Accounting Concepts
Accounting Concepts
Accounting Concepts
V. Imp. According to accounts, any gain/income will only be recorded once we have earned it.
E.g. Business receives a huge advance payment in January, for a contract that is to be ended in May,
then that income will not be recognised as income until May, when the contract is complete.
However, to acknowledge the receipt of cash, the advance payment will be placed under liabilities as
prepaid income.
Accounting Conventions
There are four main conventions in practice in accounting: conservatism;
consistency; full disclosure; and materiality.
Conservatism is the convention by which, when two values of a
transaction are available, the lower-value transaction is recorded. By this
convention, profit should never be overestimated, and there should always
be a provision for losses.
In simple words, expected losses are losses, but expected gains are not gains.
Any liability that we may face, will be recorded in the books even before it has occurred (if we know
about it happening)
For example, Taxes or Payment of any penalty on late payment of taxes would be recorded in
advance, even if they havent been paid to the government yet.
However, if there is a court case against us, in which we have a 90% chance to win and receive
90,000 as compensation, we will not record it unless we actually receive it.
E.g. taking the example of the retiring CEO, such information is material and therefore should be
mentioned in the notes of accounts.
Full disclosure entails the revelation of all information, both favourable and detrimental to
a business enterprise, and which are of material value to creditors and debtors.
It basically is the continuation of previous one, and it add that it is necessary to disclose all material
information. Withholding info is unethical and illegal.
Assets (fixed and current): Current assets are assets that will be
used within one year.
For example, cash, inventory, and accounts receivable (see above).
Fixed assets (non-current) may provide benefits to a company for more
than one yearfor example, land and machinery.
Balance sheet: A financial report that provides a gist of a companys
assets and liabilities and owners equity at a given time.
Capital: A financial asset and its value, such as cash and goods. Working
capital is current assets minus current liabilities.
Cash flow statement: The cash flow statement of a business shows the
balance between the amount of cash earned and the cash expenditure
incurred.