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Chapter 1 The Role of Accounting © Cambridge University Press 2012
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The Purpose of Accounting The purpose of accounting is to provide business owners with financial information that will assist them in making decisions about the activities of their firm © Cambridge University Press 2012
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The Accounting Process The accounting process involves collecting source documents, recording financial data and then reporting financial information, and subsequently advising the owner on an appropriate course of action © Cambridge University Press 2012
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Accounting Principles © Cambridge University Press 2012 Entity – the business is assumed to be separate from the owner and other businesses, and its records should be kept on that basis Going Concern – the life of the business is assumed to be continuous, and its records are kept on that basis
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Accounting Principles © Cambridge University Press 2012 Reporting Period – the life of the business must be divided into periods of time to allow reports to be prepared Historical Cost – the recording of a transaction at its original cost or value, as this value is verifiable by reference to the source document
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Accounting Principles © Cambridge University Press 2012 Conservatism – losses should be recorded when probable but gains should only be recorded when certain, so that liabilities and expenses are not understated and assets and revenues are not overstated Consistency – accounting methods should be applied in a consistent manner to ensure that reports are comparable between periods
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Accounting Principles © Cambridge University Press 2012 Monetary Unit – all items must be recorded and reported in a common unit of measurement; that is, Australian dollars
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Qualitative Characteristics © Cambridge University Press 2012 Relevance – is the information in the report useful for decision-making? Reliability – is it accurate, and free from bias or error? Comparability – can the reports be compared over time? Understandability – is the information presented in an easy-to-understand manner?
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Financial Reports © Cambridge University Press 2012 The three general-purpose financial reports are the: Cash Flow Statement Income Statement Balance Sheet
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The Elements of Financial Statements © Cambridge University Press 2012 Asset – a resource controlled by an entity, as a result of past events, from which future economic benefits are expected to flow to the entity Liability – a present obligation of the entity as a result of past events, the settlement of which is expected to result in an outflow from the entity of resources embodying economic benefits
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The Elements of Financial Statements © Cambridge University Press 2012 Owner’s equity – the residual interest in the assets of the entity after the deduction of its liabilities Revenue – an increase in assets (or decrease in liabilities) that increases owner’s equity, except for capital contributions by the owner Expense – the decrease in owner’s equity that occurs through business activities
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