1 / 69

LECTURE 1 THE CONTEXT AND PURPOSE OF FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING

LECTURE 1 THE CONTEXT AND PURPOSE OF FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING. AKUA PEPRAH-YEBOAH DEPARTMENT OF ACCOUNTING AND FINANCE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS. INTRODUCTION.

hayj
Télécharger la présentation

LECTURE 1 THE CONTEXT AND PURPOSE OF FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. LECTURE 1THE CONTEXT AND PURPOSE OFFINANCIAL ACCOUNTING AKUA PEPRAH-YEBOAH DEPARTMENT OF ACCOUNTING AND FINANCE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS

  2. INTRODUCTION Accounting is the language of business. It is the method companies use to communicate financial information to their employees and the public. This lesson introduces financial accounting by discussing what accounting is, its objectives, who uses accounting information and the main components of accounts. It also sets the context within which accounting happens by exploring the regulatory framework of accounting and related issues such as corporate governance.

  3. Lesson objectives • At the end of the lesson you should have an appreciation of: • The objectives of financial reporting • The needs of users and stakeholders • The main elements of financial report • Capital and revenue items • The regulatory framework • Duties and responsibilities of those charged with governance

  4. THE PURPOSE OF FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING ‘Financial accounting’ is a term that describes: • Maintaining a system of accounting records for business transactions and other items of financial nature, and • reporting the financial position and the financial performance of an entity in a set of ‘financial statements’.

  5. THE FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING PROCESS Financial accounting begins with the recording of financial transactions (Book keeping). All large businesses (and many small ones) have a bookkeeping system for recording the financial details of their business transactions on a regular basis. The information that is recorded in the book-keeping system (ledger records) of an entity are also analysed and summarised periodically, typically each year, and the summarised information is presented in financial statements. Financial statements provide information about the financial position and performance of the entity. Note: The term ‘entity’ is used to describe any type of organisation. ‘Business entities’ include companies, business partnerships and the businesses of ‘sole traders’

  6. TYPES OF BUSINESS ENTITIESTHE SOLE TRADER The business of a sole trader is owned and managed by one person. Any individual who sets up in business on his own, without creating a company, is a sole trader. Sole trader businesses are usually small operations, but the owner might employ a number of employees who work for the business to earn a wage or salary, but do not have any share in the ownership of the business.

  7. TYPES OF BUSINESS ENTITIESPARTNERSHIP Partnership can be defined as the association of two (2) or more (not exceeding 20) individuals who carrying on business jointly for the purpose of making profits. Each partner contributes some funds (capital) to set up the business. Like a sole trader, a partnership may have employees who work for the business, but have no share in the ownership.

  8. COMPANY (LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY) • Limited liability companies are incorporated to take advantage of ‘limited liability’ for their owners (shareholders). This means that, while sole proprietors and partners are personally responsible for the amounts owned by their businesses, the shareholders of a limited liability companies are responsible for the amount paid for their shares. • They are not responsible for the company’s debts unless they have given personal guarantees (of a bank loan, for example). However, they may lose the money they have invested in the company if it fails. Shareholders may be individuals or other companies

  9. COMPARISON OF TYPES OF BUSINESS

  10. THE NATURE, PRINCIPLES AND SCOPE OF FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING As stated earlier, financial accounting is concerned with preparing a number of financial reports or ‘financial statements’ about the position and performance of the entity. This information is provided for the benefit of a number of different users. Financial statements relate to a given period of time, known as the ‘financial year’, ‘accounting period’ or ‘reporting period’ (usually 12 calendar months).

  11. They are prepared from information held in the financial accounting records (the ‘books or ‘ledgers’), although some adjustments and additions are required to complete the financial statements, especially for companies. • Financial statements should be prepared in accordance with accepted rules and principles. • International: (IAS/IFRS by the IFAC’s IASB) • National: Accounting regulations (ICAG) • National laws: (Company law, Partnership Act, etc) • Industry Specific Regulations: SEC, GSE, etc

  12. SCOPE AND OBJECTIVES OF FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING The rules on financial reporting, including the requirements of International Accounting Standards, are concerned with the preparation of financial statements for ‘external’ users. In many business entities, detailed financial reports are prepared for the benefit of management. Providing financial information for the benefit of managers is known as management accounting, and this is not subject to any regulatory control. Managers can use the information in financial statements if they wish to do so, but they ought to be able to obtain better information about the operations of their business - and more regularly. So financial reporting is not primarily for the benefit of management.

