Solution Financial Accounting Theory and Analysis Text and Cases 10th Edition Richard G. Sc
财务会计理论
财务会计理论财务会计理论(Financial Accounting Theory)是关于财务会计的概念、原则、规则和方法的系统分析和研究。
它旨在解释和理解财务报告和信息披露的背后逻辑,以及财务会计的基本原理和规则。
以下是一些财务会计理论的主要内容和要点:1.会计信息的目标和用户:财务会计理论关注会计信息的目标与用户,即提供关于企业财务状况、业绩和现金流量等方面的信息,以满足内部和外部利益相关者的需要。
2.会计概念和财务报告:财务会计理论研究会计的基本概念和财务报告的制定原则。
其中包括会计实体、计量基础(如历史成本、公允价值)、会计期间概念、会计主体和会计恒等原则等。
3.会计政策选择与财务决策:财务会计理论考虑了企业可能面临的各种会计政策选择,以及这些会计政策对财务报告和经济决策的影响。
研究会计政策对财务报告质量和意义的影响,并探讨会计政策的经济和市场后果。
4.会计准则和国际会计标准:财务会计理论研究了各国的会计准则和国际会计标准,比较不同的会计规则和制度,并提出推动国际会计准则标准化的理论和实践措施。
5.信息披露与透明度:财务会计理论研究了信息披露的目的、内容和质量,以提高企业的信息透明度和市场效率。
研究会计报告的可靠性、诚信度和质量对投资者和其他利益相关者的影响。
6.公司治理和财务会计:财务会计理论研究了公司治理结构和机制对财务会计的影响。
通过研究公司治理机制与财务报告的关系,揭示了公司治理对财务会计质量和可信度的重要性。
财务会计理论的研究旨在提高财务报告质量、加强信息披露和透明度,推动全球资本市场的健康发展。
理论研究的成果对于会计准则的发展、企业决策的制定和投资者保护具有重要的指导作用。
Financial Accounting TheoryCraig Deegan:财务会计theorycraig迪根
Criticisms of inductive method
• ‘… concentrates on the status quo, is reactionary in attitude and cannot provide a basis upon which current practice may be evaluated or from which future improvements may be deduced’ (Gray, Owen & Maunders 1987, p. 66)
– we should critically evaluate theories before accepting them
Copyright 2006 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd PPTs t/a Financial Accounting Theory 2e by Deegan
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Early development of accounting theory
• Relied upon the process of induction
– development of ideas or theories through observation
• 1920s to 1960s theories developed from observing what accountants did in practice
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Learning objectives (cont.)
– theories, including theories of accounting, are developed as a result of applying various value judgements and that acceptance of one theory, in preference to others, will in part be tied to one’s own value judgements
mba fa 《financial accounting》 习题答案1
CHAPTER 1FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING ANDITS ECONOMIC CONTEXTISSUES FOR DISCUSSIONID1–1Security analysts and stockholders: These users would use financial statements to try to estimate the future earnings and cash flow potential of the company, which would be used to project a value for the company’s stock.Bank loan officers: These users would use the financial statements to determine the ability of a company to repay loans to the bank.A company’s customers and suppliers: These users would use financial statements todetermine whether to extend credit to the company (suppliers) or whether to rely upon the company to be a supplier (customers). Both suppliers and customers would also use the financial statements to monitor the company’s profit margins.Public utilities: This group would use the financial statements to determine the company’s growth rate and how that might impact upon the company’s utility needs. Also, they would evaluate the company’s ability to pay its bills.Labor unions: These groups would use the financial statements to monitor the profitability of the company to help determine the amount of pay raises and benefits that it will negotiate for from the company.A company’s managers: The company’s managers will use the financial statements to assessthe overall financial health of the company. This could impact the managers in a number of ways: raises, promotion opportunities, performance of other departments, etc.ID1–2The board of directors serves various functions for a company. One is to represent and protect the interests of the stockholders who are not on the board. Another is to provide oversight and input to management. The managers are involved in running the business on a day-to-day basis whereas the board is more focused on the bigger, long-term picture. A weak board may not ask probing questions of management but instead may take everything at face value and believe anything that management says to them. A healthy management team would want a strong board that delivers valuable input. A management team that wants a weak board of directors may be trying to hide something (management fraud).Auditors are concerned with management fraud because, if there is a problem, in many cases the auditors will be sued by the stockholders on the basis that the auditors should have detected the fraud.ID1–3The function of the audit committee is to provide a channel whereby the auditors report their findings and concerns, if any, to the board of directors. Typically there are outside members of the board that are on the audit committee so that if the auditors have concerns about management’s financial statements or activities, then the auditors have a way to speak directly to the board of directors.The auditors are in a sensitive position because the financial statements and activities that they are auditing are prepared by the same people who hire and pay the auditors. Therefore, they may be reluctant to jeopardize their relationship with the company by being too negative.ID1–4Since Pepsi’s profits increased by a greater percentage than sales increased, it must mean that expenses as a percentage of sales dropped. Pepsi was able to improve its profitability per dollar of sales.The growth in equity was larger than the growth in assets, indicating that Pepsi reduced its liabilities. The financing activities verify that Pepsi used a significant amount of cash, partially to reduce debt. In addition to the reduction in liabilities, the strong cash flow from operations was used to purchase additional assets for the company.ID1–5Creditors would impose these types of restrictions on Continental Airlines so that the creditors would be protected for their loans. These types of restrictions are fairly common and act as a trip wire to warn the creditors that business may not be going well. The cash restriction would force Continental to have enough cash to pay the interest on the debt, the minimum stockholders’ equity makes sure that there are assets to act as collateral for the loans, and the restriction of dividends insures that management doesn’t distribute cash or assets out to the stockholders and not leave assets in the company to satisfy the creditors.These restrictions act as trip wires in that as soon as a restriction is violated the creditors can call the debt and force the company to pay back the loans. What is more typical is for the loans to be restructured. This usually means higher interest rates and fees to do the restructuring. These all put the creditors in a better position to protect their loans.ID1–6Companies would usually engage in this type of behavior to try to improve their stock price. By showing higher revenues or lower expenses investors are more likely to reward the company with a higher stock price. Companies that have negative cash flow are under a lot of pressure to maintain a high stock price since selling stock is the only way to fund the business. This type of incentive can lead to questionable behavior.The ethical implications are significant because if investors lose faith in the financial statements that are reported this would severely impact the stock market. A strong driver to a robust economy is access to capital (stock markets). If this source is reduced because investors don’t believe the numbers that are reported, a very bad impact on the overall economy would result.ID1–7This is the normal statement that an auditor would make about a company whose books it had audited and found no significant problems. This would be part of what is called a “non-qualified opinion”. If there was a particular item that the auditors did not agree with they would issue a “qualified opinion” – they would agree with everything except the qualified item that would be identified.“In our opinion”, it is their opinion and not a fact, “fairly, in all material respects”, means that the auditors can not say that every single number is exactly accurate to the penny but that the numbers are generally about right. This reflects the concept of materiality. The auditors believe that all material items have been presented accurately. “in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles”, this means that the financial statements have been compiled in a way that meets all of the accounting principles that are called GAAP.ID1–8Corporate governance describes the relationship among the stakeholders of a company, mainly : the shareholders, the Board of Directors, management and the company’s auditors.Corporate governance mechanisms encourage management and the Board of Directors to act in the best interest of the shareholders and to provide the shareholders with accurate and timely financial information. The Sarbanes-Oxley Act was passed to upgrade the financial transparency of corporate operations, requiring increased financial disclosures and management responsibilities for the intergrity of the financial statements. Improved information provided to shareholders and other providers of capital will strenghten the confidence in the financial system, ultimately benefitting both providers and users of capital.ID1–9Management is charged with the responsibility to benefit the shareholders’ investment in the company. Choosing investments that will boost the short-term results of the company in lieu of long-term gains does not meet this requirement. While satisfying the needs of Wall Street analysts for short-term results, a management decision to forego larger long-term returns violates the relationship between the owners of the company and the management of the company. Many observers feel that short-term profit pressures from analysts have caused management to ignore its responsibility to work for the long-term benefit of the shareholder.ID1–10While the NYSE is reacting to potential rules changes based on marketing considerations, the SEC is reacting based on a desire to improve the quality of financial information that companies disclose. The SEC has a very strong argument in that the US equity markets are the largest and most liquid markets in the world. All other countries would love to have a financial market like the ones that exist in the US.One of the possible reasons that other countries don’t want to adopt the same accounting rules as exist in the US is that their companies may not compare well with US companies that have been operating under the stricter rules. To lower the accounting standards may have the impact of influencing the US capital markets to look more like capital markets in other countries, which would not be good for the US economy.ID1–11Many experts agree that one of the driving forces recently in economic growth has been the globalization of the economy, with countries across the world doing more and more business with each other. This globalization is threatened when the companies cannot agree on a uniform set of guidelines covering a business practice as important as financial reporting. The flow of capital is dependent on transparent and accurate financial information. If countries cannot agree on accounting standards, the ability of those companies to do business in each other’s markets, and the ability of capital to move from one country to another, will be limited.ID1–12Management accounting is the accounting system that generates information that is used exclusively by the managers of the company. Financial accounting refers to the financial statements that are prepared and distributed outside of the company. So in many cases management accounting information is the operational information used by the managers of the company. This can be very proprietary to the company and so is not made public.Management accounting numbers are not subject to audit and therefore are prepared in whatever form is helpful to the manager.Financial accounting information is audited and therefore has to follow GAAP. Its primary purpose is to be used by people outside of the company.ID1-13a. Home Depot is a large retailing company, focusing on hardware sales to consumers andcontractors. It is a retailer because it does not manufacture the goods that it sells. It buys products from vendors and offers those products for sale in its stores.b. The firm of KPMG audits the financial statements of Home Depot. The audit report consists of4 paragraphs. The first paragraph states what years and financial statements were auditedand therefore being commented upon by this audit report. The second paragraph explains what an audit is intended to do and how the company has gone about doing this audit. The third paragraph states the auditors’ opinion regarding the financial statements that have been audited. The final paragraph indicates a change in accounting methods by the company.c. Net income in 2003 was $4,304,000,000, for 2002 net income was $3,664,000,000 and for2001 net income was $3,044,000,000.d. 2003 2002Current liabilities $9,554 27.7% $8,035 26.8%Long-term liabilities 2,476 7.2% 2,174 7.2%Total assets $34,437 $30,011From 2002 to 2003 Home Depot increased its current liabilities by $1.5 billion and increased its long-term liabilities by $300 million. As a percentage of total assets, however, long-term liabilities remained constant. The ratio of current liabilities to total assets increased by nearly a percentage point. This shows that the increase in total assets (over $4 billion) was generated by the increase in current liabilities and net income.e. Cash from operating activities was $6,545,000,000 in 2003, in 2002 it was $4,802,000,000 andin 2001 was $5,963,000,000.f. Home Depot is considered to be one of the best-managed companies in the US. The companyis extremely profitable (see c above), growing and well-capitalized. This financial condition is reflected in the company’s cash balance of over $2.8 billion and shareholders’ equity of over $22 billion.。
Financial Accounting TheoryCraig Deegan:财务会计theorycraig迪根
• Perspective of accounting Darwinism
Copyright 2006 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd PPTs t/a Financial Accounting Theory 2e by Deegan
accounting information provided – prescribe what accounting information should be
provided to particular classes of stakeholders – predict that the relative power of a stakeholder group will
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Learning objectives
• In this chapter you will be provided with evidence that shows that
– there are many theories of financial accounting – the different theories of financial accounting are often
• Many theories of financial accounting exist • No universally accepted theory of accounting
– different perspectives about the central objective, role and scope of financial accounting
会计英文词汇
