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Introduction to Accounting

Subject: Accounting
Topic: 1
Cambridge Code: 0452 / 0985 / 7707


What is Accounting?

Accounting - The process of recording, classifying, summarizing, and interpreting financial transactions and events

Purpose of Accounting

  1. Record Financial Transactions - Keep systematic records of all business activities
  2. Provide Financial Information - Present data in organized and meaningful way
  3. Measure Profit or Loss - Determine financial performance
  4. Track Assets and Liabilities - Monitor business resources and obligations
  5. Support Decision-Making - Provide information for management decisions
  6. Ensure Accountability - Show how resources have been used

Users of Accounting Information

Internal Users

Management

  • Use accounts for planning and control
  • Make strategic business decisions
  • Monitor cash flow and profitability

Employees

  • Interested in business stability and employment security
  • Assess business performance
  • Negotiate wages/benefits

External Users

Investors/Shareholders

  • Evaluate investment opportunities
  • Assess profitability and growth
  • Make investment decisions

Creditors/Lenders

  • Assess ability to repay loans
  • Monitor business solvency
  • Make lending decisions

Government/Tax Authorities

  • Calculate tax liability
  • Enforce tax laws
  • Collect statistical data

Customers

  • Assess business stability
  • Evaluate creditworthiness
  • Make purchasing decisions

Branches of Accounting

Financial Accounting

  • Records historical transactions
  • Prepares financial statements
  • External reporting focus
  • Follows accounting standards (IFRS, GAAP)
  • Primarily for external users

Management Accounting

  • Provides internal information
  • Supports decision-making
  • Focuses on planning and control
  • Uses both financial and non-financial data
  • Confidential internal use

Cost Accounting

  • Analyzes costs of production
  • Determines cost per unit
  • Supports pricing decisions
  • Used in manufacturing businesses

Accounting Concepts and Principles

The Business Entity Concept

  • Business is separate from owner
  • Owner's private transactions not recorded
  • Business transactions recorded separately from personal

The Accounting Equation

Assets=Liabilities+Capital\text{Assets} = \text{Liabilities} + \text{Capital}

Or:

Assets=Liabilities+Owner’s Equity\text{Assets} = \text{Liabilities} + \text{Owner's Equity}

The Dual Aspect Concept

  • Every transaction has two aspects
  • Debit one account, credit another
  • Total debits always equal total credits

The Money Measurement Concept

  • Only transactions measurable in money are recorded
  • Transactions expressed in common currency
  • Non-monetary items excluded from accounts

The Periodicity Concept

  • Accounts divided into regular periods (usually 1 year)
  • Financial statements prepared at end of period
  • Allows for meaningful period comparison

The Going Concern Concept

  • Business assumed to continue operating indefinitely
  • Assets valued on basis they will be used in business
  • Not valued on basis of immediate sale

The Historical Cost Concept

  • Assets recorded at cost of purchase
  • Cost remains in accounts
  • Values not adjusted for inflation or market changes

The Accruals Concept

  • Revenue and expenses recorded when earned/incurred
  • Not when cash is received or paid
  • Matches income and expenses to same period

The Consistency Concept

  • Accounting methods remain same from year to year
  • Allows meaningful comparison between periods
  • Changes only disclosed with explanation

The Prudence Concept

  • Overstate liabilities and expenses
  • Understate assets and revenue
  • Avoid overstating profit

Key Accounting Terms

Assets - Resources owned by business (cash, property, equipment)

Liabilities - Amounts owed to others (loans, accounts payable)

Capital/Equity - Owner's investment in business

Revenue - Income earned from selling goods/services

Expenses - Costs incurred in running business

Profit - Revenue minus expenses

Loss - When expenses exceed revenue

Debit - Left side of ledger account; asset/expense increase or liability decrease

Credit - Right side of ledger account; liability/revenue increase or asset decrease


The Accounting Process

  1. Source Documents - Original records of transactions
  2. Journal Entry - First recording of transaction
  3. Ledger Posting - Transfer to ledger accounts
  4. Trial Balance - Check that debits = credits
  5. Adjustments - Accruals, prepayments, depreciation
  6. Financial Statements - Income statement and balance sheet

Advantages of Good Accounting

  • Systematic record keeping
  • Easy to identify profit/loss
  • Track financial position
  • Support management decisions
  • Verify accuracy of accounts
  • Comply with legal requirements
  • Attract investors/lenders
  • Plan for future

Key Points to Remember

  1. Accounting is systematic recording of financial transactions
  2. Serves multiple users with different information needs
  3. Based on accounting concepts and principles
  4. Business entity separate from owner
  5. Accounting equation: Assets = Liabilities + Capital
  6. Regular financial statements required
  7. Accounts based on historical cost
  8. Accruals concept matches income to expenses

Practice Questions

  1. Explain the difference between financial accounting and management accounting.
  2. Identify the users of accounting information and explain what information each needs.
  3. State the accounting equation and explain what it represents.
  4. Explain why accounting concepts are important in financial reporting.
  5. List and explain three accounting concepts.

Revision Tips

  • Understand the purpose and users of accounts
  • Learn accounting concepts thoroughly
  • Remember the accounting equation
  • Know key accounting terms and definitions
  • Understand the role of accounting in business