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Amity School of Business FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING. Module I Introduction to Accounting.

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Amity School of Business FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING
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Page 1: Amity School of Business FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING. Module I Introduction to Accounting.

Amity School of Business

FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING

Page 2: Amity School of Business FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING. Module I Introduction to Accounting.

Module I

Introduction to Accounting

Page 3: Amity School of Business FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING. Module I Introduction to Accounting.

Introduction to Accounting• Meaning

• Nature

• Functions

• Branches

• Accounting Equation

• Accounting Concepts

• GAAP

• Difference between GAAP & US GAAP

Page 4: Amity School of Business FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING. Module I Introduction to Accounting.

What is Accounting?

Accounting is defined as:

The art of recording, classifying & summarizing in a significant manner and in terms of money, transactions and events, which are in part at least, of a financial character and interpreting the results thereof.

• Accounting is often called the “language of business”– People who perform accounting procedures speak the

language of debits and credits.

• The process of accounting provides useful information that describe specific things about a company’s financial position.

Page 5: Amity School of Business FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING. Module I Introduction to Accounting.

Three Activities

What is Accounting?What is Accounting?

The accounting process includes the bookkeeping function.

Page 6: Amity School of Business FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING. Module I Introduction to Accounting.

DIFFERENCE BETWEEN ACCOUNTANY AND

BOOKKEEPING.

Page 7: Amity School of Business FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING. Module I Introduction to Accounting.

• Book keeping is merely recording the business transactions in books and ledgers. It is part of Accounting. It is often routine and clerical in nature

• Accounting is a wider concept: Compilation of accounts in such a way that one is in a position to understand state of affairs of business

• ACCOUNTING BEGINS WHERE BOOK-KEEPING ENDS

Accounting and Book-Keeping

Page 8: Amity School of Business FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING. Module I Introduction to Accounting.

Financial Accounting

• Financial accounting - focuses on the specific needs of decision makers external to the organization, such as stockholders, suppliers, banks, and government agencies

Page 9: Amity School of Business FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING. Module I Introduction to Accounting.

Users of Financial Information

InvestorsCommunity

Board of DirectorsManagement

EmployeesSuppliers

Creditors

Customers

Government

Internal UsersExternal Users

Page 10: Amity School of Business FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING. Module I Introduction to Accounting.

BRANCHES OF ACCOUNTING

• Financial Accounting

• Management Accounting

• Cost Accounting

• Social responsibility Accounting

• Human Resource Accounting

Page 11: Amity School of Business FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING. Module I Introduction to Accounting.

BRANCHES OF ACCOUNTING• Financial Accounting: It includes Book keeping and the

preparation of Financial Statements.

• Management Accounting: It is a system to assemble and furnish the useful material and summarized accounting information to the management.

• Cost Accounting: It deals with the cost of production and its various constituents.

• Social responsibility Accounting: It is the study of social effects in addition with the economic effects.

• Human Resource Accounting: is the process of identifying and measuring data about human resource and communicating this information to interested parties.

Page 12: Amity School of Business FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING. Module I Introduction to Accounting.

Objectives of Accounting• To maintain systematic records• To ascertain the operational profit or loss• To ascertain financial position• To satisfy requirements of law, Govt.& other

interested parties• To facilitate rational & futuristic decision making• To Provide remedial measures devices for the

deviations of the actual from the budgeted performance

Page 13: Amity School of Business FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING. Module I Introduction to Accounting.

Functions Of Accounting• Performance measurement

• Forecasting

• Government Regulation and Taxation

• Evaluation and Control

• Decision Making

• Fixing Responsibility

Page 14: Amity School of Business FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING. Module I Introduction to Accounting.

Significance of Accounting

IdentifiesIdentifies

RecordsRecords

CommunicatesCommunicatesRelevantRelevant

ReliableReliable

ComparableComparable

AccountingAccounting is a

system that

information

that is

to help users make better decisions.

to help users make better decisions.

Page 15: Amity School of Business FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING. Module I Introduction to Accounting.

LIMITATIONS OF ACCOUNTING

• Danger of window dressing

• Ignorance about the present value of business

• Influenced by personal judgments

• Ignores important non-monetary information

• Does not provide timely information


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