会计词汇:采编: 卢丽虹国际会计术语英汉对照Accounting system 会计系统American Accounting Association 美国会计协会American Institute of CPAs 美国注册会计师协会Audit 审计Balance sheet 资产负债表Bookkeepking 簿记Cash flow prospects 现金流量预测Certificate in Internal Auditing 内部审计证书Certificate in Management Accounting 管理会计证书Certificate Public Accountant注册会计师Cost accounting 本钱会计External users 外部使用者Financial accounting 财务会计Financial Accounting Standards Board 财务会计准那么委员会Financial forecast 财务预测Generally accepted accounting principles 公认会计原那么General-purpose information 通用目的信息Government Accounting Office 政府会计办公室Income statement 损益表Institute of Internal Auditors 内部审计师协会Institute of Management Accountants 管理会计师协会Integrity 整合性Internal auditing 内部审计Internal control structure 内部控制结构Internal Revenue Service 国内收入署Internal users 内部使用者Management accounting 管理会计Return of investment 投资回报Return on investment 投资报酬Securities and Exchange Commission 证券交易委员会Statement of cash flow 现金流量表Statement of financial position 财务状况表Tax accounting 税务会计Accounting equation 会计等式Articulation 勾稽关系Assets 资产Business entity 企业个体Capital stock 股本Corporation 公司Cost principle 本钱原那么Creditor 债权人Deflation 通货紧缩Disclosure 批露Expenses 费用Financial statement 财务报表Financial activities 筹资活动Going-concern assumption 持续经营假设Inflation 通货膨涨Investing activities 投资活动Liabilities 负债Negative cash flow 负现金流量Operating activities 经营活动Owner's equity 所有者权益Partnership 合伙企业Positive cash flow 正现金流量Retained earning 留存利润Revenue 收入Sole proprietorship 独资企业Solvency 清偿能力Stable-dollar assumption 稳定货币假设Stockholders 股东Stockholders' equity 股东权益Window dressing 门面粉饰Account 帐户政治风险political risk再开票中心re-invoicing center现代管理会计专门方法special methods of modern management accounting 现代管理会计modern management accounting提前与延期支付Leads and Lags特许权使用管理费fees and royalties跨国资本本钱的计算the cost of capital for foreign investments跨国运转资本会计multinational working capital management跨国经营企业业绩评价multinational performance evaluation经济风险管理managing economic exposure交易风险管理managing transaction exposure换算风险管理managing translation exposure国际投资决策会计foreign project appraisal国际投资决策会计foreign project appraisal国际存货管理international inventory management股利转移dividend remittances公司内部贷款inter-company loans冻结资金转移repatriating blocked funds冻结资金保值maintaining the value of blocked funds调整后的净现值adjusted net present value配比原那么matching旅游、饮食效劳企业会计accounting of tourism and service施工企业会计accounting of construction enterprises民航运输企业会计accounting of civil aviation transportation enterprises企业会计business accounting商品流通企业会计accounting of commercial enterprises权责发生制原那么accrual basis农业会计accounting of agricultural enterprises实现原那么realization principle历史本钱原那么principle of historical cost外商投资企业会计accounting of enterprises with foreign investment通用报表all-purpose financial statements铁路运输企业会计accounting of rail way transportation enterprises所有者权益owners equity所有者权益owners equity实质量于形式substance over form修正性惯例principle of exceptions信息系统论information system perspective相关性原那么relevance微观会计micro-accounting客观性原那么objectivity可比性原那么comparability谨慎性原那么prudence金融企业会计accounting of financial institutions交通运输企业会计accounting of communication and transportation enterprises 建设单位会计accounting of construction units记账本位币recording currency计量属性measurement attributes及时性原那么timeliness货币计量monetary measurement会计准那么accounting standards会计主体accounting entity会计职业道德accounting professional ethics会计职能functions of accounting会计预测accounting forecasting会计要素accounting elements会计研究accounting research会计学科体系accounting science system会计学accounting会计信息accounting information会计任务targets of accounting activities会计人员accounting personnel会计确认accounting recognition会计目标accounting objective会计理论结构theoretical structure of accounting会计理论accounting theory会计控制accounting control会计决策accounting decision making会计监督accounting supervision会计假设accounting assumption会计记录accounting records会计计量accounting measurement会计机构accounting department会计环境accounting environment会计核算financial accounting会计管理体制system of accounting administration会计分期accounting periods会计对象accounting object会计等式accounting equation会计本质nature of accounting会计报表accounting statements宏观会计macro-accounting会计accounting汇总报表combination statements划分资本性支出与收益性支出原那么distinguishment between capital expenditure and revenue expenditure合并报表consolidated financial statements管理活动论management activities perspective管理会计management accounting管理工具论management tool perspective股份制企业会计accounting of stock companies公认会计原那么generally accepted accounting principle, GAAP公共会计public accounting工业会计accounting of industrial enterprises个别报表individual statements高新技术企业会计accounting of high technology enterprises负债liability费用expense反应价值feedback value对外经济合作企业会计accounting of foreign economic cooperation enter prises 对外报表external statements对内报表internal statements一致性原那么consistency艺术论art perspective房地产开发企业会计accounting of real estate enterprises邮电通信企业会计accounting of post and telecommunication enterprises预测价值forecast value真实与公允true and fair view持续经营going concern本钱报表cost statement财务会计原那么financial accounting principles财务会计概念框架financial accounting conceptual framework财务会计financial accounting政府及非营利组织会计governmental and non-profit organization accounting重要性原那么materiality专用报表special purpose financial statements资产assets资金funds资金运动funds movement财务报告financial report财务报表要素elements of financial statements财务报表financial statements币值稳定假设constant-dollar assumption保险企业会计accounting of insurance companies收入确实认recognition of revenue公司债券发行价格corporate bond issuing price固定资产折旧depreciation of fixed assets可转换债券convertible bonds公司债券利息摊销加速折旧法accelerated depreciation methods营业外收支净额公司债券利率interest rate on debenture应收账款出借assignment of accounts receivable无担保债券debenture bonds后进先出法last-in, first-out, LIFO其他货币资金应付票据贴现discount on notes payable先进先出去first-in, first-out缩写FIFO在发建工程constructions in process固定资产更换与改进improvements and replacements of fixed assets 实地盘存制periodic inventory system收益总括观点all-inclusive concept of income损益表法可变现净值法net realizable value应付福利费根本业务利润固定资产扩建additions of fixed assets应收账款出售sale or factoring of accounts receivable或有负债contingent liability销货退回与折让sales returns and allowances零售价格法retail method现金折扣cash discount特定履行法其他业务利润公司债券bonds payable销售法sale method应付票据notes payable认股权stock rights固定资产修理repairs and maintenance of fixed assets有担保债券mortgage bonds销售费用selling expenses应付股利dividends payable应收票据notes receivable无形资产intangible assets收款法collection method所得税income tax流动负债current liabilities生产法production method方案本钱核算废弃和生置法retirement and replacement method盘存法inventory method流动资产current assets购货折扣purchases discounts商誉goodwill应收账款accounts receivable投资收益investment income营业利润operating income预提费用股本capital stock公司债券归还redemption of bonds坏账bad debts固定资产重估价revaluations of fixed assets银行存款cash in bank固定资产fixed assets利润总额利益分配profit distribution应计费用accrued expense商标权trademarks and trade names全部履行法净利润net income应付利润profit payable未分配利润收益债券income bonds货币资金利息资本化capitalization of interests公益金工程物资预付账款advance to supplier其他应收款other receivables现金cash预收账款公司债券发行corporate bond floatation应付工资wages payable实收资本paid-in capital盈余公积surplus reserves管理费用土地使用权股利dividend应交税金taxes payable负商誉negative goodwill费用确实认recognition of expense短期投资temporary investment短期借款short-term loans递延资产deferred charges低值易耗品当期经营观点current operating concept of income 待摊费用待核销基建支出[旧]待处理流动资产损失待处理固定资产损失存货销售的影响effects of inventory errors折旧[旧]折旧方法depreciation method折旧率depreciation rate支出payment直线法straight-line职工福利基金welfare fund专项拨款【旧】专利权patents住房基金housing fund重置本钱法replacement costing专项物资[旧]专项资产【旧】专有技术know-how专营权franchises资本公积capital reserves资产负债表balance sheet资金占用和资金来源[旧]自然资源natural resources存货inventory车间经费【旧】偿债基金sinking fund长期应付款long-term payables长期投资long-term investments长期借款long-term loans长期负债long-term liability of long-term debt财务费用financing expenses拨定留存收益appropriated retained earnings标准本钱法standard costing变动本钱法variable costing比例履行法包装物版权copyrights汇总原始凭证cumulative source document汇总记账凭证核算形式bookkeeping procedure using summary vouchers 工作底稿working paper复式记账凭证multiple account titles voucher复式记账法Double entry bookkeeping复合分录compound entry划线更正法correction by drawing a straight ling汇总原始凭证cumulative source document会计凭证accounting documents会计科目表chart of accounts会计科目account title红字更正法correction by using red ink会计核算形式bookkeeping procedures过账posting会计分录accounting entry会计循环accounting cycle会计账簿Book of accounts活页式账簿loose-leaf book集合分配账户clearing accounts计价比照账户matching accounts记账方法bookkeeping methods记账规那么recording rules记账凭证voucher记账凭证核算形式Bookkeeping procedure using vouchers记账凭证汇总表核算形式bookkeeping procedure using categorized account summary 简单分录simple entry结算账户settlement accounts结账closing account结账分录closing entry借贷记账法debit-credit bookkeeping局部清查partial check卡片式账簿card book跨期摊提账户inter-period allocation accounts累计凭证multiple-record document联合账簿compound book明细分类账簿subsidiary ledger明细分类账户subsidiary account盘存账存inventory accounts平行登记parallel recording全面清查complete check日记总账combined journal and ledger日记总账核算形式bookkeeping procedure using summarized journal三式记账法triple-entry bookkeeping实账户real accounts试算表trial balance试算平衡trial balancing收付记账法receipts-payment bookkeeping收款凭证receipt voucher损益表账户income statement accounts通用记账凭证general purpose voucher通用日记账核算形式bookkeeping procedure using general journal外来原始凭证source document from outside现金日记账cash journal虚账户nominal accounts序时账簿book of chronological entry一次凭证single-record document银行存款日记账deposit journal永续盘存制perpetual inventory system原始凭证source document暂记账户suspense accounts增减记账法increase-decrease bookkeeping债权结算账户accounts for settlement of claim债权债务结算账户accounts for settlement of claim and debt债务结算账户accounts for settlement of debt账户account账户编号Account number账户对应关系debit-credit relationship账项调整adjustment of account专用记账凭证special-purpose voucher转回分录reversing entry资金来源账户accounts of sources of funds资产负债账户balance sheet accounts转账凭证transfer voucher资金运用账户accounts of applications of funds自制原始凭证internal source document总分类账簿general ledger总分类账户general account附加账户adjunct accounts付款凭证payment voucher分类账簿ledger多栏式日记账核算形式bookkeeping procedure using columnar journal 对账checking对应账户corresponding accounts定期清查Periodic checking method定期盘存制periodic inventory system订本式账簿bound book调整账户adjustment accounts调整分录adjusting journal entry单式记账凭证single account title voucher单式记账法single-entry bookkeeping附属账户Secondary accounts本钱计算账户costing accounts财产清查physical inventory簿记bookkeeping不定期清查non-periodic checking method补充登记法correction by extra recording表外账户off-balance sheet accounts备抵账户provision accounts备抵附加账户provision and adjunct accounts备查账簿memorandum。
斯科特财务会计理论PPT课件第一章
– Lack of transparency of asset-backed securities – Excessive risk encouraged by off-balance-sheet activities – Excessive risk encouraged by manager compensation
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc
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1.10 The Fundamental Problem Of Financial Accounting Theory
• The best measure of net income to control adverse selection not the same as the best measure to motivate manager performance
– Fair value accounting for financial instruments
• Complicated by liquidity pricing
– High leverage of financial institutions
• Off-balance sheet financing liabilities • Use of expected loss notes to avoid consolidation of
• Response of standard setters
– Stopgap measures in response to government pressure
• Fair value accounting guidance during liquidity pricing • Increased use of internal estimates (value-in-use) • Increased use of cost-based valuation
会计英语词汇
Chapter1Accounting 会计,会计学Accountant 会计师,会计人员Accounting information 会计信息Financial data 财务数据Business 企业,经营,商业,业务Business transaction 经济业务,经济交易Enterprise 企业Economic information 经济信息Business organization 经济组织Financial activity 财务活动,筹资活动Profitability 获利能力,盈利能力End product 最终产品Creditor 债权人Performance 业绩Favorable 有利的Unfavorable 不利的Accounting system 会计系统,会计制度Financial condition 财务状况Investor 投资人Result of operations 经营成果Financial report 财务报告To make decision 制定决策Accounting principles 会计原则Business activity 经济活动Accounting concepts 会计概念Financial accounting 财务会计Economic unit 经济单位Owner 业主,拥有者Governmental agency 政府机构Generally accepted accounting principles 公认会计原则Employ 采用Prepare 准备,编制Annual report 年度报告Stockholder 股东Audit 审计,审查,查帐Auditing 审计,审计学Accounting records 会计记录Public accountant 公共会计师Fairness 公正性,公允性Reliability 可靠性Periodic audit 定期审计Corporation 股份有限公司Internal auditor 内部审计人员Cost accounting 成本会计Cost data 成本数据Management accounting 管理会计Selling price 销售价格Management advisory service 管理咨询服务Management service 管理服务Tax accounting 税务会计Tax returns 纳税申报单,税单Budgetary accounting 预算会计International accounting 国际会计International trade 国际贸易Not-for-profit accounting 非盈利组织会计Not-for-profit organization 非盈利组织Social accounting 社会会计Measurement 计量Chapter2Accounting practice 会计实务Accounting theory 会计理论Decline 方针,指南Assumption 假设Business entity 经济主体Accounting entity 会计主体Economic activity 经济活动Bookkeeping 簿记Double-entry bookkeeping system 复试记账系统Entry分录,记录Single proprietorship独资Partnership合伙Accounting purpose会计目的Separate entity独立主体Asset资产Going-concern持续经营Historical cost历史成本Current market value 当前市场价值Accounting period会计期间Stable-monetary-unit货币计量单位Objective principle客观性原则Operating result经营成果Cost principle成本原则Actual cost实际成本Book value账面价值Equivalent当量,约当量Depreciation折旧Consistency principle一贯性原则Accounting method会计方法Financial statement 财务报告Comparability可比性Materiality principle重要性原则Conservatism principle谨慎性原则Revenue收入Expense费用Cost of goods商品成本Net income净收入Net loss净损失Accrual-basis 权责发生制Cash-basis 现金收付制Journal 日记账Realization principle 实现原则Matching principle 配比原则Recognize 确认Transfer转让,转帐,过户Income statement收益表,损益表Full-disclosure principle充分揭示原则Chapter3Accounting element会计要素Accounting equation会计等式Liability负债Owner s’equity业主权益,所有者权益Current asset长期资产Long-term asset长期资产Operating cycle 经营周期Bank deposit 银行存款Short-term investment短期投资Long-term investment长期投资Accounts receivable应收账款Note receivable应收票据Prepayment 预付款项Inventory 存货Fixed asset 固定资产Plant and equipment 厂房和设备Intangible asset 无形资产Store fixtures店面装置Office equipment办公设备Delivery equipment运输设备Creditors’ equity债权人权益Obligation责任,义务Debt债务Current liability流动负债Long-term liability长期负债Short-time loans payable应付短期贷款Long-term loans payable长期应付贷款Notes payable应付票据Accounts payable应付账款Accrued expense应计费用Bonds payable应付债券Long-term accounting payable长期应付账款Interest 股份,利息Claim 要求权Net assets 净资产Capital资本Stockholder’s equity 股东权益Cost of goods sold 商品销售成本Administrative expenses 管理费用Selling expenses销售费用Financial expense 财务费用Occur 发生Dividend payable 应付股利Retained earnings留存收益Chapter4Classification分类,分级Day-to-day 随时Account title 账户名称Ledger 分类帐Debit side 借方Credit side 贷方Charge借记,收取费用Memorandum 摘要,备忘录Insert 插入,嵌入,写入Cash on hand 库存现金subgrouping子目,细目supplies 物料用品prepaid expenses 预付费用face value 面值check 支票bank draft 银行汇票money order 汇款单debtor 债务人bearer 持票人salaries payable 应付工资taxes payable 应付税费interest payable 应付利息long-term notes payable 长期应付票据mortgage payable 应付抵押借款bonds payable 应付公司债券drawing提款income summary收益汇总professions fees职业服务费commissions revenues 佣金收入interest income利息收入chart of accounts账户一览表executive salaries主管人员薪金office salaries办公人员薪金sales salaries销售人员薪金prepaid rent预付租金accumulated depreciation累计折旧depreciation expense折旧费用sales销售收入sales returns and allowance销售退回与折让purchases returns and allowance购买退回与折让Chapter5Accounting cycle会计循环Accounting procedures会计程序,会计方法Trial balance试算平衡表Post-closing trial balance结算后试算平衡表Journalize 做分录,记账Post to the ledger过入分类帐Assemble汇集Work sheet工作底表Adjusting entry调整分录close结账,结清,关闭ledger accounts分类账户general ledger总分类帐two-column account两栏式账户source document原始凭证check stub支票存根journal日记帐journal entry日记帐分录records(book) of original entry原始记录簿transcribe抄录post过账,誊帐manually手工的chronological按时间顺序的enter登记,计入general journal普通日记账special journal特殊日记帐sales journal销售日记帐purchases journal购买日记帐cash receipts journal现金收入日记帐cash disbursements journal现金支出日记帐division of labor分工Chapter6Adjusting procedures调整程序Accrual(basis) accounting权责发生制Align调整,使成一线,(转做)使一致Apportion(按比例)分配,摊配Accrue自然积累(如利息等),计提Outlay支出Expire期满,耗尽,失效Insurance expense保险费用Prepaid insurance 预付保险费Supplies expense物料用品费Supplies on hand在用物料Subscription预订Deferred credit递延贷项Accrued salaries payable应计应付工薪Accrued revenue应计收入Closing entry结账分录Closing procedure结账程序Temporary account临时性账户,名义账户,虚账户Permanent account 永久性账户,实账户Withdrawals提款Statement of cash flow现金流量表Financial position财务状况Portray描绘Dispose处理Inflows流入Outflows流出Chapter7Working paper工作底稿Adjusted trial balance调整后试算平衡表Cross-reference交叉参考Occasion需要,机会,工作场合Salaries accrued应计薪金Combine结合,联合Extend(会计)将数字转入。
盈余管理的利弊及控制
盈余管理的利弊及控制【摘要】盈余管理是指企业的经营者在某种利益的驱动下,在法律和会计规范许可的范围内,对利润进行的人为操纵和管理。
企业经营者之所以热衷于盈余管理,是基于自身效用最大化或公司市场价值最大化的原因。
适度的盈余管理有其有利的一面,但是盈余管理也有弊端,必须对其进行控制。
本文对盈余管理的利弊及其控制等方面进行了探讨。
【关键词】盈余管理;利弊;控制一、盈余管理概述盈余管理是企业财务管理的一个重要内容,也是实证会计理论研究的一个重点。
美国会计学家雪普(Katherine Schipper)在其著名的“盈余管理的评论”(Commentary on earnings management)一文中,将盈余管理定义为旨在有目的地干预对外财务报告过程,以获取某些私人利益的“披露管理”。
加拿大会计学家司可脱教授(William R.Scott)在其著作《财务会计理论》(Financial Accounting Theory)中,将盈余管理定义为经营者在一系列的可选会计政策(如公认会计原则)中选择那些使自身或公司市场价值最大化的会计政策的行为。
通过以上的定义,可以得出两点启示:一是盈余管理影响的是企业的会计报告盈利,而不是企业的实际盈利,即盈余管理实质上并不能增加或减少企业的盈利,只是改变了企业盈利的分布时间;二是盈余管理是在法律和会计规范许可的范围内对利润进行人为的操纵和管理,盈余管理与伪造盈余是有明显界限的。
企业经营者之所以热衷于盈余管理,是希望通过盈余管理使自身利益或企业市场价值最大化。
具体而言,盈余管理的动机主要包括增加经营者的报酬、避免企业债务违约、平滑利润、提高公司的股票价格等。
在我国的资本市场中,由于企业的上市、配股、退市等市场行为都受到政府的管制,而会计盈余指标又是政府实施管制的基本依据,因此盈余管理也可能是出于配股的需要、保牌的需要和经营者业绩考核的需要等。
盈余管理的手段主要是会计方法,包括应计项目的管理和会计政策的变更,其中应计项目是指利润表中不涉及现金流量的收入和费用项目,应计项目管理是指改变折旧年限、坏账计提比率等会计估计以及改变利润的年末调整项目。
会计专业词汇英语翻译_会计学堂
会计学堂,是深圳快学教育发展有限公司旗下的在线培训平台。
成立于2011年,拥有500余人的优秀师资团队,是国内领先的会计实操培训机构。
位于深圳南山科技园,是一家以技术和产品驱动的创新性培训机构,在线学员超过200万人次。
2015年3月,公司获得知名风险投资公司1000万的A轮融资;12月,会计学堂被腾讯教育评选为在线会计实操培训的第一品牌。
获得腾讯课堂“2013、2014年度最佳会计培训机构”荣誉。
平台介绍:教学特色:会计学堂脱离了纯理论方式,坚持学会就可以上岗的教学理念,所有讲课老师都是第一线的财务经理、财务总监。
会计学堂拒绝大学理论派,以实操为主导。
全真全套帐实操系统:会计学堂斥资300万打造的真账实操系统,是唯一一家采用金蝶K3及用友T3结合企业真实业务单据实操的培训机构。
学习的内容就是实际工作上岗的内容,学员在动手实操中轻松学会。
