Chapter 1. Accounting in Action
Chapter 1. Accounting in Action
Chapter 1. Accounting in Action
ACCOUNTING IN ACTION
Accounting Principle
Part 1
Identifies
The
economic
Accounting is the Records
events of an
information system
organization
Communicates
Interested
users
1. Why is accounting important?
Understanding the
basics of accounting
invest in a business
1. Why is accounting important?
When you study accounting, you will also learn a lot about management, finance, and
marketing, which will give you a solid foundation for your future studies.
You will learn how making a sale is meaningless unless it is a profitable sale and the
money can eventually be collected from the customer.
Marketing managers must also be able to decide on pricing strategies based on costs.
Accounting is what quantifies these costs and explains why a product or service costs
what it does.
=> Whatever you choose, working knowledge of accounting will be relevant and useful.
2. Using accounting information
Internal users
Internal users of accounting information plan, organize and run companies. They work for
the company
In running a business, internal users must answer many important
question:
To answer the question above, users need detailed information on a
timely basis; that is, it must be available when we needed. Some
example of information that internal user need include:
External users
The following Users of accounting information Whether they An example of a question that might be
is the list of are an internal asked by that user
some users of or external
accounting user, and
information.
For each user
indicate 1. Creditor External Will the business be able to pay back the
loan?
2. Viet Nam Revenue Agency External Is the company following the tax laws?
4. General manager of the production Internal How much will it cost to produce the
department product?
5. Manager of the human resources Internal Can the company afford to give the
department. employees raises?
3. The forms of business organization
Forms of business
organization
12
Summary of the important characteristics of each organizational
form a business
14
The conceptual framework of accounting
Foundation concepts
If a company is not regarded as a going concern, or if there are significant doubts about its
ability to continue as a going concern, then this must be stated in the financial statements,
along with the reason why the company is not regarded as a going concern.
Foundation concepts
Periodicity concept:
The periodicity concept guides organizations in dividing up their economic activities into
distinct time periods. The most common time periods are months, quarters, and years.
Not all events are recorded and reported in the financial statements. Only events that cause
changes in the business’s economic resources or changes to the claims on those resources are
recorded and reported. These transactions are called accounting transactions.
Measurement is the process of determining the amount that should be recognized. At the time
something is acquired, the transaction is first measured at the amount of cash that was paid or
at the value exchanged.
Ex. If Echo Company purchased land for $100,000, the land is recorded in Echo’s records at
it cost of $100,000. The land is an economic resource of the business and $100,000 is
referred to as the land’s historical cost.
But what should Echo Company do if, by the end of the next year, the land’s value has
increased to $120,000? Historical cost is the primary basis of measurement used in financial
statements, which means that Echo Company would continue to report the land at its
historical cost of $100,000. This is often called the historical cost measurement method.
However, the historical cost may not always be the most relevant measure of certain types of
resources. The fair value may provide more useful information.
Ex. With an investment purchased for the purpose of trading to make a gain, the current
value or market value of the investment provides more relevant information to the user.
Fair value generally would be the amount the resource could be sold for in the market.
Transaction identification process
2. Relevance means that financial information matches what really happened, the
information is factual.
3. The business owner’s personal expenses must be separate from the expenses of
the business to comply with accounting’s reporting entity concept.
5. All companies in Viet Nam must report their financial statement using IFRS
5. Elements of the financial statement
ASSETS
• Present economic resources controlled by the business that have the potential to
produce economic benefits.
o Examples: accounts receivable, merchandise inventory, vehicles
LIABILITIES
• Present obligations to transfer an economic resource
o Examples: accounts payable, salaries payable
OWNER’S EQUITY
• The owner’s claim on the assets
o Residual amount of assets minus liabilities
Elements of the financial statement
REVENUES
• Revenues result from business activities that are undertaken to earn a profit, such
as performing services, selling merchandise inventory, renting property, and lending
money
EXPENSES
• Expenses are the costs of assets that are consumed and services that are used in a
company’s business activities.
Thank you for your listening!