Accounting Principles: (Cheat Sheet)
Accounting Principles: (Cheat Sheet)
(Cheat Sheet)
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Accounting Principles
The financial statements distributed to people outside of a U.S. corporation must be in compliance
with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP or US GAAP). US GAAP includes basic
accounting concepts and underlying principles to very complex and detailed accounting standards
issued by the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB). The following are some of the
underlying concepts, principles and assumptions of accounting.
Cost Principle
The cost principle (or historical cost principle) requires that transactions be recorded at their cost.
Cost is defined as the cash amount or the cash equivalent amount at the time of the transaction.
Except for certain marketable investment securities and impairments, the recorded amounts are
not increased for inflation or market values. However, there are cases when the cost amounts are
reduced to amounts that are less than the original cost amount.
Example 1. A company purchased land in the year 1983 for $50,000. The company continues to own
the land without making any improvements. A recent appraisal indicates the lands current market
value is $475,000. The companys current balance sheet will report the land at $50,000.
Example 2. A contractor provided emergency service to a client on December 30. The work required
the contractor to rent some special equipment for $2,000. The contractor will bill the client $19,000
on January 10 and will pay the equipment rental company on January 10. Under the accrual method
of accounting the contractor had revenue of $19,000 in December and equipment rent expense of
$2,000 in December. (Under the cash method, the company would report the revenue and expense
in January.)
Matching Principle
The matching principle, which is associated with the accrual method of accounting, requires a
company to match expenses with revenues. For example, a retailers income statement should
match the cost of the goods that were sold with the sales of the goods. It also requires the matching
of sales commission expense with the related sales. If these cause and effect relationships are not
present, an expense is to appear on the income statement when a cost is used up or has expired. If
there is uncertainty, a cost should be expensed immediately. For instance, the cost of a retailers ads
that were run in December is to be expensed in December, since there is uncertainty as to any future
benefit from the ads.
Example 3. A company purchased land several years ago for $200,000. The company continues to
hold the land without making any improvements. During the time after the land was purchased the
general price index for inflation has increased by 5% and the value of land has increased by 15%.
The companys current balance sheet will report the land at $200,000
Materiality
The concept of materiality allows a minor violation of an accounting principle if the amount is
insignificant. The amount must be very minor in relation to a corporations assets and net income. In
other words, a lender or investor must not be misled.
Example 4. Companies often expense immediately the purchase of assets that have a cost of $500
or less. The justification is that a lender or investor will not be misled with a $500 expense occurring
in the first year instead of $100 per year for 5 years.
Conservatism
The concept of conservatism provides guidance to an accountant who is faced with two acceptable
alternative ways for reporting an amount. Conservatism tells the accountant to break the tie by
using the alternative that will result in less net income and less assets or greater liabilities. The
concept does NOT instruct accountants to report the lowest amounts possible.
Example 5. Due to advances in technology, most of the items in a companys inventory have had
their value dropped dramatically. Should the company report the loss in value now, or should the
company wait until the items in inventory are sold. Conservatism directs the accountant to report the
loss now (as opposed to waiting until the items are sold).
Consistency
Consistency means that the same method of accounting should be followed from period to period.
For example, if a company has adopted the LIFO cost flow assumption for valuing its inventory, it is
required to use LIFO in all of the subsequent years. (In the year that a company switched from FIFO
to LIFO, the financial statements must communicate clearly that the FIFO consistency had ended.)
Reliability
Another qualitative characteristic of accounting is reliability. This means that accountants should be
reporting amounts that are dependable and free from bias.