随时更新的课程:实时更新的课程,会计学堂所有课程均采用最新会准则和政策更新,每个月都会更新课程内容,让学员的学习不会落伍会计专业词汇英语翻译政治风险political risk再开票中心re-invoicing center现代管理会计专门方法special methods of modern managementaccounting 现代管理会计modern management accounting提前与延期支付Leads and Lags特许权使用管理费fees and royalties跨国资本成本的计算the cost of capital for foreigninvestments跨国运转资本会计multinational working capital management跨国经营企业业绩评价multinational performance evaluation经济风险管理managing economic exposure交易风险管理managing transaction exposure换算风险管理managing translation exposure国际投资决策会计foreign project appraisal国际投资决策会计foreign project appraisal国际存货管理international inventory management股利转移dividend remittances公司内部贷款inter-company loans冻结资金转移repatriating blocked funds冻结资金保值maintaining the value of blocked funds调整后的净现值adjusted net present value配比原则matching旅游、饮食服务企业会计accounting of tourism and service施工企业会计accounting of construction enterprises民航运输企业会计accounting of civil aviationtransportation enterprises企业会计business accounting商品流通企业会计accounting of commercial enterprises权责发生制原则accrual basis农业会计accounting of agricultural enterprises实现原则realization principle历史成本原则principle of historical cost外商投资企业会计accounting of enterprises with foreigninvestment 通用报表all-purpose financial statements铁路运输企业会计accounting of rail way transportationenterprises 所有者权益owners equity所有者权益owners equity实质量于形式substance over form修正性惯例principle of exceptions信息系统论information system perspective相关性原则relevance微观会计micro-accounting客观性原则objectivity可比性原则comparability谨慎性原则prudence金融企业会计accounting of financial institutions交通运输企业会计accounting of communication andtransportation enterprises建设单位会计accounting of construction units记账本位币recording currency计量属性measurement attributes及时性原则timeliness货币计量monetary measurement会计准则accounting standards会计主体accounting entity会计职业道德accounting professional ethics会计职能functions of accounting会计预测accounting forecasting会计要素accounting elements会计研究accounting research会计学科体系accounting science system会计学accounting会计信息accounting information会计任务targets of accounting activities会计人员accounting personnel会计确认accounting recognition会计目标accounting objective会计理论结构theoretical structure of accounting会计理论accounting theory会计控制accounting control会计决策accounting decision making会计监督accounting supervision会计假设accounting assumption会计记录accounting records会计计量accounting measurement会计机构accounting department会计环境accounting environment会计核算financial accounting会计管理体制system of accounting administration会计分期accounting periods会计对象accounting object会计等式accounting equation会计本质nature of accounting会计报表accounting statements宏观会计macro-accounting会计accounting汇总报表combination statements划分资本性支出与收益性支出原则distinguishment between capitalexpenditure and revenue expenditure合并报表consolidated financial statements管理活动论management activities perspective管理会计management accounting管理工具论management tool perspective股份制企业会计accounting of stock companies公认会计原则generally accepted accounting principle,GAAP 公共会计public accounting工业会计accounting of industrial enterprises个别报表individual statements高新技术企业会计accounting of high technology enterprises负债liability费用expense反馈价值feedback value对外经济合作企业会计accounting of foreign economiccooperation enter prises对外报表external statements对内报表internal statements一致性原则consistency艺术论art perspective房地产开发企业会计accounting of real estate enterprises邮电通信企业会计accounting of post and telecommunicationenterprises 预测价值forecast value真实与公允true and fair view持续经营going concern成本报表cost statement财务会计原则financial accounting principles财务会计概念框架financial accounting conceptual framework财务会计financial accounting政府及非营利组织会计governmental and non-profitorganization accounting重要性原则materiality专用报表special purpose financial statements资产assets资金funds资金运动funds movement财务报告financial report财务报表要素elements of financial statements财务报表financial statements币值稳定假设constant-dollar assumption保险企业会计accounting of insurance companies收入的确认recognition of revenue公司债券发行价格corporate bond issuing price固定资产折旧depreciation of fixed assets可转换债券convertible bonds公司债券利息摊销加速折旧法accelerated depreciation methods营业外收支净额公司债券利率interest rate on debenture应收账款出借assignment of accounts receivable无担保债券debenture bonds后进先出法last-in, first-out, LIFO其他货币资金应付票据贴现discount on notes payable先进先出去first-in, first-out缩写FIFO在发建工程constructions in process固定资产更换与改良improvements and replacements of fixedassets 实地盘存制periodic inventory system收益总括观点all-inclusive concept of income损益表法可变现净值法net realizable value应付福利费基本业务利润固定资产扩建additions of fixed assets应收账款出售sale or factoring of accounts receivable或有负债contingent liability销货退回与折让sales returns and allowances零售价格法retail method现金折扣cash discount特定履行法其他业务利润公司债券bonds payable销售法sale method应付票据notes payable认股权stock rights固定资产修理repairs and maintenance of fixed assets 有担保债券mortgage bonds销售费用selling expenses应付股利dividends payable应收票据notes receivable无形资产intangible assets收款法collection method所得税income tax流动负债current liabilities生产法production method计划成本核算废弃和生置法retirement and replacement method盘存法inventory method流动资产current assets购货折扣purchases discounts商誉goodwill应收账款accounts receivable投资收益investment income营业利润operating income预提费用股本capital stock公司债券偿还redemption of bonds坏账bad debts固定资产重估价revaluations of fixed assets 银行存款cash in bank固定资产fixed assets利润总额利益分配profit distribution应计费用accrued expense商标权trademarks and trade names全部履行法净利润net income应付利润profit payable未分配利润收益债券income bonds货币资金利息资本化capitalization of interests公益金工程物资预付账款advance to supplier其他应收款other receivables现金cash预收账款公司债券发行corporate bond floatation应付工资wages payable实收资本paid-in capital盈余公积surplus reserves管理费用土地使用权股利dividend应交税金taxes payable负商誉negative goodwill费用的确认recognition of expense短期投资temporary investment短期借款short-term loans递延资产deferred charges低值易耗品当期经营观点current operating concept of income 待摊费用待核销基建支出[旧]待处理流动资产损失待处理固定资产损失存货销售的影响effects of inventory errors折旧[旧]折旧方法depreciation method折旧率depreciation rate支出payment直线法straight-line职工福利基金welfare fund专项拨款【旧】专利权patents住房基金housing fund重置成本法replacement costing专项物资[旧]专项资产【旧】专有技术know-how专营权franchises资本公积capital reserves资产负债表balance sheet资金占用和资金来源[旧]自然资源natural resources存货inventory车间经费【旧】偿债基金sinking fund长期应付款long-term payables长期投资long-term investments长期借款long-term loans长期负债long-term liability of long-term debt财务费用financing expenses拨定留存收益appropriated retained earnings标准成本法standard costing变动成本法variable costing比例履行法包装物版权copyrights汇总原始凭证cumulative source document汇总记账凭证核算形式bookkeeping procedure using summaryvouchers 工作底稿working paper复式记账凭证multiple account titles voucher复式记账法Double entry bookkeeping复合分录compound entry划线更正法correction by drawing a straight ling汇总原始凭证cumulative source document会计凭证accounting documents会计科目表chart of accounts会计科目account title红字更正法correction by using red ink会计核算形式bookkeeping procedures过账posting会计分录accounting entry会计循环accounting cycle会计账簿Book of accounts活页式账簿loose-leaf book集合分配账户clearing accounts计价对比账户matching accounts记账方法bookkeeping methods记账规则recording rules记账凭证voucher记账凭证核算形式Bookkeeping procedure using vouchers记账凭证汇总表核算形式bookkeeping procedure usingcategorized account summary简单分录simple entry结算账户settlement accounts结账closing account结账分录closing entry借贷记账法debit-credit bookkeeping局部清查partial check卡片式账簿card book跨期摊提账户inter-period allocation accounts累计凭证multiple-record document联合账簿compound book明细分类账簿subsidiary ledger明细分类账户subsidiary account盘存账存inventory accounts平行登记parallel recording全面清查complete check日记总账combined journal and ledger日记总账核算形式bookkeeping procedure using summarizedjournal 三式记账法triple-entry bookkeeping实账户real accounts试算表trial balance试算平衡trial balancing收付记账法receipts-payment bookkeeping收款凭证receipt voucher损益表账户income statement accounts通用记账凭证general purpose voucher通用日记账核算形式bookkeeping procedure using generaljournal 外来原始凭证source document from outside现金日记账cash journal虚账户nominal accounts序时账簿book of chronological entry一次凭证single-record document银行存款日记账deposit journal永续盘存制perpetual inventory system原始凭证source document暂记账户suspense accounts增减记账法increase-decrease bookkeeping债权结算账户accounts for settlement of claim债权债务结算账户accounts for settlement of claim and debt债务结算账户accounts for settlement of debt账户account账户编号Account number账户对应关系debit-credit relationship账项调整adjustment of account专用记账凭证special-purpose voucher转回分录reversing entry资金来源账户accounts of sources of funds资产负债账户balance sheet accounts转账凭证transfer voucher资金运用账户accounts of applications of funds自制原始凭证internal source document总分类账簿general ledger总分类账户general account附加账户adjunct accounts付款凭证payment voucher分类账簿ledger多栏式日记账核算形式bookkeeping procedure using columnarjournal 对账checking对应账户corresponding accounts定期清查Periodic checking method定期盘存制periodic inventory system订本式账簿bound book调整账户adjustment accounts调整分录adjusting journal entry单式记账凭证single account title voucher单式记账法single-entry bookkeeping从属账户Secondary accounts成本计算账户costing accounts财产清查physical inventory簿记bookkeeping不定期清查non-periodic checking method补充登记法correction by extra recording表外账户off-balance sheet accounts备抵账户provision accounts备抵附加账户provision and adjunct accounts 备查账簿memorandum。
会计理论解读:内涵及外延
3.2会计理论的外延
3.2.1按研究对象进行分类
按研究对象分类可以分为财务会计理论和管理会计理论。
1. 财务会计理论(Financial Accounting Theory)
财务会计理论,顾名思义,是研究财务会计(Financial Accounting)学科领域的理论。到目前为止,大多数的会计 文献和会计理论研究都是关于财务会计理论的研究。
行为会计理论认为,会计行为不是无序的,而是有规律并且可以控 制的。会计行为是约束条件的函数,即会计行为取决于各影响 因素形成的约束条件。一般情况下,有什么样的一组约束条件, 就有与之相对应的会计行为,包括会计个体的行为和会计群体 的行为或组织的行为等。
3.2会计理论的外延
3.2.3 按推理方式进行分类 推理性理论是根据从一般到具体(演绎)还是从具体到一般(归纳)
布雷思韦特强调理论的内在逻辑性,认为“科学的理论是一种演绎 系统,按这种系统在逻辑上所得出的结论应该同在该系统一套 基本假设下所观察到的有关事实相一致。因此,对科学理论本 质的研究就是对应用于该理论中的演绎系统本质的研究。”;
威廉斯(1994)认为“系统的知识的有组织积累,其目的是理性 的解释——预测”,不仅要按照演绎的方法去解释,还要能利 用理论对未知事物进行预测。
3.2会计理论的外延
3.2.2 按研究方法进行分类
按研究方法进行分类可以分为规范会计理论、实证会计理论和行 为会计理论。
2. 实证会计理论(Positive Accounting Theory)
所谓实证会计理论是相对于规范会计理论而言的,是一套关于会计 “是什么”的系统知识体系,为解释现行会计实务和预测未来 会计实务提供理论依据。这种理论只能解释和预测哪些企业将 采用或不采用某个具体的会计实务(根据其偏好),而不能说 明企业应该采用哪种会计实务。实证会计理论采用归纳法,具体 有关实证会计理论及其方法论的讨论可参见第11章、第12章、 第13章。
斯科特财务会计理论PPT课件第一章
• Consolidation • Derecognition
– Increased disclosure – Response of standard setters considered in greater
detail in Chapter 7
• Response of standard setters
– Stopgap measures in response to government pressure
• Fair value accounting guidance during liquidity pricing • Increased use of internal estimates (value-in-use) • Increased use of cost-based valuation
• Lower of cost or market • Ceiling tests
• Current value accounting
– Current value accounting writes up and down
• Increased conservatism in recent years
• Liquidity pricing
– Counterparty risk
>> Continued
1-5 Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc
Market Meltdowns, 2007-2008 (continued)
• Financial accounting issues leading up to the market meltdowns
mba fa 《financial accounting》 习题答案4
CHAPTER 4THE MECHANICS OF FINANCIAL ACCOUNTINGBRIEF EXERCISESBE4–1Transaction Assets = Liabilities + Stockholders’ Equity Paid $3,656 to purchase + 3,656property, plant and equip. - 3,656Issued common stock + 967 = + 967for $967Recorded depreciation -4,651 = -4,651of $4,651Net effect -3,684 = -3,684b. The transaction to purchase property, plant and equipment does not appear to affect theaccounting equation. This is because both sides of the transaction affect the asset side of the balance sheet. Intel pays cash for p,p,&e; this reduces cash and increases fixed assets. All of the other transactions affect both sides of the balance sheet.BE4–2Transaction Assets = Liabilities + Stockholders’ Equity Borrowed $350 from banks, + 350 = +350issuing long-term debtPaid cash dividends of $208 - 208 = - 208Issued common stock for $28 + 28 = +28Paid $250 to reducelong-term debt -250 = -250 ___Net effect - 80 = +100 -180b. The net effect on the company’s long-term debt balance is to increase it by $100. Two sourcesthat could have provided the cash to finance the net effect of these four transactions are funds from operations and funds from investing activities. All of the transactions shown here are financing activities, which show a use of $80 for financing activities.1BE4–3Transaction Assets = Liabilities + Stockholders’ Equity Recognized revenues +953 = +953of $953, in exchange foraccounts receivable.Paid $431 for sales and -431 = -431marketing.Issued common stock for $78 +78 = +78Purchased marketable -1,166securities for $1,166 +1,166 = _____Net effect +600 = +600b. The first and second transactions would be reflected on the income statement. Yahoo wouldshow $953 of revenue on the income statement. Yahoo would also show sales and marketing expense of $431.All of these transactions would directly or indirectly be reflected on the statement of cash flows.The first two transactions would be netted in the cash from operations section, the third transaction would be in the financing section and the fourth transaction would be in the operations section.EXERCISESE4–1Assets = Liabilities + Stockholders' Equity(1) + 30,000 + 30,000(2) – 20,000+ 20,000(3) + 9,000 +9,000(4) + 8,000 + 8,000(5) – 5,500 – 5,500(6) – 500 – 500Total 41,000 9,000 32,000Note:Transactions (4), (5), and (6) are initially recorded in temporary accounts and are closed into the Retained Earnings account, which is part of stockholders' equity.E4–2Assets = Liabilities +Stockholders' EquityAccounts Notes Contributed RetainedCash + Receivable + Land = Payable + Capital + Earnings(1) + 30,000 +30,000(2) – 20,000 +20,000(3) + 9,000 +9,000(4) +8,000 + 8,000(5) – 5,500 – 5,500(6) – 500 – 500 Total 13,000 8,000 20,000 9,000 30,000 2,000Note:Transactions (4), (5), and (6) are initially recorded in temporary accounts and are closed into the Retained Earnings account, which is part of stockholders' equity.E4–3X CompanyIncome StatementFor the Year EndedRevenues..................................................................................................$ 8,000Operating expenses..................................................................................5,500Net income................................................................................................$ 2,500X CompanyStatement of Stockholders’ EquityFor the Year EndedContributed RetainedCapital EarningsBeginning balance $ 0 $ 0Net income 2,500Dividends (500)Owner contribution 30,000 _______Ending balance $ 30,000 $ 2,000X CompanyBalance SheetAs ofAssets Liabilities and Stockholders' EquityCash ....................................$ 13,000 Notes payable........................$ 9,000Accounts receivable.............8,000 Contributed capital.................30,000Land ....................................20,000 Retained earnings..................2,000Total liabilities andTotal assets..........................$41,000 stockholders' equity...........$ 41,000E4–3 ConcludedX CompanyStatement of Cash FlowsFor the Year EndedCash flows from operating activities:Cash payments for expenses..................................... $ (5,500) Cash flows from investing activities:Purchase of land......................................................... (20,000) Cash flows from financing activities:Cash contributions from owners................................ $ 30,000Proceeds from bank loan........................................... 9,000Payments of cash dividend (500)Net cash flow from financing activities.................. 38,500 Net increase in cash........................................................ $ 13,000 Beginning cash balance.. 0Ending cash balance....................................................... $ 13,000 E4–4Assets = Liabilities + Stockholders' Equity(1) +10,000 + 10,000(2) + 8,000 + 8,000(3) – 3,000 + 3,000 – 6,000(4) +12,000 + 10,000– 2,000(5) – 400 – 400(6) + 7,000 + 1,000– 6,000Total 25,600 13,000 12,600Cathedral EnterprisesIncome StatementFor the Year EndedFees earned.................................................................................................$ 8,000 Expenses......................................................................................................(6,000) Gain on sale of land.....................................................................................1,000 Net income...................................................................................................$ 3,000 E4–4 ConcludedCathedral EnterprisesStatement of Stockholders’ EquityFor the Year EndedContributed RetainedCapital EarningsBeginning balance $ 0 $ 0Net income 3,000Dividends (400)Stockholder contribution 10,000 ______Ending balance $ 10,000 $ 2,600Cathedral EnterprisesBalance SheetAs ofAssets Liabilities and Stockholders' EquityCash ....................................$ 17,600 Misc. payable.........................$ 3,000Receivables..........................2,000 Long-term note......................10,000Land ....................................6,000 Contributed capital.................10,000Retained earnings..................2,600Total liabilities andTotal assets..........................$25,600 stockholders' equity...........$25,600Cathedral EnterprisesStatement of Cash FlowsFor the Year EndedCash flows from operating activities:Cash collected from customers.................................. $ 6,000Cash paid for expenses.............................................. (3,000)Net cash increase from operating activities.......... $ 3,000 Cash flows from investing activities:Proceeds from sale of land........................................ $ 7,000Cash paid for land...................................................... (2,000)Net cash increase from investing activities........... 5,000 Cash flows from financing activities:Contributions from stockholders................................ $ 10,000Dividends paid to stockholders (400)Net cash increase from financing activities........... 9,600 Increase in cash.............................................................. $ 17,600Beginning cash balance 0Ending cash balance....................................................... $ 17,600Note: Even though $12,000 worth of land was purchased only $2,000 is shown on this statement because the balance ($10,000) was paid for with a promise to pay cash in the future (loan). So only $2,000 of cash was used this year.E4–5(1) This financial event does not have accounting significance. Entries are made to record financialevents that affect the company's current financial condition. In this case, the new contract will affect the company's future financial condition by affecting the dollar value of future events as the new contract is implemented. Simply signing the contract does not affect the company's current financial position.(2) This financial event does have accounting significance. The receipt of cash in exchange forissuing debt affects the company's current financial position by increasing both the amount of cash the company has and the obligations the company has to other entities. Thus, an entry is necessary, and the entry would be:Cash (+A)................................................................................. 200,000Bonds Payable (+L)............................................................ 200,000 Issued bonds.(3) This event does not have accounting significance. The retirement of an official does notinfluence the company's current financial position.(4) This financial event does have accounting significance. Receiving cash from a customer wouldchange the company's current financial position. The entry would be:Cash (+A)................................................................................. 10,000Accounts Receivable (–A).................................................. 10,000 Collected cash from customers.(5) This financial event does have accounting significance. Payment of a liability will change acompany's current financial position by decreasing both the amount of cash the company has and the company's obligations to other entities. The entry would be:Accrued Interest Payable (–L).................................................. 1,000Cash (–A)........................................................................... 1,000 Paid interest previously incurred.(6) This financial event does not have accounting significance. Long-lived assets are reported atoriginal cost less accumulated depreciation. Increases in market value above the reported amounts are not reported because market values on long-lived assets are not objective (i.e., are not reliable).(7) This financial event does have accounting significance. The purchase of an insurance policyrepresents a change in the company's financial position because the company has less cash and because the company has acquired the benefit of insurance coverage. However, the value of the policy has no influence on the company. The appropriate entry would be:Prepaid Insurance (+A)............................................................ 1,500Cash (–A)........................................................................... 1,500 Purchased insurance coverage.(8) This financial event does not have accounting significance. Simply placing an order does notaffect a company's financial position. That is, the company has not experienced a change in the amount of cash it has, the amount it owes other entities, and so forth. The company's position does not change until it legally owns the goods.E4–6Account Financial Statement Accounting EquationFlight Equipment Balance Sheet AssetsPassenger Revenue Income Statement Owners’ EquityRetained Earnings Balance Sheet Owners’ EquityNotes Payable Balance Sheet LiabilitiesInterest Expense Income Statement Owners’ EquityAccounts Receivable Balance Sheet AssetsDividends Balance Sheet Owners’ EquityPrepaid Expenses Balance Sheet AssetsAccounts Payable Balance Sheet LiabilitiesCommon Stock Balance Sheet Owners’ EquityFuel Expense Income Statement Owners’ EquityOther Revenues Income Statement Owners’ EquityShort-Term Investments Balance Sheet AssetsDepreciation Expense Income Statement Owners’ EquityGain - Sale of Investment Income Statement Owners’ EquityE4–7Bristol-Myers SquibbIncome StatementFor the Year Ended December 31, 2002Revenue:Sales........................................................................... $18,106Loss on sales of business (30)Total revenue......................................................... $ 18,076 Expenses:Cost of goods sold...................................................... $ 6,532Selling and adm. Expense.......................................... 4,124Advertising and product expense............................... 1,143Research and dev. expense....................................... 2,206Other expenses.......................................................... 1,934Total expenses....................................................... 15,939 Net income...................................................................... $ 2,137 E4–7 ConcludedBristol-Myers SquibbBalance SheetAs of December 31, 2002Assets Liabilities and Stockholders' EquityCash and equivalents...........$ 2,367 Accounts payable...................$ 1,551 Marketable securities...........1,622Accounts receivable.............2,968 Accrued payables..................5,087 Other current assets.............3,103 Short-term borrowings...........1,379Other current liabilities (470)Property, plant and equipment 5,334 Long-term liabilities................7,779Other noncurrent assets.......9,628 Stockholders’ equity...............8,756Total liabilities andTotal assets..........................$ 25,022 stockholders’ equity $ 25,022Bristol-Myers SquibbStatement of Cash FlowsFor the Year Ended December 31, 2002Cash flows from operating activities:Net income................................................... $ 2,137Adjustments:Total adjustments.................................... (1,192)Net cash increase (decrease)due to operating activities................... $ 945 Cash flows from investing activities:Net cash increase (decrease) due toinvesting activities............................... (2,030) Cash flows from financing activities:Net cash increase (decrease) due tofinancing activities............................... (1,117) Increase in cash balance.................................. $ (2,202)Beginning cash balance.................................... 4,569Ending cash balance......................................... $ 2,367The company appears to be in very good financial condition. The company is very profitable with a 12% net income margin ($2,137/$18,106). The company has an extremely strong balance sheet with very good liquidity; working capital is $1,573 ($10,060 - $8,487).E4–8a. Ending cash = Beginning cash + Cash inflows – Cash outflows= $9,000 + $133,500 – $99,500= $43,000Note: Since Cash is an asset, cash inflows are recorded on the debit, or left-hand side of the T account, and cash outflows are recorded on the credit, or right-hand side of the Taccount.b.Miller ManufacturingStatement of Cash FlowsFor the Year Ended December 31, 2006Cash flows from operating activities:Cash collections from customers............................... $ 95,000Payment of salaries.................................................... (26,500)Payment of miscellaneous expenses......................... (13,000)Payment of rent.......................................................... (7,000)Payment of interest..................................................... (3,000)Net cash increase from operating activities.......... $ 45,500 Cash flows from investing activities:Proceeds from sale of land........................................ $ 7,500Purchase of long-term investments........................... (10,000)Purchase of equipment.............................................. (24,000)Net cash decrease from investing activities.......... (26,500) Cash flows from financing activities:Proceeds from issuance of common stock................ $ 15,000Proceeds from borrowing........................................... 16,000Payment of bank loan................................................. (12,000)Payment of dividends................................................. (4,000)Net cash increase from financing activities........... 15,000 Increase (decrease) in cash balance.............................. $ 34,000 Beginning cash balance.................................................. 9,000 Ending cash balance....................................................... $ 43,000E4–9a.(1) Cash (+A)........................................................................... 15,000Common Stock (+SE)................................................... 15,000 Issued common stock.(2) Cash (+A)........................................................................... 4,000Fees Earned (R, +SE)................................................... 4,000 Sold services for cash.(3) Wage Expense (E, –SE).................................................... 1,600Cash (–A)...................................................................... 1,600 Incurred and paid wages.(4) Investment in Land (+A)..................................................... 9,000Cash (–A)...................................................................... 9,000Purchased land as an investment.(5) Dividends (–SE)................................................................. 2,000Cash (–A)...................................................................... 2,000 Declared and paid dividend.(6) Cash (+A)........................................................................... 3,500Land (–A)....................................................................... 3,000Gain on Sale of Land (Ga, +SE) (500)Sold land.(7) Interest Expense (E, –SE) (600)Note Payable (+L) (900)Cash (–A)...................................................................... 1,500 Made principal and interest payment.(8) Miscellaneous Expenses (E, –SE)..................................... 1,800Cash (–A)...................................................................... 1,800 Incurred and paid miscellaneous expenses.b.E4–9 Concludedc.Small and AssociatesStatement of Cash FlowsFor the Month Ended January 31, 2006Cash flows from operating activities:Collections from customers........................................ $ 4,000Payment of wages...................................................... (1,600)Payment of interest (600)Payment of miscellaneous expenses......................... (1,800)Net cash decrease from investing activities.......... $ 0 Cash flows from investing activities:Proceeds from sale of land........................................ $ 3,500Purchase of land......................................................... (9,000)Net cash decrease from investing activities.......... (5,500)Cash flows from financing activities:Proceeds from issuance of stock............................... $15,000Repayment of note (900)Dividend payment....................................................... (2,000)Net cash increase from financing activities........... 12,100 Increase in cash balance................................................ $ 6,600 Beginning cash balance.................................................. 5,000 Ending cash balance....................................................... $ 11,600E4–10a. Assets = Liabilities + Stockholders' EquityAccounts Notes Contributed Retained Cash + Receivable + Land = Payable + Capital + Earnings(1) + 12,000 +12,000(2) + 5,000 + 5,000(3) – 10,000 + 10,000(4) – 5,000 – 5,000(5) + 10,000 +4,000 + 14,000(6) – 4,000 – 4,000(7) + 2,800 – 3,000 – 200(8) – 2,200 – 2,200 Total 8,600 4,000 7,000 5,000 12,000 2,600Ed's Lawn ServiceIncome StatementFor the Year Ended December 31, 2006Revenue.......................................................................... $14,000 Rent expense.................................................................. (5,000) Miscellaneous expense................................................... (4,000) Loss on sale of land.. (200)Net income...................................................................... $ 4,800Ed's Lawn ServiceStatement of Stockholders’ EquityFor the Year Ended December 31, 2006Contributed RetainedCapital EarningsBeginning balance, January 1, 2006 $ 0 $ 0Net income 4,800Dividends (2,200)Stockholder contribution 12,000 ______Ending balance, December 31, 2006 $ 12,000 $ 2,600Ed's Lawn ServiceBalance SheetAs of December 31, 2006Assets Liabilities and Stockholders' EquityCash ....................................$ 8,600 Notes payable........................$ 5,000 Accounts receivable.............4,000 Contributed capital.................12,000 Land ....................................7,000 Retained earnings..................2,600Total liabilities andTotal assets..........................$19,600 stockholders' equity...........$ 19,600E4–10 ContinuedEd's Lawn ServiceStatement of Cash FlowsFor the Year Ended December 31, 2006Cash flows from operating activities:Cash collected from customers.................................. $ 10,000Rent payments on lawn equipment............................ (5,000)Payment of miscellaneous expenses......................... (4,000)Net cash increase from operating activities.......... $ 1,000 Cash flows from investing activities:Proceeds from sale of land........................................ $ 2,800Cash paid for land...................................................... (10,000)Net cash decrease from investing activities.......... (7,200) Cash flows from financing activities:Stockholder contributions........................................... $ 12,000Proceeds from bank loan........................................... 5,000Dividend payments..................................................... (2,200)Net cash increase from financing activities........... 14,800 Increase in cash.............................................................. $ 8,600 Beginning cash balance.. 0Ending cash balance....................................................... $ 8,600b.(1) Cash (+A)........................................................................... 12,000Contributed Capital (+SE)............................................. 12,000 Collected cash from stockholders.(2) Cash (+A)........................................................................... 5,000Notes Payable (+L)........................................................ 5,000 Borrowed cash from bank.(3) Land (+A)........................................................................... 10,000Cash (–A)...................................................................... 10,000 Purchased land.(4) Rent Expense (E, –SE)...................................................... 5,000Cash (–A)...................................................................... 5,000 Incurred and paid rent expense.(5) Cash (+A)........................................................................... 10,000Accounts Receivable (+A)................................................. 4,000Fees Earned (R, +SE)................................................... 14,000 Rendered services.(6) Miscellaneous Expenses (E, –SE)..................................... 4,000Cash (–A)...................................................................... 4,000 Incurred and paid miscellaneous expenses.E4–10 Continued(7) Cash (+A)........................................................................... 2,800Loss on Sale of Land (Lo, –SE) (200)Land (–A)....................................................................... 3,000 Sold land.(8) Dividends (–SE)................................................................. 2,200Cash (–A)...................................................................... 2,200 Declared and paid cash dividend.