Financial Accounting For Dummies. Maire Loughran
Чтение книги онлайн.
Читать онлайн книгу Financial Accounting For Dummies - Maire Loughran страница 12
Though the United States is developing a global marketplace, as of this writing, U.S. GAAP may differ significantly from accounting principles used by businesses in other countries. Therefore, comparing financial statements of a foreign-based company and a U.S.-based company is difficult.
Consistency
Consistency means the company uses the same accounting treatment for the same type of accounting transactions — both within a certain financial period and among various financial periods. Doing so allows the user to know that the financial accountant is not doing the accounting equivalent of comparing a dog to a cat. Both are animals, both are furry, but as any pet owner knows, you have a basic lack of consistency between the two.
Keep in mind that a company is allowed to switch accounting methods if it has a valid business purpose for the switch; the company isn’t stuck using only one method throughout its existence. An example of a good reason for a switch in methods is if using a different accounting method presents a more accurate financial picture. But a change in methods can’t be done willy-nilly whenever the business feels like it. I provide the whole scoop on changes in accounting treatment in Chapter 20. Also, the company has to disclose this change in its footnotes to the financial statements; see Chapter 15.
SEEING HOW DEPRECIATION AFFECTS THE BOTTOM LINE
Depreciation is the process of systematically reclassifying the cost of an asset from the balance sheet to the income statement over its useful life — a topic I discuss at length in Chapter 12. A few different methods of depreciation are allowed by GAAP, so unless you know which method the company is using, you can’t effectively compare one company to another.
Consider an example. For the same asset, here is the amount of depreciation a company can take for the asset’s first year of use depending on which commonly used depreciation method it employs:
Straight-line depreciation: $54,000
Double-declining balance depreciation: $120,000
The difference between the two methods is a whopping $66,000 ($120,000 – $54,000)! Now imagine depreciating equipment that costs in the millions of dollars; the effect on the company’s bottom line net income of choosing one depreciation method versus another would be even more astonishing.
Luckily for the financial statement users, to aid in comparability, the depreciation method in use by a company must be disclosed in the notes to the financial statements. For much more info about depreciation, jump to Chapter 12. For the scoop on what financial statement notes are, head to Chapter 15.
Consistency is crucial when it comes to depreciation. If the company lacks consistency —for example, it uses different depreciation methods when accounting for the same asset in different years — you cannot create truly useful financial statements.
Accepting Financial Accounting Constraints
While preparing financial statements, accountants realize that time is money and there is a limit to the amount of cost that should be incurred for any reporting benefit. The agencies that set the standards for accounting practices (which I introduce in Chapter 4) always perform a cost/benefit analysis before finalizing any reporting requirements. Associated with this financial accounting constraint is the concept of materiality.
Materiality is the importance you place on an area of financial reporting based upon its overall significance. What is material for one business may not be material for another. You have to consider the size of the company, the size of the financial statement transaction, the particular circumstances in which the transaction occurred, and any other factors that can help you judge whether the issue is truly significant to the financial statement users.
COST/BENEFIT LOST IN THE WOODS
Years ago, the bookkeeper at one of my client companies spent five hours tracking down the reason why the company bank reconciliation was off by $2 to make sure the bank hadn’t made a mistake. (Preparing a bank reconciliation means you take the balance in the bank account per the bank as of a certain date, add in any deposits that got to the bank too late to hit the statement, and subtract any checks the company has written that have not yet cleared.) Yikes!
Now, was this an effective and efficient use of that bookkeeper’s time and salary expense? No, of course not. Say she was paid $10 per hour. It cost the company $50 for her to confirm that the operating account bank balance was indeed off by $2, and it wasn’t just an inadvertent mistake on the part of the bank.
For example, an expense totaling $10,000 would be material if the total expense amount is $50,000 but would likely be immaterial if the total expense was $500,000. But the nature of the transaction may make the difference material even if the comparative size is immaterial. For example, $10,000 that is deliberately — not accidentally — excluded from income may be material even if the amount is a small percentage of overall income. That’s because the deliberate exclusion may be an attempt by the owner of the company to avoid paying taxes on the income.
Conservatism is very important in financial accounting. It means that when in doubt, the financial accountant should choose the financial accounting treatment that will cause the least favorable effect on revenue or expenses.
Considering Your Ethical Responsibilities
Every professional — and, frankly, every individual — should operate using a code of conduct. This means you should always attempt to act in an ethical manner and do the right thing, regardless of whether doing the right thing is the best choice for you personally.
In this section, I give you the nuts and bolts of the code of conduct that financial accountants must follow. Plus, you find out about the goals toward which financial accountants strive: integrity, objectivity, and independence.
Following the accountant’s code of conduct
In a financial accounting class, you learn about different employment and licensing options available to financial accountants — a topic I discuss in Chapter 22. Financial accountants who are serious about their profession normally become certified