Accounting & Finance
Accounting & Finance
&
Finance
MBA 1st Semester
Amity Global Business School
Ms. Kavitha Menon
Module I –
Introduction
Overview Of Module I
Concepts of accounting
Users of accounting information
Scope and inter-relationship between
financial, cost and management accounting
Introduction to HR accounting
Accounting records and books – Journal,
Ledger, Subsidiary books
Trial Balance
Definition of Accounting
“Accounting is the process of identifying,
measuring and communicating economic
information to permit informed judgments
and decisions by users of the information.”
- American Accounting
Association
ACCOUNTING
Is a methodology,
Is the measurement of financial transactions
Disclosure or provision of assurance about
financial information primarily used by
managers, investors, tax authorities and other
decision makers
Accounting is also widely referred to as the
“Universal Language of Business"
Accountancy is a profession.
ACCOUNTS RECORDS
What we own
What we owe
Summa Commu
Analyzing Interpreting
rizing nicating
Difference between
Accounting and Book-Keeping
Book keeping is merely recording the business
transactions in books and ledgers. It is part of
Accounting. It is often routine and clerical in nature
Accounting is a wider concept: Compilation of
accounts in such a way that one is in a position to
understand state of affairs of business
Records
Records
information
Relevant
Relevant Communicates
Communicates
that is
Reliable
Reliable
to
to help
help users
users make
make
Comparable better
better decisions.
decisions.
Comparable
Objectives of Accounting
To maintain systematic records
To protecting business properties
To ascertain the operational profit or loss
To ascertain financial position
To meet the information need of decision
makers
To satisfy requirements of law
To facilitate rational decision making
Functions Of Accounting
Performance measurement
Forecasting
Government Regulation and Taxation
Evaluation and Control
Decision Making
Stewardship
Fixing Responsibility
To determine whether
Users of Accounting Information To thedetermine
amount owing whetherto
theirwill
them principals
be paidandwhen
the and
due interest thereof
whether they
Short-term creditors will should
be paidextend,
when due
To judge prospects for
Long-term creditors To review
their maintainthe firm’s
and whether
investment
(a)
they
or restrict
and
To judge
short-term should prospects
solvency
extend,(b)of
Present investors the
Stability
to an flow
determine and of credit
whether to an
long-termenterprise
maintain solvency
or and(c)to
restrict
they individual
profitabilityshouldof the
buy,enterprise
hold
Potential investors determine
effective
the flow
employers, to
whether
utilization
of credit to
assess of an
or
theysellshould
the shares
buy the in
Management resources (d)
individual
the ability tosharesprofitability
pay enterprise
relation to turnover (e)
remuneration,
Employees To profitability
know
To assess
retirement aboutthein
the
benefits relation to
tax
Tax authorities investments
continuation
liabilities
and to provide ofand
of an to decide
an
upon
enterprise theespecially
course of action to
enterprise
employment
Customers when be taken
they have
opportunities
Toinregulate
future the
activities, determine
Government and their agencies
established a long-
taxation policies,
term involvement
national income etc.
Branches of Accounting
Cost Accounting
Mana
g
t Acc emen
ounti
Financial ng
Accounting
Social
esp ons i b il ity
R
Human Accounting
Resour
ce
Accoun t ing
ting co un
Tax Ac
Steps in Accounting
Fixed Assets
CURRENT ASSETS
Assets held -
In the form of cash
goods or services
Are not held for resale in the normal course of
business
Classification –
Subject to depreciation
Classification –
Current Liabilities
Long-term Liabilities
CURRENT LIABILITIES
Liabilities which fall due for payment in a
relatively short period (normally, a period of not
more than 12 months from the date of Balance
Sheet
Credit
Cash Purchase
Purchases s
SALES
The mount for which the goods are sold or
services are rendered
Cash Credit
Sales Sales
STOCK/INVENTORY
Tangible property held for sale in the ordinary
course of business or for consumption in the
production of goods or services for sale
Includes –
Raw materials
Work-in-progress
Finished goods
TRADE TRADE
DEBTOR CREDITOR
Bills
Bills
Receivab
Payable
le
PROVISIONS
Amount kept aside out of profits – charge on
the profits
• Reporting
Realization Concept
Matching Concept
Accrual Concept
Business Entity Concept
Business treated as a separate entity that is distinct
from its owners
The financial affairs of the business are to be treated
as being separate from the non-business activities of
its owners
Personal transactions of the owner should not be
included
Separate bank accounts of the business and the
owner.
Proprietor treated as the creditor of the business
If household expenses of Rs. 12000 of the proprietor
are shown as a business expense, the profits will be
understated to the extent of Rs. 12000
Business Entity Forms
Sole
Sole Partnership
Partnership Joint
JointStock
Stock
Proprietorship
Proprietorship Firm
Firm Company
Company
Going Concern Concept
An enterprise is viewed as a going concern, i.e. will
continue to operate in the foreseeable future.
Assumes the enterprise has neither the intention nor the
necessity to curtail the scale of its operations
Does not imply permanent existence but simply stability
and continuity for a period sufficient to carry business
plans
Example: Depreciation on fixed
assets, long term contracts
Money Measurement Concept
Accounting will deal only with those items
to which a monetary value can be
attributed.
Transactions of qualitative nature, even though
of great importance to a business are not
considered E.g. good management,
hardworking members of
staff, entrance of a new
competitor in the market
Accounting Period Concept
The entire life of the firm is divided into time
intervals for the measurements of the
profit/loss of the business.
A business has to compulsorily adopt financial
exchange are2005
required 2006
to publish2007
quarterly results
QTR 1 JAN FEB MAR
QTR 2 APR MAY JUN
QTR 3 JUL AUG SEPT
QTR 4 OCT NOV DEC
Historical Cost Concept
Assets should be recorded initially at cost
i.e. the price paid to acquire it
Main Limitation:-
In times of inflation, historical