CHAPTER 1
ACCOUNTING IN ACTION
CHAPTER LEARNING OBJECTIVES
1. Identify the use and users of accounting and the objective of financial reporting. Accounting is the
information system that identifies, records, and communicates the economic events of an organization
to a wide variety of interested users. Good accounting is important to people both inside and outside the
organization. Internal users, such as management, use accounting information to plan, control, and
evaluate business operations. External users include investors and creditors, among others. Accounting
data are used by investors (owners or potential owners) to decide whether to buy, hold, or sell their
financial interests. Creditors (suppliers and bankers) evaluate the risks of granting credit or lending
money based on the accounting information. The objective of financial reporting is to provide useful
information to investors and creditors to make these decisions. Users need information about the
business’s ability to earn a profit and generate cash. For our economic system to function smoothly,
reliable and ethical accounting and financial reporting are critical.
2. Compare the different forms of business organization. The most common examples of business
organization are proprietorships, partnerships, and corporations. Proprietorships and partnerships are
not separate legal entities but are separate entities for accounting purposes; income taxes are paid by
the owners and owners have unlimited liability. Corporations are separate legal entities as well as
separate entities for accounting purposes; income taxes are paid by the corporation and owners of the
corporation have limited liability.
3. Explain the building blocks of accounting: ethics and the concepts included in the conceptual
framework. Generally accepted accounting principles are a common set of guidelines that are used to
prepare and report accounting information. The conceptual framework outlines some of the body of
theory used by accountants to fulfill their goal of providing useful accounting information to users.
Ethical behaviour is fundamental to fulfilling the objective of financial accounting. The reporting entity
concept requires the business activities of each reporting entity to be kept separate from the activities of
its owner and other economic entities. The going concern assumption presumes that a business will
continue operations for enough time to use its assets for their intended purpose and to fulfill its
commitments. The periodicity concept requires businesses to divide up economic activities into distinct
periods of time. Qualitative characteristics include fundamental and enhancing characteristics that help
to ensure accounting information is useful.
Only events that cause changes in the business’s economic resources or changes in the claims on those
resources are recorded. Recognition is the process of recording items and measurement is the process of
determining the amount that should be recognized. The historical cost concept states that economic
resources should be recorded at their historical (original) cost. Fair value may be a more appropriate
measure for certain types of resources. Generally, fair value is the amount the resource could be sold for
in the market. The monetary unit concept requires that only transactions that can be expressed as an
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