Sunday, June 26, 2011

Chapter 6 The Statement of Cash Flows: The Foundational Theory and A Case Study Tutorial


Introduction

In Chapter Two you were introduced to the Monetary Unit Assumption that limits financial accounting to transactions that can be measured in money.  As you further studied in Chapter Two, this limitation means that other (non-monetary) information that is important to financial markets needs to be provided from sources outside the financial accounting paradigm.  Since the financial accounting portion of the financial market information pie is limited, and some would say shrinking, the FASB wanted to make the information that it did provide as useful as possible.  So in 1987, FAS 95 required the Cash Flow Statement in GAAP financial reports. 
The authoritative foundation of the Statement of Cash Flows is in Statement of Financial Accounting Concepts No. 1: Objectives of Financial Reporting by Business Enterprises.
49. Financial reporting should provide information about how an enterprise obtains and spends cash, about its borrowing and repayment of borrowing, about its capital transactions, including cash dividends and other distributions of enterprise resources to owners, and about other factors that may affect an enterprise’s liquidity or solvency. For example, although reports of an enterprise’s cash receipts and cash outlays during a period are generally less useful than earnings information for measuring enterprise performance during a period and for assessing an enterprise’s ability to generate favorable cash flows (paragraphs 42–46), information about cash flows or other funds flows may be useful in understanding the operations of an enterprise, evaluating its financing activities, assessing its liquidity or solvency, or interpreting earnings information provided. Information about earnings and economic resources, obligations, and owners’ equity may also be useful in assessing an enterprise’s liquidity or solvency[1].

Friday, June 17, 2011

Chapter 5 Refining Financial Statements: Classified Balance Sheet and Multi-Step Income Statement


Introduction

In this Chapter, you will incrementally refine your financial accounting knowledge base by studying the Classified Balance Sheet and Multi-Step Income Statement.  If you are not proficient in the base financial accounting rules, mechanics and terminology, then the material presented in this Chapter will be quite confusing.  On the other hand, if you have mastered the foundational accounting language and are confident in your ability to analyze basic economic transactions and to complete a full accounting cycle as outlined in Chapters One through Four, you will find this Chapter to be very simple.  Since I am writing this book for the best students who want to be challenged, refining a couple of financial statements isn’t enough meat for a full Chapter so I am going to supplement it with the most important (and most interesting and challenging) topic that an accounting student can study.  I do not expect you to find easy answers, I want you to embark on an academic journey that begins by asking the question: Is There a Crisis in the Financial Accounting Paradigm?

Saturday, June 11, 2011

Chapter 4 Accrual Accounting


The Periodicity Assumption

Recall that in Chapter Two you were introduced to the Generally Accepted Accounting Principle Periodicity Assumption that financial reports are prepared at yearend, regardless of an economic entity’s operating cycle[1].  An organization’s operating cycle describes how quickly it turns its cash (used to buy or manufacture Inventory) into cash it receives from its customers (including any time to collect Accounts receivable).  To illustrate this concept, consider two companies described in Table 4.1.
Table 4 1

Sunday, June 5, 2011

Chapter 3 Analyzing and Recording Transactions


Chapter 3

Measuring Wealth

In Chapters One and Two you studied why financial accounting is an important component of our financial market.  Without standardized financial reporting in accordance with rules issued by an authoritative body (FASB), investors would have a difficult time comparing competing financial instruments (IOU’s), and markets would be less efficient.  In the next two chapters you begin to investigate what information financial accounting is designed to record and report in a standardized format.  At the dawn of the Industrial Revolution, Adam Smith observed and painstakingly documented a phenomenon with empirical evidence gathered though observation and quantitative data analysis.  His findings were the basis for a new scientific paradigm devoted to studying England’s new economic culture.  Wherever you live, Smith’s words from 1776 are still relevant to you today.  Please read: Volume One Introduction and Plan of the Work and Book I, Chapter I Of the Division of Labor http://www.econlib.org/library/Smith/smWN.htmlThis reading should take no more than 30 minutes, that is if you are able to stop…
In Chapter One, you studied the “invisible hand” that moves the economy.  Adam Smith described the economy’s change in focus from King and country to the motivation of each individual citizen.  Whereas Socrates described the economic benefit of teaching men to work for the greater good, Smith asserted that expecting a benevolent economic architect to create a greater good was an impossible and unrealistic dream.  Smith observed that a rational man acting in his own self-interest produced the greatest amount of wealth.  Through specialization and division of labor, each man becomes more productive by deciding for himself how best to spend his time.  In short, the paradigm can be described as thinking small, concentrating on the individual desires and motivation of men, in order to accomplish something grand, creating the greatest amount of wealth.
Give me that which I want, and you shall have this which you want, is the meaning of every such offer; and it is in this manner that we obtain from one another the far greater part of those good offices which we stand in need of. It is not from the benevolence of the butcher, the brewer, or the baker, that we expect our dinner, but from their regard to their own interest. We address ourselves, not to their humanity but to their self-love, and never talk to them of our own necessities but of their advantages. (Smith, 1776, Book 1, Chapter II, Paragraph 2)
The idea to provide ALL men with the knowledge and freedom to act in their own best interest was revolutionary and represented the destruction of the previous “top-down” economic paradigm and is the philosophical basis of our free market economy.