  13. SCOPE AND OBJECTIVES OF FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING • The IASB has issued a Framework for the Preparation and Presentation ofFinancial Statements, which states that the objective of financial statements is to: • provide information about the financial position, performance and changes in financial position of an entity • that is useful to a wide range of users in making economic decisions.

  14. INFORMATION FOR ECONOMIC DECISIONS The IASB states that financial statements are produced to enable users to make economic decisions on the basis of the information that the statements provide. Information – including financial information – has no value unless it is used.

  15. Users of financial information usually have an interest in some aspect of what the entity does or might do in the future. Any person or group of persons with an interest of any kind in a business entity is sometimes referred to as a ‘stakeholder’ – because they have some stake in what the entity does. Many users of financial statements are therefore also stakeholders.

  16. USERS OF FINANCIAL STATEMENTS The International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) has published a document that sets out the concepts that underlie the preparation and presentation of financial statements for users. This document is called the IASB Framework for thepreparation and presentation of financial statements. The IASB Framework provides a list of users of financial statements, and an indication of what their information needs might be.

  17. INVESTORS Investors in a business entity are the providers of risk capital. Unless they are managers as well as owners, they invest in order to obtain a financial return on their investment. They need information that will help them to make investment decisions. In the case of shareholders in a company, these decisions will often involve whether to buy, hold or sell shares in the company. Their decision might be based on an analysis of the past financial performance of the company and its financial position, and trying to predict from the past what might happen to the company in the future. Financial statements also give some indication of the ability of a company to pay dividends to its shareholders out of profits. Financial statements also give some indication of the ability of a company to pay dividends to its shareholders out of profits.

  18. EMPLOYEES Employees need information about the financial stability and profitability of their employer. An assessment of profitability can help employees to reach a view on the ability of the employer to pay higher wages, or provide more job opportunities in the future.

  19. LENDERS Lenders, such as banks, are interested in financial information about businesses that borrow from them. Financial statements can help lenders to assess the continuing ability of the borrower to pay interest, and its ability to repay the loan principal at maturity.

  20. SUPPLIERS AND OTHER TRADE CREDITORS Financial information about an entity is also useful for suppliers who provide goods on credit to a business entity, and other ‘trade creditors’ who are owed money by the entity as a result of debts incurred in its business operations (such as money owned for rent or electricity or telephone charges). They can use the financial statements to assess how much credit they might safely allow to the entity.

  21. CUSTOMERS Customers might be interested in the financial strength of an entity, especially if they rely on that entity for the long-term supply of key goods or services GOVERNMENT The government and government agencies are interested in the financial statements of business entities. They might use this information for the purpose of business regulation or deciding taxation policies.

  22. THE PUBLIC In some cases, members of the general public might have an interest in the financial statements of a company. The IASB Framework comments: ‘For example, entities may make a substantial contribution to the local economy in many ways including the number of people they employ and their patronage of local suppliers.’

  23. MANAGERS Managers are not included in this list of users by the IASB Framework, because management should have access to all the financial information they need, and in much more detail than financial statements provide. However, management is responsible for producing the financial statements and might be interested in theinformation they contain.

  24. The International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) states in its Framework that investors are the most significant of the user groups in its list. All the information needs of user groups cannot be met by financial statements. However there are needs for financial information that are common to all users. Investors are providers of risk capital to the entity; therefore information that meets their needs should meet most of the needs of other users, to the extent that financial statements can meet these information needs at all. In producing international accounting standards, the IASB has therefore given most consideration to the information needs of investors.

  25. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Financial statements present information about: The financial position of an entity Its financial performance during an accounting period (reporting period) Its Cash flows and Changes in its financial position during the period. They also show the results of how management have used and looked after the resources of the business (‘management’s stewardship of the resources entrusted to it’ (IAS 1 Presentation of Financial Statements).

  26. To do this, the financial statements provide information about an entity’s: • Assets • Liabilities • Equity • Income and expenses, including gains and losses • Contributions by the owners of the entity and distributions by the entity to its owners, in their capacity as owners (e.g. contributions of new capital by the owners, and payments of drawings or dividends to the owners) • Cash flows.

  27. Information about the financial position of an entity consists of information about its assets, liabilities and equity. This information is presented in a statement offinancial position. (In the past this has been called the balance sheet) Information about the financial performance of an entity consists of information about income and expenses and profit or loss – and also certain other gains or losses during the period that are not regarded as income or expense, or part of profit or loss.

