What is 'Accounting'
Accounting is the systematic and comprehensive recording of
financial transactions pertaining to a business, and it also refers to the
process of summarizing, analyzing and reporting these transactions to oversight
agencies and tax collection entities. Accounting is one of the key functions
for almost any business; it may be handled by a bookkeeper and accountant at
small firms or by sizable finance departments with dozens of employees at large
companies.
The reports generated by various streams of accounting, such
as cost accounting and management accounting, are invaluable in helping
management make informed business decisions. While basic accounting functions
can be handled by a bookkeeper, advanced accounting is typically handled by
qualified accountants who possess designations such as Certified Public
Accountant (CPA) in the United States, or Chartered Accountant (CA), Certified
General Accountant (CGA) or Certified Management Accountant (CMA) in Canada.
Creating Financial Statements
The financial statements that summarize a large company's
operations, financial position and cash flows over a particular period are
concise statements based on thousands of financial transactions. As a result,
all accounting designations are the culmination of years of study and rigorous
examinations combined with a minimum number of years of practical accounting
experience.
Generally Accepted Accounting Principles
In most cases, accountants use generally accepted accounting
principles (GAAP) when preparing financial statements. GAAP is a set of
standards related to balance sheet identification, outstanding share
measurements and other accounting issues, and its standards are based on
double-entry accounting, a method which enters each expense or incoming revenue
in two places on a company's balance sheet.
Example of Double Entry Accounting
To illustrate double-entry accounting, imagine a business
issues an invoice to one of its clients. An accountant using the double-entry
method enters a credit under the accounts receivables column and a debit under
the balance sheet's revenue column. When the client pays the invoice, the
accountant debits accounts receivables and credits revenue. Double-entry
accounting is also called balancing the books, as all of the accounting entries
are balanced against each other. If the entries aren't balanced, the accountant
knows there must be a mistake somewhere in the ledger.
Financial Accounting Versus Management Accounting
Financial accounting refers to the processes accountants use
to generate the annual accounting statements of a firm. Management accounting
uses much of the same processes but utilizes information in different ways.
Namely, in management accounting, an accountant generates monthly or quarterly
reports that a business's management team can use to make decisions about how
the business operates.
Financial Accounting Versus Cost Accounting
Just as management accounting helps businesses make
decisions about management, cost accounting helps businesses make decisions
about costing. Essentially, cost accounting considers all of the costs related
to producing a product. Analysts, managers, business owners and accountants use
this information to determine what their products should cost. In cost
accounting, money is cast as an economic factor in production, whereas in
financial accounting, money is considered to be a measure of a company's
economic performance.
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