Entrepreneurial Small Business 5th Edition; Chapter 12
Financial Accounting
A formula, rule-based set of accounting principles and procedures intended for use by outside owners, investors, banks, and regulators.
Assets
Something the business owns that is expected to have economic value in the future.
Financial Strength
The ability of a business to survive adverse financial events.
Going Concern Concept
The accounting concept that a business is expected to continue in existence for the foreseeable future.
Permanent Accounts
The accounts of assets, liabilities, and owners' equity, excluding accounts for revenue and expenses.
Master Budget
A budget, also referred to as a comprehensive budget, that consists of sets of budgets that detail all projected receipts and spending for the budgeted period.
Public Business
A business that has its stock bought and sold on an organized stock exchange, such as the New York Stock Exchange.
Financial Flexibility
A business's ability to manage cash flow in such a manner that the company can respond appropriately to unexpected opportunities and needs.
Expense
A decrease in owners' equity caused by consuming your product or service.
Budget
A financial plan for the future based on a single level of operations; a quantitive expression of the use of resources necessary to achieve a business's strategic goals.
LIquidity
A measure of how quickly company can raise money through internal sources by converting assets to cash.
Costs of Goods Sold Budget
A schedule that shows the predicted cost of product actually sold during the accounting period.
Cash Flow Statement
A statement of the sources and uses of cash in a business for a specific period of time.
Balance Sheet
A statement of what a business owns (assets), what it owes to others (liabilities), and how much value the owners have invested in it (equity).
Managerial Accounting
Accounting methods that are specifically intended to be by managers for planning, directing, and controlling a business.
Operating Activities
Activities involved in producing and selling goods and services.
Financing Activities
Activities through which cash is obtained from and paid to lenders, owners, and investors.
MARCS Rate
An Internal Revenue Service acronym for the Modified Accelerated Cost Recovery System. The MARCS approach lets taxpayers depreciate more of the cost earlier in the life of a capital expense.
Tax Accounting
An accounting approach based on specific accounting requirements set by governmental taxing agencies.
Activity-Based Cost Estimate
An accounting method that assigns costs based on the different type of work a business does in order to sell a particular product or service.
Revenue
An increase in owners equity caused by selling your product or service.
Internal (Cost) Factors
Aspects of or choices within the business that could cause the business's costs to change.
External (Cost) Factors
Aspects of the world outside the business that could cause the business's costs to change.
Financial Statements
Formula summaries of the content of an accounting system's records of transactions.
Current
In accounting, current means an asset that will be turned into cash in less than one year or liability that must be paid in less than one year.
Long Term
In accounting, long term refers to an asset that will still have value to the business more than one year form now or a liability that will still be owed more than one year from now.
Account
In terms of a accounting practice, an account is a chronological list of all additions to and subtractions from a single type of assets (e.g., cash, receivables, loans outstanding).
Pro Forma
Latin "in the form of" when used to describe financial statements; indicates estimated or hypothetical information.
Liablities
Legal obligations to give up things of value in the future.
Depreciation
Regular and systematic reduction in income that transfers asset value to expense over time.
Business Entity Concept
The concept that a business has an existence separate from that of its owners.
Articulatee
The concept that information flows from the income statement through the statements of retained earnings and owners' equity to the balance sheet.
Variance
The difference between an actual and budgeted revenue or cost.
Owners' Equity
The difference between assets and liabilities of a business.
Economy of Scale
The idea that it is cheaper (per items) to make many of an item than few.
Breakeven Point
The point at which total costs equal gross revenue.
Investing Activities
The purchase and sale of land, buildings, equipment, and securities.
Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP)
The standardized rules for accounting procedures set out by the Financial Accounting Standards Board and used in all audits and submissions of accounting reports to the government.
Accounting Equation
The statement that assets equal liabilities plus owners' equity (Assets = Liabilities + Owners' Equity).
Retained Earnings
The sum of all profits and losses, less all dividends paid since the beginning of the business.
Current Ratio
The value of current assets divided by current liabilities.
Variable Costs
Those costs that change with each unit produced, for example, raw materials.
Fixed Costs
Those costs that remain constant regardless of quantity of output, for example, rent.
Cost-Volume-Profit (CVP) Analysis
A managerial accounting technique that looks at the fixed and variable costs of a business to arrive at a number of unit sales (volume) to maximize profits.
Income Statement
A statement that lists revenues and expenses and shows the amount of profit a business makes for a special period of time.
Variance Analysis
The process of determining the effect of price and quantity changes on revenues and expenses.