*The Ending Balance in the Retained Earnings account is derived by the following formula: Beginning Balance + Revenues – Expenses – Dividends.For a check, refer to the statement of retained earnings.E4–10 ConcludedEd's Lawn ServiceIncome StatementFor the Year Ended December 31, 2006Revenue................................................................................................. $ 14,000 Rent expense......................................................................................... (5,000) Miscellaneous expense.......................................................................... (4,000) Loss on sale of land. (200)Net income............................................................................................. $ 4,800Ed's Lawn ServiceStatement of Stockholders’ EquityFor the Year Ended December 31, 2006Contributed RetainedCapital EarningsBeginning balance, January 1, 2006 $ 0 $ 0Net income 4,800Dividends (2,200)Stockholder contribution 12,000 _____Ending balance, December 31, 2006 $ 12,000 $ 2,600Ed's Lawn ServiceBalance SheetAs of December 31, 2006Assets Liabilities and Stockholders' EquityCash .................................... $ 8,600 Notes payable........................ $ 5,000 Accounts receivable.............4,000 Contributed capital................. 12,000 Land ....................................7,000 Retained earnings.................. 2,600Total liabilities andTotal assets..........................$19,600 stockholders' equity........... $19,600Ed's Lawn ServiceStatement of Cash FlowsFor the Year Ended December 31, 2006Cash flows from operating activities:Cash collected from customers.................................. $ 10,000Rent payments on lawn equipment............................ (5,000)Payment of miscellaneous expenses......................... (4,000)Net cash increase from operating activities.......... $ 1,000 Cash flows from investing activities:Proceeds from sale of land........................................ $ 2,800Cash paid for land...................................................... (10,000)Net cash decrease from investing activities.......... (7,200) Cash flows from financing activities:Stockholder contributions........................................... $ 12,000Proceeds from bank loan........................................... 5,000Dividend payments..................................................... (2,200)Net cash increase from financing activities........... 14,800 Increase in cash.............................................................. $ 8,600 Beginning cash balance.. 0Ending cash balance....................................................... $ 8,600E4–11a. Ending cash balance = $8,000 + $109,500 – $90,000 = $27,500b.Holcomb ManufacturingStatement of Cash FlowsFor the Year Ended December 31, 2006Cash flows from operating activities:Cash collections from customers............................... $ 74,000Payments for inventory............................................... (34,000)Payment of wages...................................................... (16,000)Payment of administrative expenses......................... (12,000)Payment of interest..................................................... (3,000)Net cash increase due to operating activities........ $ 9,000 Cash flows from investing activities:Proceeds from long-term investments....................... $ 12,500Purchase of equipment.............................................. (11,000)Net cash increase due to investing activities........ $ 1,500 Cash flows from financing activities:Proceeds from issuance of common stock................ $ 14,000Proceeds from borrowing........................................... 9,000Repayment of bank loan............................................ (10,000)Payment of dividends................................................. (4,000)Net cash increase due to financing activities........ 9,000 Increase in cash balance................................................ $ 19,500 Beginning cash balance.................................................. 8,000 Ending cash balance....................................................... $ 27,500 E4–12a. (1) The entry is to record rent incurred but not yet paid.(2) The entry is to record the expiration of a previously purchased insurance policy.(3) The entry is to record the expiration of a portion of a fixed asset cost.(4) The entry is to record interest revenue earned but not yet collected.(5) The entry is to record the expiration of a deferred revenue.b. (1) Accrual adjusting entry(2) Cost expiration adjusting entry(3) Cost expiration adjusting entry(4) Accrual adjusting entry(5) Cost expiration adjusting entryE4–13(1) Accrual adjusting entry (7) Investing cash flow(2) Operating cash flow (8) Cost expiration adjusting entry(3) Financing cash flow (9) Operating cash flow(4) Cost expiration adjusting entry (10) Cost expiration adjusting entry(5) Cost expiration adjusting entry (11) Operating cash flow(6) Operating cash flow (12) Cost expiration adjusting entry。
Solution to Financial Accounting Theory William R Scott 5th Ch10
Chapter 11S UGGESTED S OLUTIONS1. Some reasons why a firm’s management might both believe in securities marketefficiency and engage in earnings management are:x Income taxation. The firm may be able to postpone payment of taxes if it can minimize its reported income, for example by managing accruals, orusing LIFO (if allowed by the tax authority).x Managerial bonus plan. As Healy documents, managers have incentives to maximize their bonuses, consistent with the bonus plan hypothesis ofpositive accounting theory. Consequently, they may adopt accountingpolicies to increase reported net income, or to reduce reported net income ifit is below the bogey or above the cap of the bonus plan.x Covenants in lending agreements. Managers may adopt policies to increase reported net income, or other financial statement variables, to avoidcovenant violation or even to avoid being too close to violation. Lendingagreements may also induce income-smoothing behaviour. A smoothsequence of reported net incomes will reduce the probability of covenantviolation.x A smooth earnings sequence may increase the willingness of lenders and suppliers to grant short-term credit. This is particularly so if the firm hasimplicit contracts with these stakeholders.x Political visibility. By reducing its reported net income the firm may forestall government intervention which might ensue if the public felt the firm wasearning excessive profits. Question 10 of Chapter 8 illustrates this point.x Earnings management can be a credible way to communicate the firm’s inside information about its longer-term expected profitability to the market.x Poor disclosure. The manager may feel he/she can manage earningsopportunistically but hide behind poor disclosure to prevent the efficientmarket from detecting it.5. The following points should be made:• Generally speaking, fair value accounting for financial instrumentseliminates the ability to manage earnings through gains trading, since theamounts and timing of the resulting unrealized gains and losses are nolonger under management control.• Some earnings management potential may exist under IAS 39 and SFAS 115 by transferring financial assets between categories, such as fromheld-to-maturity to trading or available-for-sale. This triggers anunrealized gain or loss on the transferred items. However, a sale ortransfer out of the held-to-maturity category is inconsistent with an intentto hold securities in this category to maturity. Thus, these standardscontain provisions to severely limit such possibilities. For example, ifsuch a transfer is made, IAS 39 prevents use of the held-to-maturitycategory for two years. This eliminates the ability to manage earnings onfuture transfers of this nature.•However, under IAS 39 and SFAS 115, unrealized gains and losses on available-for-sale securities are excluded from net income. Then, theremay be a potential for earnings management by actual sale of financialinstruments, since any realized gains and losses on these instrumentswill then be transferred into net income.• Where market values for financial instruments are not available, someability to manage unrealized gains and losses remains, since fair valueswill then have to be estimated. Management may influence unrealizedand realized earnings by managing the fair value estimates.We may conclude that while managing earnings for bonus purposes will be reducedunder fair value accounting for financial instruments, some ability to manage earnings remains.7. a. Reasons to resort to extreme earnings management tactics:x To meet analysts’ forecasts. As stated in the question, this was the apparent reason in BMS’ case.x Contractual reasons. To increase bonuses and/or to avoid debt covenant violations.x Implicit contracts. To increase earnings so as to receive better terms from suppliers. In BMS’ case, this seems unlikely since wholesalers were pressedto accept excess inventory.x IPO. The firm may have wanted to increase and/or smooth earnings so as to increase proceeds from a planned IPO.b. From the standpoint of a single year, stuffing the channels seems effective.This is because it is hard to detect.S uch behaviour may possibly be detected through full disclosure, such as sales byproduct, segment, or region. Then, careful analysis may reveal unusual sales patterns.However, the company has little motivation to provide full disclosure unless required by GAAP and/or insisted upon by the auditor.W holesalers may object if too much inventory is forced upon them. Since wholesalers are not formally BMS employees, it may be more difficult to keep them fromcomplaining to regulators or the media. However, in BMS’ case, paying their carrying charges may have been a device to avoid such complaints.O ver a series of years, stuffing the channels is likely to be less effective, for thefollowing reasons:x Accruals reverse. Product stuffed into the channels this year will reduce sales next year. Ever more stuffing is needed if the strategy is to bemaintained.x Physical limitations. There may be limits on wholesalers’ storage space.x Cost. It seems that paying the wholesalers’ carrying costs for theirexcess inventory became quite costly for BMS.We conclude that while stuffing the channels may be reasonably effective in the short run, it loses effectiveness to the extent it is used over multiple periods.c. Cookie jar accounting seems reasonably effective as an earnings managementdevice since it can be hard to detect. The firm has some flexibility about the extent of disclosure of gains and losses from asset disposals (see discussion re unusual, non-recurring, and extraordinary items in Section 5.5.). Furthermore, overprovision for losses puts future earnings (i.e., cookies) in the bank (jar), and GAAP does not require separate disclosure of the effect on operating earnings when these accruals reverse.F ull disclosure of unusual, non-recurring, and extraordinary items may tip off an efficient market as to the possibility of cookie jar accounting. This effect was documented by Elliott and Hanna (1996)—see Sections 5.5 and 11.6.1. While even an efficient market will not really know the actual extent of such accounting without full disclosure, suspicions may lead to SEC investigation. This seems to have happened to BMS.E ffectiveness of cookie jar accounting can be increased if it is used responsibly to reveal management’s estimate of persistent earning power (i.e., good earnings management). It seems unlikely that BMS was using it in this manner, however.W e conclude that while cookie jar accounting can be reasonably effective, and has the potential to be good, its continuing and excessive misuse may lead to its discovery and subsequent penalties.B MS appears to have been using cookie jar accounting to smooth reported earnings.9. a. Restructuring charges are an effective earnings management device. They arean unusual and non-recurring item, hence of low persistence. As a result, they may be ignored by investors in evaluating operating earnings, and by compensationcommittees for bonus purposes.However, the reasonableness of the amount of the restructuring charge is difficult for investors and compensation committees to evaluate. Consequently, as Hanna (1999) argues, management may overstate the amount, thereby putting earnings in the bank.These future earnings increases are also difficult to detect, since they become buried in lower amortization and/or used to absorb costs that would otherwise be charged to future earnings. Thus management can have it both ways—little penalty when thecharge is reported, and reward for increased future operating earnings. In effect,Hanna’s argument is that restructuring charges are too effective an earningsmanagement device since they create temptations for opportunistic managerbehaviour.With respect to GE, it seems that restructuring charges are used in conjunction withother earnings management devices to manage current reported earnings. GE’s goal seems to be to report steadily increasing earnings. This goal rules out reporting huge increases in earnings currently, such as earnings from large extraordinary gains, since it may be hard to top these earnings in future years. Then, restructuring charges servea role of reducing current reported earnings to a desired level. Given the variety ofother earnings management devices at its disposal, it seems unnecessary for GE to overstate restructuring charges. If it did, it is unlikely that it could sustain the pattern of steadily increasing earnings it has reported. Overall, GE’s use of restructuring chargesseems quite effective as part of an overall earnings management strategy that avoids reporting large, unsustainable earnings increases.b. It seems unlikely that GE’s share price always fully reflects all publicly available information. Costs of fully analyzing all information, and idiosyncratic risk, contribute to lack of full market efficiency. In GE’s case, costs of analysis are particularly high, since the firm’s complexity makes it difficult even for analysts to fully interpret GE. Also, investors who wish to eliminate idiosyncratic risk would find it difficult to find similar firms to invest in. Thus, any anomalies and resultant mispricing of GE shares are likely to persist.However, any mispricing will be reduced, if not eliminated, if GE’s management uses earnings management responsibly to reveal its expected persistent earning power, since share prices are based to a considerable extent on expected future earnings. If management’s inside information about expected earning power is accurate, GE’s share price should trade at a price similar to its price if the market had fully digested all publicly available information.c. The answer follows from part b. It seems that GE is using earnings management responsibly to convey inside information about expected earning power. This stands in for the difficulty analysts and investors face in fully evaluating all available information themselves. As a result, GE’s share price should reasonably reflect its future performance. We conclude that, in this case, GE’s earnings management is good.14. a. The revenue deferral will decrease relevance, since there is now a greater recognition lag for contract revenue. This reduces the ability of investors to revise state probabilities and predict future cash flows of the firm. However, reliability will increase, since there is now less chance of error or bias in revenue recognition.b. Nortel appears to be following a pattern of big bath for 2005. The shareholderlitigation expense item creates a large loss for the year. Nortel may feel that this would be a good time to defer revenue, since there is a large loss anyway, and, sinceaccruals reverse, deferral now will increase revenue to be recognized in futureperiods.c. Abnormal return is the difference between expected and actual share return forthe day. From the market model, the expected return for Nortel for t = March 10/06was:R jt = Įj + ȕj R Mt, where Įj = R f(1 – ȕj)= .0001(1 – 1.96) + 1.96 × .0058= -.0001 + .0114= .0113The actual return on Nortel shares for this day was - .0305. Abnormal return was thus (-.0305 – .0113) = - .0418, or - 4.18%.The abnormal share return likely arose because of the revenue deferral, since themarket would have been aware of the shareholder litigation and would haveincorporated the expected settlement amount into Nortel’s share price prior to March10. The news of the deferral would cause investors to lose confidence in Nortel’s accounting, increasing estimation risk.An opposite answer can also be supported, for either of 2 reasons:x If the amount of the settlement exceeded the market’s expectation, the news of the settlement amount could have caused the negative abnormal return.x If markets are not fully efficient, the market may not have incorporated an expected settlement amount into Nortel’s share price prior to the news of March10.d. Inclusion in operations seems questionable. Presumably, shareholder litigationresulting from accounting restatements will not occur frequently over several years.Also, such lawsuits do not typify the normal business activities of Nortel. Inaddition, the amount or timing of the expense does not seem to depend ondecisions or determination by managers or owners. Thus, the 3 requirements for an extraordinary item are met.Nortel may have intentionally overestimated its litigation settlement costs charged to current operations, in order to put earnings in the bank. If so, this is consistent with the argument of Hanna (1999). To the extent actual litigation costs are less than $2.474 billion, the difference can be transferred back to earnings fromcontinuing operations at some future date.。
