2. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles
Defined as the set of accepted industry
rules, practices and guidelines for
financial accounting
Includes the standards, conventions, and
rules accountants follow in recording and
summarizing transactions, and in the
preparation of financial statements
4. American Institute of Certified Public
Accountants (CPA)
Founded in 1887
Sets ethical standards for the CPA profession
Sets U.S. auditing and GAAP standards
Develops and grades the Uniform CPA
Examination
http://www.aicpa.org
5. Financial Accounting Standards
Board
Established in 1973
Establishes and improves standards
of financial accounting by non-
governmental entities (GAAP)
www.fasb.org
6. Securities and Exchange Commission
Created by the Securities Act of 1933 and the
Securities and Exchange Act of 1934
Holds the primary responsibility for:
◦ Enforcing federal securities laws
◦ Regulating the securities industry
◦ Regulating the stock market and
◦ Preventing corporate abuse of investors
7. Enforcement authority granted by Congress
Bring civil enforcement actions against
individuals and companies who:
◦ Commit accounting fraud
◦ Provide false information
◦ Engage in insider trading
◦ Violate securities laws
Bring criminal enforcement actions to
prosecute individuals and companies for
criminal offenses
8. Maintains fair, orderly and efficient security
markets
Ensures that securities industry professionals
deal fairly with their customers
Ensures that corporations make all material
information about themselves public
Facilitates capital formation for corporations
www.sec.gov
9. notes
stock
treasury stock
security future
bond
debenture
certificate of interest
participation in any profit-sharing agreement
10. Referred to as the Truth in Securities
Law
Two basic objectives:
◦ Requires that investors receive
financial/significant information
concerning securities offered for public
sale
◦ Prohibits deceit, misrepresentations, and
fraud in the sale of securities
11. Empowers the SEC with broad authority over the
securities industry
Includes the power to register, regulate, and
oversee
◦ Brokerage firms
◦ Transfer agents
◦ Clearing agencies
◦ Self-regulatory organizations
New York Stock Exchange
American Stock Exchange
NASDAQ
Empowers SEC to require periodic reporting by
companies with publicly traded securities (GAAP)
12. Governmental Accounting Standards
Board
Established in 1984
To establish and improve standards of
state and local governmental
accounting and financial reporting
(GAAP)
www.gasb.org
13. What is meant by GAAP?
Why should all companies follow GAAP in
reporting to external users of financial
information?
Explain the roles of each of the governing
bodies in the setting of accounting standards.
16. To provide useful, understandable information to users of financial
statements for decision making
For present and potential investors and creditors and other users in
making rational investment, credit, and similar decisions
To help present and potential investors and creditors and other
users to assess the amounts, timing, and uncertainty of prospective
cash receipts
To inform users about the
◦ economic resources of an enterprise;
◦ the claims to those resources (obligations);
◦ the effects of transactions, events, and
◦ circumstances that cause changes in resources and claims to
those resources
17. Decision usefulness
◦ the quality of being useful to decision
making
Understandability
◦ users must understand the information
within the context of the decision being
made
18. Relevance
◦ Definition: relating to the matter at hand
Reliability
◦ Definition: the quality or state of being reliable;
and the extent to which an experiment, test, or
measuring procedure yields the same results on
repeated trials
http://www.merriam-webster.com
19. Capable of making a difference in the
decision making of the user
Must have predictive or feedback value
◦ Predicts or forecasts for users about the outcome of
events of a company
◦ Provides feedback value for users to confirm or
correct prior expectations of a company
Must be presented in a timely manner
◦ Provides current information to users to help with
decision making
20. Must be verifiable
◦ Able to be proven; not subject to opinion
Must be a faithful representation
◦ Agreement between the accounting numbers and
supporting documentation
Must be reasonably free from error
◦ No mistakes or inaccuracies should be found in the
financial statements
Must be reasonably free from bias; should be
neutral
◦ Accounting information should not favor any groups or
companies but be a true and factual representation of a
company’s financial position.
