FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING ACTG 3000 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 12
About This Presentation
Title:

FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING ACTG 3000

Description:

FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING ACTG 3000 Presented by Charles Kile, Ph.D. Professor of Accounting Middle Tennessee State University What is Income? IF Accounting is viewed as a ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:81
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 13
Provided by: kil97
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING ACTG 3000


1
FINANCIAL ACCOUNTINGACTG 3000
  • Presented by Charles Kile, Ph.D.
  • Professor of Accounting
  • Middle Tennessee State University

2
What is Income?
  • IF Accounting is viewed as a measure of economic
    performance . . .
  • . . . THEN income is the unit of measurement.

3
Income Profit Earnings
  • These are simply synonymous terms to describe
    the unit of measurement used in the accounting
    system.
  • These are not real items. Their inherent meaning
    is only derived by how their measurement is
    determined.

4
Income (Profit, Earnings)is comprised of
  • REVENUE
  • -- and EXPENSES
  • (and other special adjustments ( , --)

5
GAAP The Rules that Public Companies Must Follow
for Financial Reporting
  • Generally
  • Accepted
  • Accounting
  • Principals

6
3 Criteria for Recognition of Revenue
  • 1- The Work has been completed.
  • 2- The Collection of money (funds) is reasonably
    assured.
  • 3- Collection of funds is reliably measured.

7
Recording CostsASSETS EXPENSES
  • 1- Immediately Expensed - Now
  • 2- Through Long-Term Assets - In Bits Pieces
    over time
  • 3- Through Inventory - When Sold
  • 4- Through Land - Never

8
The Financial Statements
  • Income Statement
  • Balance Sheet
  • Statement of Cash Flows
  • Retained Earnings Statement
  • Footnote Information

9
INCOME STATEMENTREVENUE
  • SALES - Revenue generated from selling inventory
    to customers.
  • SERVICE REVENUE AND FEES REVENUE Revenue
    generated from performing a service as one of the
    companys lines of business.

10
Operating Expenses
  • COST OF GOODS SOLD the cost of inventory that
    has been sold
  • WAGE EXPENSE the cost of paying employees
  • RENT EXPENSE the cost of paying rent
  • UTILITIES EXPENSE the cost of paying utilities
  • INTEREST EXPENSE the cost of paying interest on
    borrowing
  • DEPRECIATION EXPENSE the amount of depreciation
    taken on long-term assets this year
  • AMORTIZATION EXPENSE the amount of amortization
    taken on intangible assets this year
  • SELLING GENERAL AND ADMINSTRATIVE a host of
    expense items not related to production
    activities.

11
OTHER INCOME STATEMENT ACCOUNTS
  • Other Revenue
  • INTEREST INCOME revenue earned by lending money
  • GAINS ON SALES OF ASSETS amount cleared over
    the cost of a sold asset
  • Other Expenses
  • LOSSES ON SALES OF ASSETS amount deficient
    relative to the cost of a sold asset

12
Mechanics of Accounting
  • lt ASSETS and EXPENSES increase with a DEBIT
    entry. The have DEBIT balances.
  • gt LIABILITIES, EQUITY REVENUE increase with a
    CREDIT entry and have CREDIT balances.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com