Chapter 3
chart of accounts
a listing of accounts used by a specific company.
incurred
acquired
operating expenses
any kind of outflows or uses of assets to prolong the operation of the business.
losses
are decreases in assets or increases in liabilities from peripheral transactions.
operating cash-to-cash cycle
begins when a company receives goods to sell (or, in the case of a service company, has employees work), pays for them, and sells to customers; it ends when the customers pay cash to the company.
non-operating revenues & expenses
investment revenues, interest expense, gains/losses on disposals of assets. Revenues or expenses that have nothing to do with the operation of your business but they still make or cost you money.
unearned revenue
payment of cash before earning of revenue has been completed. (current liability)
prepaid expenses
prepaying for something that we have not received yet. (current asset)
revenue
recognized on the income statement when earned not when cash is received.
cash basis of accounting
reporting revenues only when cash is received and expenses only when cash is paid.
expense matching principle
requires that expenses be recognized in the same period as the related revenues.
cash basis
revenue recognized when cash received-cash paid=net income
revenue realization principle
revenues should be recognized when they are earned, not necessarily when cash is received.
time period assumption
the assumption that the long life of a company can be reported in shorter time periods, such as months, quarters, and years.
measurement issues
what amounts should be recognized?
recognition issues
when should the effects of operating activities be recognized (recorded)?
the expense matching principle
Requires that costs incurred to generate revenue be recognized in the same period. This matches benefits with costs.
accrual basis
revenues recognized when earned-expenses incurred=accrual net income