Chapter 1 Flashcards
Accounting (def)
Accounting identifies, measures and communicates financial information about economic entities to interested persons.
2 broad accounting classifications
Financial Accounting
Managerial Accounting
Financial Accounting
- Preparation of FS
- Internal and external users
- Investors, creditors and others
Managerial Accounting
- Communicates financial information through varied forms
- Internal decision-makers
- Management uses to plan, evaluate, control operations
Goal of FS
communicates financial information to outsiders
Major FS
- Statement of financial position / Balance sheet
- Statement of Income / Statement of comprehensive income / Income statement / Statement of profit or loss / statement of financial performance
- Statement of cash flows / Cash flow statement
- Statement of changes in equity (IFRS) / Statement of retained earnings (ASPE)
Sources for resource allocation
- Debt and equity markets
- Financial institutions
Key stakeholders of FS and what is at stake
- Investors / creditors: investment/loan
- Management: Job, bonus, salary increase, access to capital markets by company
- Securities commissions and stock exchanges: reputation, effective and efficient capital marketplace
- Analysts and credit rating agencies: reputation, profits
- Auditors: reputation, profits
- Standard setters: reputation
Objective of Financial Reporting
To provide financial information about the reporting entity that is useful to current and potential decision makers (decision-usefulness approach)
Information symmetry
All stakeholders should have equal access to all relevant information
Information Asymmetry
When managers have access to more information than other stakeholders
Cost/benefit of sharing information
More information - could facilitate flow of capital and lower the cost of capital
Too much information - give away proprietary information that could cause profits to fall and impact a company’s competitive advantage
Reasons for information asymmetry
- efficient markets hypothesis
- human behaviour
Types of asymmetry problems
- Adverse selection: knowing that there is information asymmetry, capital markets may attract wrong kinds of participants
- Moral Hazard: concept that people will shirk responsibility if there is no accountability
Information Asymmetry Issues (management bias)
- Aggressive accounting - downplay the negative and focus on the positive
- Conservative accounting - downplay the positives and focus on the negatives
What are accounting standards
Standards are not rules, regulations or laws; they are recommendations
AcSB
Canadian Accounting Standards Board
- Canadian private companies (ASPE)
- Pension plans
- not-for-profit entities
IASB
International Accounting Standards Board
- public companies (IFRS)
- option for not-for-profit entities and private companies
FASB
Financial Accounting Standards Board
- US entities (US GAAP)
- option for Canadian public companies listed on a US stock exchange
Value Creation
Process of creating potential for
- revenue and net income in the future
- future benefits for stakeholders
ESG
environmental, social and governance