homework chapter one
Each business is accounted for separately from its owner or owners.
Business entity assumption
principles that determine whether an action is right or wrong
ethics
the company paid 1000 cash in dividends to the owner
(1000) cash = -1000 dividends
the company paid 10000 cash to settle the liability created in transaction c
(10000) cash = 10000 accounts payable
the company paid 15000 cash for rent of office space for the month
(1500) cash = - 1500 expenses
the company paid an assistant 3000 cash as wages for the month
(3000) cash = - 3000 expenses
the company purchased additional equipment for 6000 cash
(6000) cash + 6000 equipment
the company purchased 10,000 of additional equipment on credit (payment due within 30 days)
10,000 equipment = 10,000 accounts payable
the company completed work for a client and immediately collected the 2500 cash earned
2500 cash = 2500 revenue
the company collected 5000 cash as a partial payment for the amount owed by the client in transaction e
5000 cash + (5000) accounts receivable
owner invested 60,000 cash in the company along with equipment that had a 15,000 market value in exchange for its common stock
60000 cash + 15000 equipment = 75000 common stock
the company completed work for a client and sent a bill for $8000 to be received within 30 days
8000 accounts receivable = 8000 revenues
An assessment of whether financial statements follow GAAP
Audit
a group that sets accounting principles in the US
FASB
financial statements reflect the assumption that the business continues operating
Going concern assumption
A company records the expenses incurred to generate the revenues reported.
Matching (expense recognition) principle
A company reports details behind financial statements that would impact users' decisions.
full disclosure principle
concepts, assumptions, and guidelines for preparing financial statements
general accounting principle
info is based on actual costs incurred in transactions
measurement (cost) principle
Amount a business earns in excess of all expenses and costs associated with its sales and revenues
net income
accounting professionals who provide services to many clients
public accountants
revenue is recorded when products and services are delivered
revenue recognition principle
detailed rules used in reporting events and transactions
specific accounting principle