Generally Accepted Accounting Principles
acquisition cost
most objective basis/original cost
full disclosure principle
required to provide necessary information for informed decisions (foot notes or attachments)
cash basis
revenue recognized when received
revenue recognition principle
revenues are recognized as soon as goods/services are sold (when earned, realized, realizable)
conservatism principle
when in doubt, record any loss and do not record any gain
monetary unit assumption
you cannot record something without value/number
fiscal
12 month period
objectivity principle
accounting info and financial reporting should be supported w unbiased evidence (more relevant and reliable)
historical cost principle
all assets should be recorded based on acquisition cost
materiality principle
all important info that can sway opinion of a user should be included in financial statements (relative in size & performance)
accrual basis principle
all transactions be recognized in the period in which they occurred (when earned and realizable)
going concern assumption
business entity is assumed to remain in existence and carry objectives and commitment for an indeterminate period of time
accounting entity assumption
business transactions are not equal to personal transactions, records should not include personal assets or liabilities
time period assumption
economic life of business can be divided (at least 1 year)
matching principle
expense recognition, efforts/expenses are matched, prevents understatement of expenses, cause and effect between revenues & expenses
reliability
favorable and unfavorable info is presented in financial statements
relevance
financial statements are accurate, can be used to predict future performance
accounts receivable
goods were sold on credit