FA 1 - The Accounting Equation Flashcards

1
Q

The accounting equation is

A

Assets = Liabilities + Owners’ Equity
Assets are the resources that the business has, and liabilities + owners’ equity are the means by which the business obtained those resources.

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2
Q

What is a transaction?

A

A transaction is an event that occours during the course of business

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3
Q

What is the accrual method of accounting?

A

The accrual method of accounting ensures that transactions are recorded in the period to which they relate, regardless of when cash is exchanged.

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4
Q

Assets

A

Assets are resources owned or controlled by an entity that will produce benefits in the future.

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5
Q

Liabilities

A

Liabilities are obligations to pay a third party for resources provided to an entity.

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6
Q

Owners’ equity

A

Owners’ equity consists of funds contributed by owners as well as profits generated by the business.
Owners’ equity = Assets - Liabilities

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7
Q

Revenue

A

Revenue is the money that a business receives from providing goods or services to a customer.

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8
Q

Expenses

A

Expenses are the costs associated with providing goods and services to a customer.

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9
Q

The Matching Principle

A

A company’s must match its expenses to the rebated revenues in the accounting period to which they relate.

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10
Q

How do you record a sale?

A

Revenue - cash up (A), revenue up (OE)

Inventory - Inventory down (A), inventory down (OE)

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11
Q

How do you record a credit purchase?

A

When received - Inventory up (A), obligation to pay up (L)

When paid - cash down (A), obligation to pay down (L)

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12
Q

What is an accounting period?

A

The time period for which results are being reported

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13
Q

Realization Principle

A

If the business has done the work and can expect to receive cash, it can recognize the revenue even if it hasn’t received the cash yet.

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14
Q

Under the accrual method, when is revenue recognized?

A

When merchandise is delivered

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15
Q

How do you record a credit sale?

A

Time of sale - cash receivable up (A), revenue up (OE)
Time of sale - inventory down (A), inventory down (OE)
Cash received - cash up (A), cash receivable down (A)

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16
Q

How do you record advance payments?

A

Time of payment - cash up (A), obligation for goods and services up (L)
Every month - obligation down (L), revenue up (OE)

17
Q

How do you record making pre-payments?

A

Time of payment - cash down (A), goods/service receivable up (A)
Every month - goods/service receivable down (A), expense down (OE)

18
Q

Conservatism

A

Practice of recording anticipated liabilities but not future gains
Objective - to prevent overly optimistic financial reports.

19
Q

What are the guidelines for financial reporting?

A

Relevance - useful, capable of influencing the decisions of users of the financial statement; and
Reliability - information faithfully represents the underlying economics and transactions.
The three dimensions of reliability - information is valid, verifiable, unbiased.

20
Q

Historical Cost Principle

A

Transactions are recorded at the actual price that existed at the time of the transaction.
Objective - to curtail the risk of overstated assets in financial statements; but the downside is that information might be out of date and the knowledge of that opens it up to inflated speculation.

21
Q

Consistency

A

Practice of managers making consistent accounting choices over time, since accounting often requires judgment and choice.

22
Q

Materiality Principle

A

Trivial transactions don’t have to be reported in detail.
A transaction is considered material if it is reasonably likely to impact the decision-making of the users of the financial report.
Materiality varies from business to business

23
Q

Entity Concept

A

A business is a separately identifiable entity.

i.e. only transactions relating to the business should be recorded in financial reports.

24
Q

Money Measurement

A

Only values that can be recorded in monetary terms get recorded in financial statements.
Closely tied to the principles of reliability and historical cost.

25
Q

Going Concern

A

The assumption that the business will continue to operate in the foreseeable future - i.e. assets will continue to be used, liabilities will continue to be settled.

26
Q

What are the standards for something to be considered an asset?

A
  • Purchased at a measurable cost;
  • Produces economic benefit in the future;
  • Results from a past event; and
  • Is owned or controlled by the entity.
27
Q

What are the criteria for something to be a liability?

A
  • Impose probable economic obligation on economic resources in the future;
  • Obligation has to be to another entity; and
  • The event that created the obligation must have occoured in the past.
28
Q

What are the transactions that affect equity?

A

Revenues and expenses;
Gains and losses;
Contributions by owners; and
Company makes a distribution to owners.