21. Comparability
◦ Definition: The quality of information that enables users to
identify similarities in and differences between two sets of
economic phenomena.
Consistency
◦ Definition: Conformity from period to period with
unchanging policies and procedures.
Information about a particular enterprise gains
greatly in usefulness if it can be compared with
similar information.
www.fasb.org
22. The purpose of comparison is to detect and
explain similarities and differences.
Accounting information should be
comparable across different companies and
over different time periods.
23. Consistent use of accounting principles from
one accounting period to another enhances
the utility of financial statements to users.
A quality of the relationship between two
accounting numbers
24. Explain the concept of the FASB’s conceptual
framework. (Slide 2)
What is the primary objective of financial
accounting?
Explain relevance and reliability of financial
statements.
What are the components of relevant
information?
What are the components of reliable information?
Why should financial statements be both
comparable and consistent?
27. A constraint is a limit, regulation, or
confinement within prescribed bounds.
This term refers to the accounting guidelines
that border the Hierarchy of Qualitative
Information
They consist of:
◦ Cost Effectiveness
◦ Materiality
◦ Conservatism
28. Also called Cost Benefit Constraint
The cost of providing accounting information
should not exceed the benefit of the
information it is reporting.
Example: A company purchases pencils and
pens to use in its business. Rather than
inventory these items, they are included as
supplies and are expensed periodically
because of the minor cost of the items.
29. Material means big enough to make a difference
in the user’s decision-making process.
States that the requirements of any accounting
principle may be ignored when there is no effect
on the decisions of the user of financial
information.
Example: A company purchases a Trashcan for
$10. Per GAAP, this amount should be
capitalized as an asset and depreciated. Because
the amount is immaterial, the $10 can be
recorded as an expense.
30. Accountants use their judgment to record
transactions that require estimation.
Conservatism helps the accountant choose
between 2 equally likely alternatives.
Requires the accountant to record the
transaction using the less optimistic choice.
Example: There is the potential for a
customer to sue the company. Although, the
customer may choose not to sue, the
accountant will disclose this potential lawsuit
to investors.
31. Concepts are the ground rules of accounting
that should be followed when preparing
financial statements.
These are:
◦ Recognition Concept
◦ Measurement Concept
32. States that an item should be recognized
(recorded) in the financial statements when:
◦ It can be defined by GAAP assumptions and
principles
◦ It can be measured
◦ It is relevant to decision-making by users
◦ It is reliable
33. States that every transaction is measured by
the stated unit of measurement, such as the
dollar
The stated procedure of valuing assets,
liabilities, equity, revenue, and expenses as
defined by GAAP
34. Assumptions are agreed upon rules of
accounting, and are basic, understood
beliefs.
There are Four Basic Assumptions of
Accounting:
◦ Economic Business Entity
◦ Going Concern
◦ Monetary Unit
◦ Time Period
35. All of the business transactions should be
separate from the business owner’s personal
transactions
There should be no co-mingling of personal
funds with business funds.
36. Financial statements are prepared under the
assumption that the company will remain in
business indefinitely unless there is sufficient
evidence otherwise.
If there is evidence that a company may
possibly have a going concern issue, this
must be disclosed in the financial statements.
37. Assumes a stable currency is going to be the
unit of record.
FASB accepts the nominal value of the US
Dollar as the monetary unit of record
unadjusted for inflation.
38. The entity’s activities are separated into
periods of time such as months, quarters or
years.
Transactions must be accounted for within
the time period they occur regardless of when
cash is exchanged.
39. Principles are accounting rules used to
prepare, present, and report financial
statements.
Principles dictate how events should be
recorded and reported.
40. Assets are recorded at historical cost, not fair
market value.
For example, if a company purchases a
building for $500,000 it should be recorded
as such, and should remain on the books for
that amount until disposed of.
If the building appreciates to $700,000 in the
next few years, no adjustment should be
made.