《财务会计理论》scott英文参考文献
【英文教学参考书】⑴AICPA,1994,"Improving Business Reporting:A Customs Focus".⑵FASB,2001,"Improving Business Reporting:Insights into Enhancing Voluntary Disclosures".⑶Storey and Teague,1995,"Foundation of Accounting Theory and Policy",The Dryden Press.⑷Previts and Merino,1979,"A History of Accounting in American",John Wilet&Son Press.⑸Scott,1997,"Financial Accounting Theory",Prentice-Hall Publishing Company..⑺Upton,2001,"Business and Financial Reporting,Challenges from The New Economy",FASB.⑻Zeff and Dharan,1994,"Readings and Notes on Financial Accounting:Issues and Controversies", McGraw-Hill Company.外文经典文献:Watts , Ross , and Jerold L. Zimmerman. Toward a Positive Theory of Determination of Accounting standards .The Accounting review (Jan 1978)Watts , Ross , and Jerold L. Zimmerman. Positive Accounting Theory: A Ten Year Perspective. The Accounting review (Jan 1990)Sorter , George H. An Event Approach to Basic Accounting Theory . The Accounting review (Jan 1969)Wallman,1995.9,1996.6,1996.12,1997.6,"The Future of Accounting and Financial Reporting " (I ,II,III,IV),Accounting Horizon.Jenson ,M.C. , and W.H. Meckling . Theory of the firm: managerial behavior, agency costs and ownership structure . Journal of financial economics (Oct .1976)Robert sprouse “developing a concept framework for financial reporting” Accounting Review, 1988(12) Schuetze ,,Walter P.”what is an Asset ?” Accountinghorizons,1993(9)Samuelson ,Richard A. ,”The concept of Assets in Accounting Theory” Accounting horizons,1996(9)AAA ,”American Accounting Association on Accounting and Auditing Measurement:1989-1990” Accounting Horizons 1991(9)L.Todd Johnson and Kimberley R.Petrone “Is Goodwill an Asset?” Accounting Horizons1998(9)Linsmeier, Thomas J. and Boatsman ,Ja mes R. ,”AAA’s financial accounting standard response to IASC ED60 intangible assets” Accounting Horizons 1998(9)Linsmeier, Thomas J. and Boatsman,JamesR.”Response to IASC ExposureDraft ,’Provisions,Contingent Liabilities and Contingent Assets’ ” Accoun ting Horizons1998(6)L.Todd Johnson and Robert. Swieringa “derivatives, hedging and comprehensive income” Accounting Horizons 1996(11)Stephen A. .Zeff ,”The Rise of Economics Concequences”, The Journal of Accountancy 1978(12)David Solomons “the FASB’s Conceptual Framework:An Evaluation ” The Journal of Accountancy 1986(6)Paul Miller , “Conceptual Framework:Myths or Realities” The Journal of Accountancy 1985(3)Part I Financial Accounting TheorySuggested Bedtime Readings:1. C.J. Lee, Lecture Note on Accounting and Capital Market2. R. Watts and J. Zimmerman: Positive Accounting Theory3. W. Beaver: Revolution of Financial ReportingAlthough these three books are relatively "low-tech" in comparison with the reading assignments, but they provide much useful institutional background to the course. Moreover, these books give a good survey of accounting literature, especially in the empirical area.1. Financial Information and Asset Market Equilibrium*Grossman, S. and J. Stiglitz, "On the Impossibility of Informationally EfficientMarkets," American Economic Review (1980), 393-408.*Diamond, D. and R. Verrecchia, "Information Aggregation in a Noisy Rational Expectations Economy," Journal of Financial Economics, (1981), 221-35.*Milgrom, P. "Good News and Bad News: Representation Theorems and Applications," Bell Journal of Economics, (1981): 380-91.Grinblatt, M. and S. Ross, "Market Power in a Securities Market with Endogenous Information," Quarterly Journal of Economics, (1985), 1143-67.2. Financial Disclosure* Verrecchia, R. "Discretionary Disclosure," Journal of Accounting and Economics (1983),179-94.2Dye, R., "Proprietary and Nonproprietary Disclosure," Journal of Business, 59 (1986), 331-66.Dye, R., "Mandatory Versus Voluntary Disclosures: The Cases of Financial and Real Externalities," Accounting Review, (1990), 1-24.Bhushan, R., "Collection of Information About Public Traded Firms: Theory and Evidence," Journal of Economics and Accounting, (1989), 183-206.Diamond, D. "Optimal Release of Information by Firms," Journal of Economic Theory (1985), 1071-94.Verrecchia, R. "Information Quality and Discretionary Disclosure," Journal of Accounting and Economics, 1990.Trueman, B. "Theories of Earnings-announcement Timing," Journal of Accounting and Economics, 13 (1990), 1-17.Joh, G. and C. J. Lee "Timing of Financial Disclosure in Oligopolies," mimeo.* Joh, G. and C. J. Lee "Stock Market Reactions to Accounting Information in Oligopoly," Journal of Business, 1992.Darrough, M.N. and N.M. Stoughton, "Financial Disclosure Policy in an Entry Game," Journal of Accounting and Economics, (1990), 219-243.Wagenhofer, A. "Voluntary Disclosure with a Strategic Opponent," Journal of Accounting and Economics, 12 (1990), 341-363.Chang, C. and C.J. Lee, "Information Acquisition as a Business Strategy," Southern Economic Journal, 1992.Chang, C. and C.J. Lee, "Optimal Pricing Strategy in Marketing Research Consulting," International Economic Review, May 1994.Chang, C. and C.J. Lee, "Selling Proprietary Information to Rivaling Clients," mimeo.3. Earnings Manipulation and Accounting Choice* Watts, R. and J. Zimmerman,"Toward a Positive Theory of the Determination ofAccounting Standards," Accounting Review, January 1978, pp.112-34.*Healy, P.M. "The Effect of Bonus Schemes on Accounting Decisions" Journal of Accounting and Economics, April 1985, 85-108.*Chen, K. and C.J. Lee, "Executive Bonus Plans and Accounting Trade-off: The Case of the 3Oil and Gas Industry, 1985-86," Accounting Review, January, 1995.*Lee, C.J. and D. Hsieh, "Choice of Inventory Accounting Methods: A Test of Alternative Hypotheses," Journal of Accounting Research, Autumn 1985.*Lee, C.J. and C.R. Petruzzi, "Inventory Accounting Switch and Uncertainty", Journal of Accounting Research, Autumn 1989.*Chau, D. and C.J. Lee, “Big Bath and Dress Up in the Process of Chapter 11 Restructuring,” working paper.*Aharony, J., C.J. Lee, and T.J. Wong, “Financial Packaging of IPO Firms in China” Journal of Accounting Research, Spring 2000.Gu, Z. and C.J. Lee, “How Widespread is Earnings Management? A Measurement Based on Seasonal Heteroscedasticity.” working paperGu, Z. and C.J. Lee, “Cross-sectional Heteroscedasticity of Accounting Accruals,” working paper.Holthausen, R.W. and R.W. Leftwich, "The Economic Consequences of Accounting Choice: Implications of Costly Contracting and Monitoring," Journal of Accounting and Economics, August 1983, PP. 77-118.Moyer, S.E. "Capital Adequacy Ratio Regulations and Accounting Choices in Commercial banks," Journal of Accounting and Economics, (1990), 123-154.Blacconiere, W.G., R.M. Bowen, S.E. Sefcik, and C.H. Stinson, "Determinants of the Use of Regulatory Accounting Principles by Savings and Loans," Journal of Accounting and Economics, (1991) 167-202.Hand, J.R.M. and P.J. Hughes, and S.E. Sefcik, "Insubstance Defeasances," Journal of Accounting and Economics, (1990), 47-89.Duke, J.C. and H.G. Hunt III, "An Empirical Examination of Debt Covenant Restrictions and Accounting-Related Debt Proxies," Journal of Accounting and Economics, 12 (1990), 45-64.Malmquist, D.H., "Efficient Contracting and the Choice of Accounting Method in the Oil and Gas Industry," Journal of Accounting and Economics, 12 (1990), 173-207.Holthausen, R.W., "Accounting Method Choice: Opportunistic Behavior, Efficient Contracting, and Information Perspectives," Journal of Accounting and Economics, 12 (1990), 207-218.Watts, R. L. and J. L. Zimmerman, Positive Accounting Theory, Prentice Hall, 1985, Chapters 7-15.44. Measurement and Valuation Role of Accounting*Ball, R. and P. Brown, “Empirical Evaluation of Accounting Income Numbers,” Journal of Accounting Research, 1968.*Lee, C.J. and A. Li, “Risk, Contrarian Strategies, and Analysts’ Over-reaction: A Study of B/M and E/P Anomaly in Cross-sectional Returns.” Working Paper.Lee, C.J. "Inventory Accounting and Earnings/Price Ratios: A Puzzle," Contemporary Accounting Research, Fall, 1988.Chen, K. and C.J. Lee, "Accounting Measurement of Economic Performance and Tobin's q Theory," Journal of Accounting, Auditing, and Finance, Spring, 1995.Gu, Z. and C.J. Lee, "Co-integration and Test of Present Value Model: A Revisit," mimeo.Ghosh, A. and C.J. Lee, "Accounting Information and Market Valuation of Takeover Premium," Financial Management, Forthcoming* Joh, G. and C. J. Lee "Stock Market Reactions to Accounting Information in Oligopoly," Journal of Business, 1992.Part II Managerial Accounting5. Agency Theory*Holmstrom, B. "Moral Hazard and Observability," Bell Journal of Economics, (1979), 74-91Rogerson, "The First Order Approach to Principal-Agent Problems," Econometrica, March 1985.*Jesen, M. and W. Meckling, "Theory of the Firm, Managerial Behavior, Agency Costs and Ownership Structure," Journal of Financial Economcs, (1976), 305-60.*Grossman, S. and O. Hart, "An Analysis of the Principal-Agent Problem," Econometrica, (1983), 7-46.Holmstrom, B. "Moral Hazard in Teams," Bell Journal of Economics, (1982), 224-40.Milgrom, P. and J. Roberts, "Relying on the Information of Interested Parties," The Rand Journal of Economics, (1986), 18-32.Malcomson, J. "Rank-order Contract for a Principal with Many Agents," Review of Eonomic Studies, (1986), 807-817.Lambert, R. "Long-term Contracts and Moral Hazard," Bell Journal of Economics, (1983),5.441-452.Malcomson, J. and F. Spinnewyn, "The Multiperiod Principal-Agent Problem," Review of Economic Studies, (1988), 391-408.6. Theory of Firm and Organization*Coase, R.H. "The Nature of the Firm," Economica, (1937), 386-405.*Alchian, A.A. "Uncertainty, Evolution and Economic Theory," Journal of Political Economy,(1950), 211-21.*Alchian, A.A. and H. Demsetz, "Production, Information Costs and Economic Organization," American Economic Review, (1972), 777-795.* Sah, R. and J. Stiglitz, "The Architecture of Economic Systems: Hierarchies and Polyarchies," American Economic Review (1986), 716-727Aoki, M. "Horizontal vs. Vertical Information Structure of the Firm," American Economic Review (1986), 971-983.Tirole, J. "Hierarchies and Bureaucracies," Journal of Law, Economics and Organization (1986), 181-214.Christensen, J. "Communication in Agencies," Bell Journal of Economics, (1981), 661-674.Grossman, S. and O. Hart, "The Costs and Benefits of Ownership: A Theory of Vertical and Horizontal Integration," Journal of Political Economy, (1986), 691-719.Mookherjee, D. "Optimal Incentive Schemes with Many Agents," Review of Economic Studies (1984), 433-46.Demski, J. and D. Sappington, "Optimal Incentives with Multiple Agents," Journal of Economic Theory (1984), 152-71.Holmstrom, B. and J. Tirole, "The Theory of the Firm," in Handbook of Industrial Organization, 1990.Williamson, O. Markets and Hierarchies, 1975Williamson, O. The Economic Institution of Capitalism, 1985, Ch.6, 9, 11.7. Accounting and Internal Control*Demski, J. and D. Sappington, "Hierarchical Structure and Responsibility Accounting," Journal of Accounting Research, 1989.6*Coase, R.H., "Accounting and the Theory of Firm," Journal of Accounting and Economics, (1990), 3-13.Jordan, J., "The Economics of Accounting Information Systems," American Economic Review, 1989.Antle, R. and J. Fellingham, "Resource Rationing and Oganizational Slack in aTwo-Period Model," Journal of Accounting Research, (1990) 1-24.Demski, J., J. Patell, and M. Wolfson, "Decentralized Choice of Monitoring Systems," Accounting Review, (1984), 16-34.Penno, M. "Accounting Systems, Participation in Budgeting, and Performance Evaluation," Accounting Review, (1990), 303-314.Melumed, N.D. and S. Reichelstein, "Centralized vesus Delegation and the Value of Communication," Journal of Accounting Research, (1987 Supplement), 1-21.8. Field Studies of Management Accounting*Baiman, S., D.F. Larcker, and M.V. Rajan, "Organizational Design for Business Units," Journal of Accounting Research, 33 (Autumn 1995): 205-231.Lee, C.J. “Financial Restructuring of State-owned Enterprises in China: The Case of Shanghai Sunve Co.” Accounting, Organization and Society, fo rthcoming.Part 3. Auditing and Accounting Regulation9. Role of Auditing*R.A. Dye, B.V. Balachandran, and R.P. Magee, "Contingent Fees for Audit Firms," Journal of Accounting Research, (1990), 239-266.*L. DeAngelo, "Auditor Independence, 'Low Balling,' and Disclosure Regulation," Journal of Accounting and Economics, (1981), 113-27.*Lee, C.J. and Z. Gu, " Low Balling, Legal Liability and Auditor Independence,” Accounting Review, 1998.Magee, R.P. and M. Tseng, "Audit Pricing and Independence," Accounting Review, (1990), 315-336.Datar, S., G.A. Feltham, and J.S. Hughes, "The Role of Audits and Audit Quality in Valuing New Issues," Journal of Accounting and Economics, (1991), 3-50.7Penno, M. "Auditing for Performance Evaluation," Accounting Review, (1990),520-536.Melumad, N.D. and L. Thoman, "On Auditors and the Courts in an Adverse Selection Setting," Journal of Accounting Research, (1990) 77-120.Baiman, S., J.H. Evans III, and N.J. Nagarajan, "Collusion in Auditing," Journal of Accounting Research, (1991), 1-18.10. Financial Accounting Standards*Dye, R. and R.E. Verrecchia, "Discretion vs. Uniformity: Choices Among GAAP," Accounting Review, July 1995, 389-415.Farrell, J. and G. Saloner, "Standardization, Compatibility, and Innovation," Rand Journal of Economics. 16 (Spring 1985): 70-83.*Lev, B. "Toward a Theory of Equitable and Efficient Accounting Policy," Accounting Review, January 1988.11. The Market of CPAs*Dye, R. "Incorporation and the Audit Market," Journal of Accounting and Economics, 19 (1995): 75-114.*Lee, C.J., C. Liu, and T. Wang, “The 150 Hours Rule,” Journal of Accounting and Economics, 1999.Liu, C., C.J. Lee, and T. Wang, “Human Capital, Auditor Independence, and Legal Liability,” working paper.Riodan, M. and D. Sappington, "Information, Incentives, and Organizational Mode,"Quarterly Journal of Economics, 102 (1987): 243-264.*Gigler, F. and M. Penno, "Imperfect Competition in Audit Markets and its Effects on the Demand for Audit-Related Services," Accounting Review, 70 (April 1995):317-336.。
Financial Accounting Theory (7)
Copyright © 2015 Pearson Canada Inc.
7-8
7.4 Financial Instruments
• Definition
– A contract that creates a financial asset of one firm and a financial liability or equity instrument of another firm
• Recognition is sooner than under historical cost
• Increases in value recognized when realized under historical cost
Copyright © 2015 Pearson Canada Inc.
• After acquisition, most liabilities valued at amortized cost
Copyright © 2015 Pearson Canada Inc. 7 - 10
7.5.3 The Fair Value Option
• Under IFRS 9, firm may designate financial assets/liabilities at acquisition as valued at fair value to reduce a mismatch.
• Barth, Hodden, and Stubben (2008)
– IFRS 9 requires own credit risk gains/losses to be included in OCI
Copyright © 2015 Pearson Canada Inc.