  28. Information about transactions by the entity with its owners in their capacity as owners (for example new share issues or dividend payments by a company) are reported in another financial statement called the statement of changes in equity or SOCIE. Information about cash flows is reported in a statement of cash flows.Additional information is provided in notes to the financial statements. These are a mixture of narrative notes and additional numerical information (sometimes in a table of figures).

  29. The financial statements of a large company will include a large number of notes, providing a wide range of additional information not contained in the main financial statements themselves.The statement of financial position, income statement, statement of comprehensive income and statement of cash flows will be described in more detail in laterlessons.

  30. THE STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL POSITION A statement of financial position (formerly called a balance sheet) reports the financial position of an entity as at a particular date, usually the end of a financial year. The financial position of an entity is shown by its assets, liabilities and equity (owners’ capital).

  31. ASSETS An asset is defined by the IASB Framework as ‘a resource controlled by the entity as a result of past events and from which future economic benefits are expected to flow to the entity.’ A resource will provide ‘future economic benefits’ if it will contribute directly or indirectly to the inflow of cash to the business.This is a fairly complex definition. It might therefore help to think of an asset as something that an entity owns or something that it is owed. (This is not a strictly accurate definition, but it can be helpful.)

  32. In the balance sheet, assets are categorised into two main types: • Current assets: assets that are expected to provide economic benefit in the short term. Examples of assets that are owned are inventory and cash. • An example of assets that are owed is money owed by customers who have purchased goods or services on credit. These assets are called ‘receivables’ or ‘trade receivables’ (to identify the fact that the debt has arisen in the course of business trading, and the money is therefore owed by customers).

  33. Non-current assets: assets that have a long useful life and are expected to provide future economic benefits for the entity over a period of several years.Examples are property, plant and equipment. A machine, for example, might be expected to have a useful life of five years. If so, it is classified as a non-current asset. Non-current assets are sometimes referred to as ‘fixed assets’.

  34. LIABILITIES A liability is defined by the IASB Framework as a ‘present obligation of the entity arising from past events, the settlement of which is expected to result in an outflow from the entity of resources embodying economic benefits.’ This too is a fairly complex definition. When you are learning about liabilities for the first time, it helps to think of a liability as something that the entity owes. (This is not a strictly accurate definition, but it can be helpful.)

  35. Examples of liabilities are amounts owed to suppliers for goods or services purchased (‘trade payables’), amounts owed to a bank (bank loans and a bank overdraft) and taxation owed to the government. It is usual to categorise liabilities in the statement of financial position into: • Current liabilities: These are obligations payable within 12 months • Non-current liabilities: These are amounts not payable within the next 12 months, for example a long-term loan from a bank.

  36. EQUITY Equity is the residual interest in the business that belongs to its owner or owners after the liabilities have been deducted from the assets. Equity = Assets – Liabilities Equity is therefore sometimes referred to as the ‘net assets’ of the business, in other words assets minus liabilities. Equity is also referred to as ‘owners’ capital’ because it represents the amount of capital invested in the business by the owners.However, equity consists not only of capital put into the business by its owners, but also profits that the business has made and retained or reinvested within the business.

  37. STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL POSITIONFORMAT A simple statement of financial position in a ‘vertical’ format is divided into two parts: The top half of the statement shows the assets of the business, with non-current assets first, and current assets below the non-current assets. The lower half of the statement shows the equity, followed by the liabilities. The liabilities are shown with non-current (long-term) liabilities first, and then current liabilities. The value of total assets in the top part of the statement of financial position must always equal the total of equity plus liabilities.

  38. Entity ABCStatement of financial position as at [date]Assets $ $Non‐current assets:Land and buildings 400,000Plant and equipment 100,000Motor vehicles 80,000 580,000Current assets:Inventory 20,000Receivables 30,000Cash 5,00055,000Total assets 635,000Equity and liabilities Equity:Owner’s capital 440,000Non‐current liabilities:Bank loan 170,000Current liabilities:Bank overdraft 10,000Trade payables 15,00025,000Total equity and liabilities 635,000

  39. THE INCOME STATEMENT: INCOME AND EXPENSES The income statement reports the financial performance of an entity during a period of time, such as the financial year. The elements in an income statement are income and expenses. The difference between income and expenses is profit or loss.

