Conventional Accounting
Conventional Accounting
Conventional Accounting
CONVENTIONAL ACCOUNTING
BASIC CONCEPTS
Objective of Accounting
A large enterprise has caused a separation between owners and managers. That is, the firm has an identity
of its own, separate and distinct from owners, creditors, and all other interested parties.
According to the stewardship function of managers must be the focus of attention of accountants in
reporting to external parties. Owners and creditors are primarily concerned about what management has
done with the funds entrusted to them.
Accounting theory therefore should explain the concepts of revenue and expense in terms of enterprise
asset-changes rather than as increases or decreases in stockholders equity.
Income
From the traditional point of views, revenues indicate the accomplishments of the firm for the given
period, expenses represent the effort expended, and income is correlated with the effectiveness of the firm
as an operating unit.
Income is a measure of the performance of the managers in handling the resources entrusted to their care
and use. The income statement reveals the result of the operations of the enterprise.
Cost Attach
Traditional accountants believe that it is justifiable to use historical cost and to allocate its amount, even if
the replacement cost has risen. Therefore, the cost attach has been formulated.
There are two types of cost: displacement and embodied.
Displacement cost denotes what has been given up and sacrified, synonymous with opportunity cost.
Embodied cost or absorption cost, relates to the factors of production and has to do with what goes into
something.
To determine the cost of one product, one simply needs to add up all the attached cost to that particular
product. The total of all those attached costs represents the effort expended to produce it, not the value of
the product. Therefore the costs attach theory is fundamental in cost accounting.
But, economists do not accept this theory. They believe there is only one kind of cost, a sacrifice.
Flow of Cost
The accountants job is to keep track of the flow of cost, trace the movement of those costs as they flow
through the business to achieve the objective of the firm, which is to make a profit.
The accountant must decide which costs have expired and to be matched against revenues on the income
statement. They also determine the unexpired costs which are to be placed on the balance sheet as assets.
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The matching principle is critical point which guides the accountant to decide which costs are to be
considered as expenses.