Financial Accounting Theory
Copyright © 2000 McGraw-Hill Book Co. Aust. PPT t/a Financial Accounting Theory by Deegan
4.11
Chapter 4: Accounting for changing prices
Calculating indices
4.12
Chapter 4: Accounting for changing prices
Performing current purchase power adjustments
• All adjustments are performed at the end of the period
Financial Accounting Theory
Copyright © 2000 McGraw-Hill Book Co. Aust. PPT t/a Financial Accounting Theory by Deegan
4.1
Financial Accounting Theory
Craig Deegan
Chapter 4 Normative theories of accounting - the case of accounting for changing prices
Slides written by Michaela Rankin
Copyright © 2000 McGraw-Hill Book Co. Aust. PPT t/a Financial Accounting Theory by Deegan
• literature then moved towards current cost accounting
第七版答案(翻译-英译中结果)
内容第1章介绍 (1)第二章会计..........................................................在理想的条件7第三章财务报告的决策有用法 (68)第四章......................................................................有效的证券市场129第五章会计信息的价值相关性 (153)第六章决策有用性................................测量方法194第七章........................................................................测量应用237第8章有效的决策有用的契约方法 (285)第九章的分析冲突 (321)第十章高管薪酬 (371)第十一章盈余管理 (425)第十二章标准设置:经济问题 (487)第十三章标准设置:政治问题 (527)版权©2015年皮尔森加拿大公司。
第一章介绍1.1 这本书的目的1.2 一些历史的角度来看1.3 2007-2008年的市场崩盘1.4 有效的合同1.5 关于道德行为的说明1.6 基于规则的与基于原则的会计准则1.7 财务会计和报告信息的复杂性1.8 会计研究的作用1.9 信息不对称的重要性1.10财务会计理论的基本问题1.11监管作为对根本问题的反应1.12本书的组织结构1.12.1理想条件1.12.2逆向选择1.12.3道德风险1.12.4标准设定1.12.5标准设定过程1.13财务会计理论与会计实务的相关性学习目标及建议教学方法1. 这本书的概要我使用图1.1作为模板来描述这本书的大致轮廓。
由于学生们通常没有机会在第一节课上阅读第一章,所以我非常关注这一章的内容。
我讨论的要点是:•理想的会计环境。
在这里,基于现值的会计是很自然的。
我讨论了这种会计基础可行所需的理想条件,但没有详细讨论,因为这个主题在第2章有更深入的讨论。
财务英语中文对照
F∙fixed asset turnover固定资产周转率∙fixed charge coverage ratio偿付固定费用能力∙face amount票面金额,面额∙face value票面价值,面值∙facility设备,设施;资金融通∙facility letter贷款通知,贷款确认函∙facsimile 传真∙facsimile signature复制签字∙factor销售代理商,应收帐款代理商,因素,要素∙factorage销售代理商佣金∙factor analysis因素分析法∙factor cost要素成本∙factor income要素收入,要素收益∙factoring应收帐款代收,应收帐款转售∙factoring commission销售代理商佣金∙factoring company应收帐款代理公司∙factor’s lien销售代理商留置权∙factors of production生产要素∙factory工厂,制造厂;制造∙factory accounting工厂会计∙factory cost工厂成本∙factory ledger工厂分类帐∙factory overhead工厂间接费用∙factory overhead rate工厂间接费用分配率∙factory tax出厂税∙facultative reinsurance临时分保合同∙failure经营失败,未能履行合同∙failure cost未能履行合同成本∙fair competition公平竞争∙fair credit reporting act公平信用调查报告法案∙fair debt collection practices act公正债务催收法案∙fair employment practice laws公平就业法∙fair labor standard act公平劳动标准法∙fair market price公平市场价格,公平市场∙fairness公正性∙fair presentation公正反映∙fair rate of return公平收益率∙fair trade公平交易∙fair transfer price公平划拨价格∙fair value公平价值∙fair view公正反映∙fair wage公平工资,公允工资∙false accounting 虚假会计∙false advertising虚假广告∙false earnings 虚假收益∙false entry虚假分录∙false returns虚假纳税申报表∙falsification of documents窜改凭证∙family allowance家庭津贴∙family corporation家族公司∙family expenditure survey家庭支出调查∙Fanie mae联邦全国抵押协会∙farm out分包合同,包税∙farm price method农场计价法∙farm price support农产品价格支持∙farm subsidy农场补助金∙FASB Exposure Draft财务会计准则征求意见稿∙FASB Statements财务会计准则公报∙FAS Summaries财务会计准则摘要∙favorable financial leverage有利财务杠杆作用∙favorable variance有利差异,顺差∙fax modem传真调制解调器∙fax system传真系统,电话传真系统∙feasibility analysis可行性分析∙feasibility analysis for computerization 电算化可行性分析∙feasible constraint可行约束条件∙feasible solution可行解∙Fed联邦储备系统∙Federal Accounting Standards Advisory Board联邦会计准则咨询委员会∙Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation联邦存款保险公司∙federal funds联邦资金∙Federal Home Loan Banks联邦住宅贷款银行∙federal income tax联邦所得税∙federal insurance contribution act tax 联邦社会保险税∙federal national mortgage association联邦全国抵押协会∙federal open market committee联邦公开市场操作委员会∙federal reserve banks联邦储备银行∙federal reserve board联邦储备委员会∙federal reserve notes联邦储备券∙federal reserve system联邦储备系统∙federal trade commission联邦贸易委员会∙federal unemployment tax联邦失业保障税∙federal withhoding tax代扣联邦税∙fed funds联邦储备系统资金∙fedwire联邦储备系统电子转帐系统∙fee劳务费,酬金∙feedback 反馈∙feedback value反馈价值∙FEI Affiliation高级财务管理人员目标协会联系机构∙FEI Code of Ethics高级财务管理人员协会职业道德准则∙FEI Research Foundation高级财务管理人员协会研究基金会∙fellow member正式会员∙Fellow of the association of corporate treasurers公司财务长协会正式会员∙fellow subsidiary联属公司∙fiber-optic communication光纤通信∙FICA tax联邦社会保险税∙fictitious account虚假帐目∙fictitious asset虚构资产,虚列资产∙fictitious liability虚列负债∙fictitious profit虚列利润∙fidelity bond忠诚保证,忠诚保险∙fidelity bond insurance忠诚保证保险∙fidelity duty忠诚职责∙fidelity guarantee忠诚保证∙fiduciary accounting财产信托会计∙fiduciary funds信托资金∙fiduciary institution信托机构∙fiduciary loan信用贷款∙fiduciary money信用货币∙fiduciary relationship信托关系∙field audit现场审计,外勤审计∙field auditor外勤审计师∙field warehousing loan 就地仓库担保贷款∙field work standard for audit外勤审计工作准则∙FIFO method先进先出法∙file文件,文档∙file maintenance文件维护,档案维护∙file retrieval文件检索,档案检索∙file structure文件结构,档案结构∙file sharing文件共享,档案共享∙file type文件类型,档案类型∙filing填报税单,填制报表∙filing status申报纳税身份∙filing system档案保管制度∙final accounts决算表∙final audit期末审计∙final dividend期末股利∙final entry终结分录∙final inventory期末存货∙final invoice终结发票∙final repayment终结清偿∙final review and assessment最终审查和评定∙final statement决算表∙final value终值∙finance筹措资金,融通资金;财政,财务;金融∙finance association财务协会∙finance committee财务委员会∙finance company金融公司∙finance journals财务期刊∙finance lease筹资租赁∙finance net财政互联网,财务互联网∙financial accounting财务会计∙financial accounting standards财务会计准则∙financial accounting theory财务会计理论∙financial accounts 财务报表,会计报表∙financial adviser财务咨询师∙financial analysis财务分析∙financial analysis software财务分析软件∙financial analyst财务分析师∙financial appraisal财务评价∙financial asset金融性资产,金融资产∙financial audit财务审计∙financial bill金融票据∙financial budget财务预算∙financial capital财务资本∙financial capital maintenance concept财务资本维护概念∙financial condition财务状况∙financial control财务控制∙financial crisis财务危机∙financial data财务数据∙financial decision财务决策∙financial department财务处,财务部门∙financial derivatives衍生金融工具,衍生金融票据∙financial disclosure财务披露∙financial embarrassment财务拮据∙financial executive高级财务管理人员∙financial expense财务费用∙financial failure财务无力偿付∙financial forecast财务预测∙financial futures金融期货∙financial game财务对策∙financial gearing财务传动作用∙financial goal财务目标∙financial grossary and dictionary财务词典和词汇∙financial guarantee财务担保∙financial guarantee management财务担保管理∙financial highlight重点财务数据∙financial incentive财务奖励∙financial income财务收益∙financial information system财务信息系统∙financial insolvency财务无力偿付∙financial institution金融机构∙financial instruments金融工具,金融票据∙financial intermediary金融中介机构∙financial investment金融投资∙financial lease财务租赁∙financial leverage财务杠杆作用∙financial leverage adjustment财务杠杆作用调整额∙financial leverage ratio财务杠杆比率∙financial management财务管理∙financial leverage chart财务杠杆作用图表∙financial manager财务经理∙financial market金融市场∙financial mathematics财务数学∙financial model财务模型∙financial objective财务目标∙financial obligation财务债务∙financial officer财务高级管理人员∙financial ombudsman金融业巡视专管员∙financial paper金融票据∙financial planner财务计划师∙financial planning财务计划∙financial planning industry财务计划产业∙financial planning models财务计划模型∙financial policy财务政策∙financial position财务状况∙financial position statement财务状况表∙finance product金融产品∙financial projection财务预测∙financial public relation财务公共关系∙financial ratio财务比率∙financial ratio analysis财务比率分析∙financial report财务报告∙financial revenue财务收入∙financial risk财务风险∙财务网站∙financial service财务服务∙Financial Service Act财务服务法案∙financial settlement财务结算∙financial software财务软件∙financial solvency财务偿付能力∙financial standing财务状况∙financial statement财务报表,会计报表∙financial statement analysis财务报表分析,会计报表分析∙financial statement audit财务报表审计,会计报表审计∙financial statement footnote财务报表附注,会计报表附注∙financial statement structure财务报表结构,会计报表结构∙financial structure财务结构∙financial structure ratio财务结构比率∙financial supermarket金融超级市场∙financial synergism财务增效作用∙financial theory财务理论∙Financial Times Industrial Ordinary Share Index金融时报工业普通股股票价格指数∙Financial Times Stock Exchange 100 Share Index金融时报股票交易所100种股票价格指数∙financial transaction金融业务∙financial transfer财务转发,财务划拨∙financial vice-president财务副总经理∙financing融通资金,筹集资金∙financing cost筹资成本∙financing decision筹资决策∙financing gap资金缺口∙financing lease融资性租赁,筹资性租赁∙financing policy筹资政策∙financing transaction融资业务,筹资业务∙finder中间人,掮客∙finder’s fee中间人佣金,掮客佣金∙findings of audit审计结果∙fine罚金,罚款∙fine paper优等票据∙fine rate优惠利率∙finished goods inventory产成品存货∙finished goods ledger产产品分类帐∙finished goods turnover产产品周转率∙firm商号,事务所;约定的,确定的∙firm offer确定性报价∙firm order确定性订货∙firm risk企业风险∙firm ware硬性软件∙first beneficiary第一受款人∙first-class paper头等票据,优等票据∙first cost最初成本,主要成本∙first entry第一次分录∙first hand information第一手资料∙first-in ,first-out method先进先出法∙first-in ,still-here method先进未出法∙first lien最先留置权,第一留置权∙first mortgage第一抵押∙first option第一购股权∙first year allowance第一年度税收减免∙fiscal agent财务代理人∙fiscal deficit财政赤字∙fiscal monopoly财政垄断∙fiscal multiplier财政乘数∙fiscal policy财政政策∙fiscal redistribution财政再分配∙fiscal theory财政理论∙fiscal year会计年度,财政年度∙fisher effect费希尔效应∙fisher Equation费希尔等式∙fitch investors service, inc.菲奇投资公司∙five C’s of credit信用五个要素∙fixed annuity固定年金∙fixed asset固定资产∙fixed-assets accounting固定资产会计∙fixed-assets audit固定资产审计∙fixed-assets depreciation rate固定资产折旧率∙fixed-assets disposal proceeds固定资产变卖收入∙fixed-assets expenditure固定资产支出∙fixed-assets management固定资产管理∙fixed assets register固定资产登记薄∙fixed assets to equity capital ratio 固定资产对产权资本比率∙fixed-assets turnover固定资产周转率∙fixed base index定期指数,定比指数∙fixed base period固定基期∙fixed benefit plan固定福利金计划∙fixed budget固定预算∙fixed capital固定资本,固定资金∙fixed cash flow固定现金流量∙fixed charge固定费用,固定留置权∙fixed-charge coverage ratio偿付固定费用能力比率∙fixed cost固定成本∙fixed deposit定期存款∙fixed disk固定磁盘∙fixed exchange rate固定汇率∙fixed expense固定费用∙fixed income固定收益∙fixed interest rate固定利率∙fixed interest securities固定利息证券∙fixed investment trust固定投资信托∙fixed liability固定负债∙fixed loan定期贷款∙fixed-order-period inventory system固定订货期存货制度∙fixed-order-quantity inventory system固定订货量存货制度∙fixed overhead固定间接费用∙fixed overhead spending variance固定间接费用开支差异∙fixed overhead variance固定间接费用差异∙fixed overhead volume variance固定间接费用业务量差异∙fixed price contract固定价格合同∙fixed rate loan固定利率贷款∙fixed rate mortgage固定利率抵押∙fixed trust固定信托∙fixture固定装修∙flash report快报∙flat bond无息公债∙flat price统一价格∙flat rate统一费率∙flat tax统一税率∙flat yield固定收益率∙flexible budget弹性预算∙flexible budget formula弹性预算公式∙flexible budget variance弹性预算差异∙flexible exchange rate弹性汇率∙flexible price弹性价格∙flexible rate loan弹性利率贷款∙flexible retirement age弹性退休年龄∙flexible standard cost弹性标准成本∙flexible trust弹性信托∙flexible working hours弹性工时∙flight of capital资本外流∙flight of currency抛售货币∙float浮存;浮动;发行∙floater浮动利率国库券∙floating asset流动资产∙floating capital流动资金∙floating charge流动留置权∙floating exchange rate浮动汇率∙floating interest rate浮动利率∙floating liability流动负债∙floating lien流动留置权∙floating money浮动资金∙floating mortgage流动抵押∙floating rate浮动利率,浮动汇率∙floating-rate bond浮动利率债券∙floating-rate certificate of deposit浮动利率存款单∙floating-rate note浮动利率国库券∙floor股票交易所交易厅;底价∙floor broker交易厅经纪人,交易所内经纪人∙floor price最低限价∙floppy disk软磁盘,软盘∙flotation发行∙flotation cost发行成本∙flow assumption流转假设∙flow chart流程图表∙flow of cash现金流转,现金流量∙flow of costs成本流转∙flow statement流量报表∙flow-through method全部流过法,当期记列法∙fluctuating exchange rate波动汇率∙fluctuating price contract变动价格合同∙FMA Membership国际财务管理人员学会会员资格∙FMA Publication国际财务管理人员学会出版物∙FOB price船上交货价格,离岸价格∙folio reference参见帐页∙follow-up check追查核对∙footing加总,合计∙footing test加总抽查∙footnote附注∙for cash付现,付现交易∙forced auction强制拍卖∙forced insurance强制保险∙forced liquidation强迫清算∙forced sale迫卖,迫售∙forced sale value迫卖价值∙forced saving强迫储蓄∙forecast预测∙forecast budget预测,预算∙forecasted statement 预测报表∙forecasting cash disbursement预计现金支出∙forecasting cash receipt预计现金收入∙forecasting earning per share预测每股收益∙forecasting technique预测技术∙forecasting technique预测技术∙foreclosure取消抵押财产赎回权,没收抵押财产∙foreign aid外援,国外援助∙foreign banking外国银行业务∙foreign bank supervision enhancement act 加强监督国外银行法∙foreign bill国外汇票∙foreign bond国外债券∙foreign branch国外分支机构∙foreign collection国外托收∙foreign corporation外国公司,外州公司∙foreign corrupt practices act国外行贿法案∙foreign credit insurance association国外信用保险协会∙foreign currency外币∙foreign currency account外币帐户∙foreign currency accounting 外币会计∙foreign currency deposit外币存款∙foreign currency futures外币期货∙foreign currency option外币购买权,外币期权∙foreign currency securities外币有价证券∙foreign currency statement外币报表∙foreign currency swaps外币互换,外币掉换∙foreign currency transaction外币经济业务,外币业务∙foreign currency translation外币折算∙foreign currency translation risk外币折算风险∙foreign direct investment国外直接投资∙foreign exchange外汇,外币兑换,外币汇兑∙foreign exchange accounting外汇会计∙foreign exchange arbitrage外汇套利∙foreign exchange broker外汇经纪人∙foreign exchange contract外汇合同∙foreign exchange dealer外汇经销商∙foreign exchange gain or loss外汇兑换损益∙foreign exchange market外汇市场∙foreign exchange rate外汇汇率∙foreign exchange reserve外汇储备∙foreign exchange risk外汇风险∙foreign exchange risk exposure外汇风险暴露∙foreign exchange risk management外汇风险管理∙foreign exchange risk sharing 共同分担外汇风险∙foreign exchange settlement结汇∙foreign exchange transaction外汇经济业务,外汇业务∙foreign income国外收益∙foreign investment国外投资∙foreign loan国外贷款∙foreign market beta国外证券市场贝塔风险∙foreign market value国外市场价值∙foreign money order国外汇票∙foreign operation国外业务∙foreign payments国外付款∙foreign risk国外风险∙foreign sales corporation国外销售公司∙foreign subsidiary国外子公司∙foreign tax credit国外税收抵免[编辑]G∙gross profit ratio毛利率∙gain获利,收益∙gain and loss损益∙gain and loss account损益帐户∙gain contingency或有收益,或有利得∙gain on disposal of fixed assets变卖固定资产收益∙gain on foreign exchange外汇收益∙gain on inventory taking存货盘盈收益∙fain on investment投资收益∙game theory对策论,博弈论∙GAO Fraud Net美国审计总署揭发舞弊网络∙GAO Report美国审计总署审计报告∙GAO’s value concept美国审计总署的价值观∙GAO Yellow Book美国审计总署黄皮书∙garbage in,garbage out无用输入,无用输出∙garnished wage扣发工资∙garnishee第三债务人∙garnishment扣押,扣发∙GASB Concepts Statements政府会计准则委员会会计概念公报∙GASB Guiding Principles政府会计准则委员会指导原则∙GASB Standard政府会计准则委员会准则∙geared investment trust举债经营投资信托公司∙gearing 财务传动作用∙gearing adjustment财务传动作用调整∙gearing effect财务传动作用效应∙gearing ratio财务传动率∙general acceptance普通汇票∙general accountant总会计师,总会计∙general accounting普通会计∙general accounts总帐∙general