Financial Acct Chapter 2 WileyPlus
The convention of consistency refers to consistent use of accounting principles:
from period to period.
One of the reasons that makes accounting numbers difficult to compare across companies is:
- different year-end. - differences in size. - differences in products and markets.
The periodicity assumption states that the economic life of a business can be divided into:
artificial time periods.
Many companies choose end of year to:
coincide with period of low business activity.
If investors do not have faith in a company's financial statements, they will:
discount the price of the company's stocks.
Accounting information should be neutral in order to enhance:
faithful representation.
Accounting information should be verifiable in order to enhance:
faithful representation.
The full disclosure principle dictates that:
financial statements should disclose all events and circumstances that would matter to users of financial statements.
In order for accounting information to be relevant, it must:
help predict future events or confirm prior expectations.
An item is considered material if:
its size is likely to influence the decision of an investor or creditor.
The two fundamental qualities of useful information are:
relevance and faithful representation.
For accounting information to have relevance, it must be:
timely.
Information that is presented in a clear fashion, so that users of that information can interpret it, is an example of:
understandability.