_______C_______ 19. _______B_______ 20. _______B_______ Multiple Choice 40 Problem I 30 Problem II 20 Problem III 10 ______ 100 Multiple Choice – (2 points each) select the ONE best answer 1. Under the definition of accounting, which of the following is not one of the activities performed on the transactions of a business entity? A. Summarizing. B. Interpreting. C. Classifying. D. Forecasting. 2. Which of the following is a measure
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concepts that underlie financial accounting and reporting. The Conceptual Framework creates the concepts that are useful in developing International Accounting Standards and other documents that provide guidance on information included in general purpose financial statements. It standardizes the development and revision of accounting standards. However, the framework does not override the accounting standards in this case. The main purpose of financial accounting and reporting is basically the foundation
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Accounting Terms Chapter 1 Accounting- Information and measurement system that identifies records and communicates relevant information about a company’s business activities Accounting equation- equality involving a company’s assets liabilities and equity, assets equal liability plus equity/ aka balance sheet equation Assets- resources a business owns or controls that are expected to provide current and future benefits to the business Auditors- An individual who checks the accuracy, fairness
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a statement of stockholders’ equity. 4 Identify and compute ratios for analyzing a company’s liquidity and solvency using a balance sheet. 5 Use the statement of cash flows to evaluate solvency. 6 Explain the meaning of generally accepted accounting principles. 7 Discuss financial reporting concepts. ● ● ● ● ● ● ● INSIDE CHAPTER 2… 46 c02AFurtherLookatFinancialStatements.qxd 7/27/10 9:39 AM Page 47 feature story Few people could have predicted how dramatically the Internet
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Accounting period: the annual reporting period (or fiscal year) Accounting priciples: are fundamentals theories, truths and propositions that serve as the foundation for financial accounting and reporting Accounting standards: establish the authoritative guidance on how companies should account for and report specific transactions events and arrangments in their financial statements Accrual accounting: measures the reports and economic effect of a companies transactions evente etc in the periods
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are not recognized in the accounting records. Fair value principle * * (b) Financial information is presented so that investors will not be misled. Full disclosure principle * (c) Intangible assets are capitalized and amortized over periods benefited. * (d) Repair tools are expensed when purchased. Expense recognition principle * (e) Agricultural companies use fair value for purposes of valuing crops. Going concern assumption * (f) Each
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certain this assumption is not applicable. The business will continue to exist in the unforeseeable future. * Monetary Unit principle: assumes a stable currency is going to be the unit of record. The FASB accepts the nominal value of the US Dollar as the monetary unit of record unadjusted for inflation. * The Time-period principle implies that the economic activities of an enterprise can be divided into artificial time periods. §Principles[edit] * Historical cost principle requires companies
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The BIGGER Picture (Ch. 1) Why do we need financial reporting? What is its purpose? Who are some of the key players in financial reporting? PROVIDER EXTERNAL USERS REGULATORS Your textbook (as most out there) evaluates accounting issues from a FASB perspective. We will discuss issues from the FASB’s conceptual framework, but also will try to think about others’ perspectives as well. Before we talk about the conceptual framework, we will discuss the structure of the ultimate product of the
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| | |Financial Accounting Concepts and Principles | Copyright © 2010, 2009 by University of Phoenix. All rights reserved. Course Description This course covers the fundamentals of financial accounting as well as the identification, measurement, and reporting of the financial effects of economic events on the enterprise. Financial information
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Chapter 7 - Positive Theory Positive Accounting Theory Philosophy of PAT Million Friedman championed positive theories in economics. He stated that: (part 3 Empirical Research in Accounts of Accounting theory from Jayne Godfrey) The ultimate goal of positive science (i.e. INDUCTIVE) is • The development of a ‘theory ‘ or ‘hypothesis’; • that yields valid and meaningful “Predictions’ • about phenomena not yet “observed”. Consistent with Friedman’s view, Watts and Zimmerman
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