41. All information pertaining to the operations
and financial position of the entity must be
reported within the period of time in
question.
Circumstances and events that make a
difference to financial statement users should
be disclosed.
42. Revenue is earned and recognized upon
product delivery or service completion,
without regard to when cash is actually
received.
Also called accrual basis accounting
Example: A customer purchases inventory
from a company on credit. Even though no
cash has yet been received, the sale is
recorded.
43. The costs of doing business are recorded in
the same period as the revenue they help
generate, regardless of when the money is
actually paid.
Also called accrual basis accounting
Example: A company orders merchandise on
credit and has 30 days in which to pay. This
purchase is recorded immediately, even
though no cash has been paid.
44. Explain what is meant by “The benefits of
accounting information must exceed the
costs.”
What is meant by the term materiality in
financial reporting?
What is meant by the term conservatism in
financial reporting?
Explain the Going Concern assumption.
Explain the Time Period assumption.
Explain the accounting principles that guide
accounting practice.
46. A formal record of the financial activities of a
business
Includes four basic financial statements:
◦ Balance Sheet (Statement of Financial Position)
◦ Income Statement (Statement of Comprehensive
Income)
◦ Statement of Cash Flows
◦ Statement of Changes in Equity
47. Reports a company’s financial
position/condition at a given point in time
Reports on:
◦ Assets
◦ Liabilities and
◦ Equity
Details about cash in bank, amounts owed to
creditors, and value of company’s assets.
48. Reports on a company’s income and
expenses over a given period of time
Reports on
◦ Revenue (income)
◦ Expenses
Shows a company’s profit or loss over a given
period of time
49. Reports on a company’s cash flow activities
into and out of the business from:
◦ Operating Activities
◦ Investing Activities and
◦ Financing Activities
Shows how changes in the balance sheet and
income statement affect cash and cash
equivalents
50. Reports the changes in the company’s equity
throughout the reporting period
Reports
◦ profit or loss from the company,
◦ dividends paid, and
◦ other items that are debited/credited to retained
earnings
51. Explain the purpose of the Balance Sheet.
Explain the purpose of the Income Statement.
Explain the purpose of the Statement of
Equity.
Explain the purpose of the Statement of Cash
Flows.
53. International Financial Reporting Standards
Adopted in 1989 by the International
Accounting Standards Board
Composed of principles-based standards,
interpretations, and framework that establish
broad rules and treatments of events
Because of numerous companies operating
globally, standards that are applicable to all
countries need to be developed.
54. States the basic principles for IFRS
Currently being updated and converged with
the IASB and FASB
Objective is to create a sound foundation for
future accounting standards
55. In February 2010, the SEC voted unanimously
to reaffirm its commitment to the goal of a
single set of High Quality Global Accounting
Standards.
In October 2010, the SEC began working on a
plan to combine GAAP and IFRS.
US companies may move to IFRS in
approximately 2015 or 2016.
56. Explain the concept behind the IFRS.
Summarize the projected target date for US
implementation of IFRS.
Editor's Notes
Information for this slide was obtained from the AICPA website at www.aicpa.org
Information for this slide was obtained from the FASB website at www.fasb.org
Information for this slide was obtained from the SEC website at www.sec.gov
Information for this slide was obtained from the SEC website at www.sec.gov
Information for this slide was obtained from the SEC website at www.sec.gov
Information for this slide was obtained from the SEC website at www.sec.gov
The stock certificate was obtained from http://www.radioing.com/collins/pix04.html
Information for this slide was obtained from the sec website at www.sec.gov
Information for this slide was obtained from the sec website at www.sec.gov
Information for this slide was obtained from the GASB website at www.gasb.org
http://www.fasb.org/jsp/FASB/Page/SectionPage&cid=1176156317989
Click on agreement, select yes
Page 18 will contain the diagram above
http://www.fasb.org/jsp/FASB/Page/SectionPage&cid=1176156317989
Click on agreement, select yes
Page 18 will contain the diagram above