  40. INCOME • Income consists of: • revenue from the sale of goods or services • other items of income such as interest received from investments • gains from disposing of non-current assets for more than their ‘carrying value’ or ‘net book value’. For example, if a machine is sold for GHȻ15,000 when its value in the statement of financial position is GHȻ10,000, there is a gain on disposal of GHȻ5,000. • The term ‘revenue’ means income earned in the course of normal business operations. In an income statement, revenue and ‘other income’ are reported as separate items.

  41. EXPENSES • Expenses consist of: • expenses arising in the ordinary course of activities, including the cost of sales, wages and salaries, the cost of the depletion of non-current assets, interest payable on loans and so on • losses arising from disasters such as fire and flood, and also losses from disposing of non-current assets for less than their carrying value in the statement of financial position.

  42. INCOME STATEMENTFORMAT • An income statement is usually presented in a vertical format. The order of presentation is usually as follows: • Sales or revenue • Cost of sales • Gross profit, which is sales minus the cost of sales • Other income, such as interest income and gains on the disposal of non-current assets • Expenses in the list, but it is usual to show expenses relating to administration, followed by expenses relating to selling and distribution, and finally expenses relating to financial matters, such as interest charges, bad debts and audit fees.) • Net profit, which is gross profit plus other income and minus other expenses.

  43. EXAMPLE: INCOME STATEMENT Entity ABCIncome statement for the year ended [date] GHȻ GHȻRevenue 800,000Cost of sales 500,000Gross profit 300,000Other income:Gain on disposal of non‐current asset 10,000 310,000ExpensesEmployees’ salaries 120,000Depreciation 10,000Rental costs 30,000Telephone charges 15,000Advertising costs 30,000Selling costs 40,000General expenses 20,000Interest charges 3,000Bad debts 2,000 270,000Net profit 40,000

  44. GROSS PROFIT AND NET PROFIT • It is usual to show both the gross profit and the net profit in an income statement. • Gross profit is the sales revenue minus the cost of sales in the period, and • Net profit (or loss) is the profit after taking into account all other income and all other expenses for the period.

  45. The expenses included in ‘cost of sales’ differ according to the activities or type of industry in which the entity operates. For example: • in a retailing business, the cost of sales might be just the purchase cost of the goods that have been sold • in a manufacturing business, the cost of sales might be the cost of producing the goods sold during the period.

  46. RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE INCOME STATEMENT AND THE STATEMENT OFFINANCIAL POSITION The income statement and the statement of financial position are separate statements but they are also related to each other.The income statement ends with a figure for the net profit for the period. Profit belongs to the owner (or owners) of the business. It is therefore an addition to the owner’s capital. Profit for the year is therefore added to owners’ capital in the statement of financial position at the end of the year.

  47. THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN CAPITAL AND REVENUE ITEMS • A business entity normally operates over many years, but prepares financial statements annually (at the end of each financial year). • It spends money for both the long term, by investing in machinery, equipment and other assets. It also spends money on day-to-day expenses, such as paying for supplies and services, and paying wages or salaries to employees. • It receives income from its business operations. It might also receive income from other sources, such as a new bank loan, or new capital invested by its owner.

  48. A distinction is made between ‘capital’ and revenue’ items: • Items of a long-term nature, such as property, plant and equipment used to carry out the operating activities of the business, are ‘capital items’. • Items of a short-term nature, particularly items that are used or occur in the normal cycle of business • operations, are ‘revenue items’. • As a rough guide (but which is not strictly accurate): • capital items will be reported in the statement of financial position, because they are of a long-term nature • revenue items are at some stage reported as income or expenses in the income statement or statement of comprehensive income.

  49. CAPITAL AND REVENUE EXPENDITURE Capital expenditure is expenditure to acquire a long-term asset for the business (a capital asset), such as property, plant and machinery, office equipment and motor vehicles. A ‘capital asset’ is a ‘non-current asset’. The IASB defines ‘capitalisation’ as recognising a cost as an asset or part of the cost of as asset. So when an item of cost is ‘capitalised’ it is treated as an asset rather than an expense.

  50. Revenue expenditure is expenditure on day-to-day operating expenses. Revenue expenditure is reported as expenditure in the income statement. For example,suppose that a business entity borrows GHȻ100,000 from a bank for five years and pays interest of GHȻ8,000 on the loan for the first year. The loan is a non-current liability (and part of the long-term ‘capital’ of the business) and the interest is an expense.

More Related