agent总代理商∙General Agreement on Tariff and Trade关税和贸易总协定∙general and administrative expense一般管理费用∙general arrangements to borrow 10国集团借款总安排∙general assignment普通转让,一般转让∙general audit普通审计∙general auditor总审计师,总审计∙general average共同海损∙general average contribution共同海损分配∙general balance sheet普通资产负债表∙general budget总预算∙general cash普通现金∙general casher出纳主任,总出纳∙general contractor总承包商∙general counsel法律总顾问∙general creditor普通债权人∙general crossed check普通划线支票∙general debt普通债务∙general endorsement普通背书∙general entry普通分录∙general expense一般费用,总务费用∙general fund普通基金∙general insurance普通保险∙general inventory财产目录,财产总目录∙generalized audit software通用审计软件∙general journal普通日记帐∙general ledger总分类帐∙general legacy普通遗嘱∙general lien总括留置权∙general accepted accounting principle公认会计原则∙general accepted auditing standards公认审计准则∙general manager总经理∙general meeting of stockholders股东大会∙general mortgage普通抵押∙general mortgage bond普通抵押债券∙general obligation bond普通信用担保债券∙general overhead一般间接费用∙general partner普通合伙人∙general partnership普通合伙∙general policy总括保险单∙general price index一般物价指数∙general price level accounting一般物价水平会计∙general price level adjusted statement 按一般物价水平调整的报表∙general property tax普通财产税∙general purchasing power accounting一般购买力会计∙general purchasing power gain or loss一般购买力损益∙general purpose financial statement通用财务报表,通用会计报表∙general purpose language通用语言∙general records普通帐薄∙general reserve普通准备金∙general standard for audit一般性审计准则∙general tariff普通税则,一般税则∙general term and conditions一般交易条件∙gentlemen’s agreement君子协定∙geographic segment地区分部∙geographic segment地区分部∙geographic wage differential 地区工作差别∙GFOA Membership政府财务官员协会会员资格∙GFOA publication政府财务官员协会出版社∙gift tax赠与税∙gilt-edged bill金边证券,优质证券∙Ginnie Mae政府全国抵押协会∙giro银行自动直接转帐∙giro system直接转帐制度∙Gitman disk吉特曼磁盘∙glamour stock热门股票∙global accounting全球会计∙global accounting standards全球会计准则∙global alliance全球联盟∙global auditing standards全球审计准则∙global bond全球债券∙global capital market全球资本市场∙global custody全球证券投资保管业务∙global depositary receipts全球证券存单∙global economy全球经济∙global fund全球基金∙globalization全球化∙global knowledge network全球知识互联网∙global logistic network全球后勤网络∙global marketing全球销售∙global reserve全球储备∙global village全球村∙glossary of accounting 会计词汇∙glossary of budgetary and economics预算和经济词汇∙glut产品充斥,供过于求∙GNP Implicit Price Deflator国民生产总值物价折算指数∙goal congruence目标一致性∙goal programming目标规划∙goal seeking目标寻求,目标搜索∙go-go fund冒险投资基金∙going concern连续经营的企业∙going concern postulate连续经营假设∙going concern review连续经营审查∙going-concern value连续经营的价值∙going price时价,现时价格∙going private私售股份,少数私人持股∙going public公开招股,股票公开上市∙going rate现行费率∙gold arbitrage黄金套利∙gold bond黄金债券∙gold bullion金块,金砖∙gold card金卡∙gold clause黄金条款,黄金结算条款∙gold coin金币∙golden handcuff 黄金手链∙golden handshake黄金握别,优厚解雇费∙golden hello黄金问候,高额待遇∙golden parachute黄金降落伞,优厚退职金∙golden share黄金股份∙gold futures黄金期货∙gold market黄金市场∙gold option黄金期权∙gold proviso clause黄金保值条款∙gold stock黄金股票∙gone concern停止营业的公司∙good accounting practice健全会计实物∙good faith善意,诚意∙goods商品,货物∙goods and services商品和劳务∙goods available for sale本期待销商品∙goods in bond关栈保管货物∙goods in process在产品∙goods-in-process inventory在产品存货∙goods in transit在途商品∙goods on consignment寄售商品∙goods on hand 存货∙goods received note收货单∙goods returned note退货单∙good title优良产权,有效产权∙goodwill商誉∙goodwill accounting商誉会计∙go private私售股份,股份私人持有∙go public公开招股,股票公开上市∙government accounting政府会计∙Government Accounting Service政府会计事务所∙government accounting standard政府会计准则∙governmental funds政府基金∙government audit政府审计∙government auditing standard政府审计准则∙government auditor政府审计师∙government bill政府短期债券∙government bond政府公债∙government borrowing政府借款∙government corporation国营公司∙government investment政府投资∙government monopoly政府垄断∙government national mortgage association 政府全国抵押协会∙government procurement policy政府采购政策∙government securities政府证券∙government subsidy政府补助金,政府补贴∙GPL accounting一般物价水平会计∙grace period宽限期∙graduated payment mortgage累进还款抵押∙graduated securities分级证券∙graduated tax分级税,累进税∙graduated wage累进工资∙grant赠款,财产转让∙grantee受助人,受让人∙grant in aid财政补助金,财政补贴∙grantor资助人,让与人∙graph图表∙graph evaluation and review technique图解评审法,图解网络技术∙graphical method图表法,图解法∙graphic software图表软件∙gray market灰市,受操纵的市场∙green accounting绿色会计∙green audit绿色审计∙greenback美钞∙greenmail payments绿色函件付款,股份回收付款∙gross总额∙gross accounts receivable应收帐款总额∙gross amount总金额∙gross book value帐面价值总额∙gross cash flow现金流量总额∙gross cost of merchandise sold销货总成本∙gross domestic product国内生产总值∙gross earnings收益总额∙gross income收益总额,毛收益;营业收入总额∙gross interest利息总额∙gross invoice price发货票总价∙gross lease租赁收入总额,租赁毛收入∙gross loss损失总额,毛损∙gross margin毛利∙gross margin rate毛利率∙gross national disproduct国民废品总额∙gross national product国民生产总值∙gross pay工薪总额∙gross price method总价法∙gross profit毛利∙gross profit analysis毛利分析∙gross profit test 毛利测试法,毛利抽查法∙gross profit ratio毛利率法∙gross profit method毛利法∙gross revenue营业收入总额∙gross sale销售收入总额∙gross wage工资总额∙gross working capital流动资金总额∙gross yield毛利收益率∙group accounts集团公司财务报表,集团公司会计报表∙group bonus集团奖金∙group company集团公司∙group depreciation method分类折旧法∙group financial statement集团公司财务报表,集团公司会计报表∙group incentive system集体奖励制度∙group insurance集体保险∙group of eight8国集团∙group of fifteen15国集团∙group of seventy seven77国集团∙group of ten10国集团∙growth options升值方式选择∙growth rate成长率∙growth stage增长阶段,成长阶段∙growth stock迅速升值股票∙guarantee受保人∙guaranteed bill担保票据∙guaranteed bond担保债券∙guaranteed dividend担保股利∙guaranteed letter of credit担保信用证∙guaranteed loan担保贷款∙guaranty担保,保证书∙guaranty fund保证金。
财务英语中文对照
F∙fixed asset turnover固定资产周转率∙fixed charge coverage ratio偿付固定费用能力∙face amount票面金额,面额∙face value票面价值,面值∙facility设备,设施;资金融通∙facility letter贷款通知,贷款确认函∙facsimile 传真∙facsimile signature复制签字∙factor销售代理商,应收帐款代理商,因素,要素∙factorage销售代理商佣金∙factor analysis因素分析法∙factor cost要素成本∙factor income要素收入,要素收益∙factoring应收帐款代收,应收帐款转售∙factoring commission销售代理商佣金∙factoring company应收帐款代理公司∙factor’s lien销售代理商留置权∙factors of production生产要素∙factory工厂,制造厂;制造∙factory accounting工厂会计∙factory cost工厂成本∙factory ledger工厂分类帐∙factory overhead工厂间接费用∙factory overhead rate工厂间接费用分配率∙factory tax出厂税∙facultative reinsurance临时分保合同∙failure经营失败,未能履行合同∙failure cost未能履行合同成本∙fair competition公平竞争∙fair credit reporting act公平信用调查报告法案∙fair debt collection practices act公正债务催收法案∙fair employment practice laws公平就业法∙fair labor standard act公平劳动标准法∙fair market price公平市场价格,公平市场∙fairness公正性∙fair presentation公正反映∙fair rate of return公平收益率∙fair trade公平交易∙fair transfer price公平划拨价格∙fair value公平价值∙fair view公正反映∙fair wage公平工资,公允工资∙false accounting 虚假会计∙false advertising虚假广告∙false earnings 虚假收益∙false entry虚假分录∙false returns虚假纳税申报表∙falsification of documents窜改凭证∙family allowance家庭津贴∙family corporation家族公司∙family expenditure survey家庭支出调查∙Fanie mae联邦全国抵押协会∙farm out分包合同,包税∙farm price method农场计价法∙farm price support农产品价格支持∙farm subsidy农场补助金∙FASB Exposure Draft财务会计准则征求意见稿∙FASB Statements财务会计准则公报∙FAS Summaries财务会计准则摘要∙favorable financial leverage有利财务杠杆作用∙favorable variance有利差异,顺差∙fax modem传真调制解调器∙fax system传真系统,电话传真系统∙feasibility analysis可行性分析∙feasibility analysis for computerization 电算化可行性分析∙feasible constraint可行约束条件∙feasible solution可行解∙Fed联邦储备系统∙Federal Accounting Standards Advisory Board联邦会计准则咨询委员会∙Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation联邦存款保险公司∙federal funds联邦资金∙Federal Home Loan Banks联邦住宅贷款银行∙federal income tax联邦所得税∙federal insurance contribution act tax 联邦社会保险税∙federal national mortgage association联邦全国抵押协会∙federal open market committee联邦公开市场操作委员会∙federal reserve banks联邦储备银行∙federal reserve board联邦储备委员会∙federal reserve notes联邦储备券∙federal reserve system联邦储备系统∙federal trade commission联邦贸易委员会∙federal unemployment tax联邦失业保障税∙federal withhoding tax代扣联邦税∙fed funds联邦储备系统资金∙fedwire联邦储备系统电子转帐系统∙fee劳务费,酬金∙feedback 反馈∙feedback value反馈价值∙FEI Affiliation高级财务管理人员目标协会联系机构∙FEI Code of Ethics高级财务管理人员协会职业道德准则∙FEI Research Foundation高级财务管理人员协会研究基金会∙fellow member正式会员∙Fellow of the association of corporate treasurers公司财务长协会正式会员∙fellow subsidiary联属公司∙fiber-optic communication光纤通信∙FICA tax联邦社会保险税∙fictitious account虚假帐目∙fictitious asset虚构资产,虚列资产∙fictitious liability虚列负债∙fictitious profit虚列利润∙fidelity bond忠诚保证,忠诚保险∙fidelity bond insurance忠诚保证保险∙fidelity duty忠诚职责∙fidelity guarantee忠诚保证∙fiduciary accounting财产信托会计∙fiduciary funds信托资金∙fiduciary institution信托机构∙fiduciary loan信用贷款∙fiduciary money信用货币∙fiduciary relationship信托关系∙field audit现场审计,外勤审计∙field auditor外勤审计师∙field warehousing loan 就地仓库担保贷款∙field work standard for audit外勤审计工作准则∙FIFO method先进先出法∙file文件,文档∙file maintenance文件维护,档案维护∙file retrieval文件检索,档案检索∙file structure文件结构,档案结构∙file sharing文件共享,档案共享∙file type文件类型,档案类型∙filing填报税单,填制报表∙filing status申报纳税身份∙filing system档案保管制度∙final accounts决算表∙final audit期末审计∙final dividend期末股利∙final entry终结分录∙final inventory期末存货∙final invoice终结发票∙final repayment终结清偿∙final review and assessment最终审查和评定∙final statement决算表∙final value终值∙finance筹措资金,融通资金;财政,财务;金融∙finance association财务协会∙finance committee财务委员会∙finance company金融公司∙finance journals财务期刊∙finance lease筹资租赁∙finance net财政互联网,财务互联网∙financial accounting财务会计∙financial accounting standards财务会计准则∙financial accounting theory财务会计理论∙financial accounts 财务报表,会计报表∙financial adviser财务咨询师∙financial analysis财务分析∙financial analysis software财务分析软件∙financial analyst财务分析师∙financial appraisal财务评价∙financial asset金融性资产,金融资产∙financial audit财务审计∙financial bill金融票据∙financial budget财务预算∙financial capital财务资本∙financial capital maintenance concept财务资本维护概念∙financial condition财务状况∙financial control财务控制∙financial crisis财务危机∙financial data财务数据∙financial decision财务决策∙financial department财务处,财务部门∙financial derivatives衍生金融工具,衍生金融票据∙financial disclosure财务披露∙financial embarrassment财务拮据∙financial executive高级财务管理人员∙financial expense财务费用∙financial failure财务无力偿付∙financial forecast财务预测∙financial futures金融期货∙financial game财务对策∙financial gearing财务传动作用∙financial goal财务目标∙financial grossary and dictionary财务词典和词汇∙financial guarantee财务担保∙financial guarantee management财务担保管理∙financial highlight重点财务数据∙financial incentive财务奖励∙financial income财务收益∙financial information system财务信息系统∙financial insolvency财务无力偿付∙financial institution金融机构∙financial instruments金融工具,金融票据∙financial intermediary金融中介机构∙financial investment金融投资∙financial lease财务租赁∙financial leverage财务杠杆作用∙financial leverage adjustment财务杠杆作用调整额∙financial leverage ratio财务杠杆比率∙financial management财务管理∙financial leverage chart财务杠杆作用图表∙financial manager财务经理∙financial market金融市场∙financial mathematics财务数学∙financial model财务模型∙financial objective财务目标∙financial obligation财务债务∙financial officer财务高级管理人员∙financial ombudsman金融业巡视专管员∙financial paper金融票据∙financial planner财务计划师∙financial planning财务计划∙financial planning industry财务计划产业∙financial planning models财务计划模型∙financial policy财务政策∙financial position财务状况∙financial position statement财务状况表∙finance product金融产品∙financial projection财务预测∙financial public relation财务公共关系∙financial ratio财务比率∙financial ratio analysis财务比率分析∙financial report财务报告∙financial revenue财务收入∙financial risk财务风险∙财务网站∙financial service财务服务∙Financial Service Act财务服务法案∙financial settlement财务结算∙financial software财务软件∙financial solvency财务偿付能力∙financial standing财务状况∙financial statement财务报表,会计报表∙financial statement analysis财务报表分析,会计报表分析∙financial statement audit财务报表审计,会计报表审计∙financial statement footnote财务报表附注,会计报表附注∙financial statement structure财务报表结构,会计报表结构∙financial structure财务结构∙financial structure ratio财务结构比率∙financial supermarket金融超级市场∙financial synergism财务增效作用∙financial theory财务理论∙Financial Times Industrial Ordinary Share Index金融时报工业普通股股票价格指数∙Financial Times Stock Exchange 100 Share Index金融时报股票交易所100种股票价格指数∙financial transaction金融业务∙financial transfer财务转发,财务划拨∙financial vice-president财务副总经理∙financing融通资金,筹集资金∙financing cost筹资成本∙financing decision筹资决策∙financing gap资金缺口∙financing lease融资性租赁,筹资性租赁∙financing policy筹资政策∙financing transaction融资业务,筹资业务∙finder中间人,掮客∙finder’s fee中间人佣金,掮客佣金∙findings of audit审计结果∙fine罚金,罚款∙fine paper优等票据∙fine rate优惠利率∙finished goods inventory产成品存货∙finished goods ledger产产品分类帐∙finished goods turnover产产品周转率∙firm商号,事务所;约定的,确定的∙firm offer确定性报价∙firm order确定性订货∙firm risk企业风险∙firm ware硬性软件∙first beneficiary第一受款人∙first-class paper头等票据,优等票据∙first cost最初成本,主要成本∙first entry第一次分录∙first hand information第一手资料∙first-in ,first-out method先进先出法∙first-in ,still-here method先进未出法∙first lien最先留置权,第一留置权∙first mortgage第一抵押∙first option第一购股权∙first year allowance第一年度税收减免∙fiscal agent财务代理人∙fiscal deficit财政赤字∙fiscal monopoly财政垄断∙fiscal multiplier财政乘数∙fiscal policy财政政策∙fiscal redistribution财政再分配∙fiscal theory财政理论∙fiscal year会计年度,财政年度∙fisher effect费希尔效应∙fisher Equation费希尔等式∙fitch investors service, inc.菲奇投资公司∙five C’s of credit信用五个要素∙fixed annuity固定年金∙fixed asset固定资产∙fixed-assets accounting固定资产会计∙fixed-assets audit固定资产审计∙fixed-assets depreciation rate固定资产折旧率∙fixed-assets disposal proceeds固定资产变卖收入∙fixed-assets expenditure固定资产支出∙fixed-assets management固定资产管理∙fixed assets register固定资产登记薄∙fixed assets to equity capital ratio 固定资产对产权资本比率∙fixed-assets turnover固定资产周转率∙fixed base index定期指数,定比指数∙fixed base period固定基期∙fixed benefit plan固定福利金计划∙fixed budget固定预算∙fixed capital固定资本,固定资金∙fixed cash flow固定现金流量∙fixed charge固定费用,固定留置权∙fixed-charge coverage ratio偿付固定费用能力比率∙fixed cost固定成本∙fixed deposit定期存款∙fixed disk固定磁盘∙fixed exchange rate固定汇率∙fixed expense固定费用∙fixed income固定收益∙fixed interest rate固定利率∙fixed interest securities固定利息证券∙fixed investment trust固定投资信托∙fixed liability固定负债∙fixed loan定期贷款∙fixed-order-period inventory system固定订货期存货制度∙fixed-order-quantity inventory system固定订货量存货制度∙fixed overhead固定间接费用∙fixed overhead spending variance固定间接费用开支差异∙fixed overhead variance固定间接费用差异∙fixed overhead volume variance固定间接费用业务量差异∙fixed price contract固定价格合同∙fixed rate loan固定利率贷款∙fixed rate mortgage固定利率抵押∙fixed trust固定信托∙fixture固定装修∙flash report快报∙flat bond无息公债∙flat price统一价格∙flat rate统一费率∙flat tax统一税率∙flat yield固定收益率∙flexible budget弹性预算∙flexible budget formula弹性预算公式∙flexible budget variance弹性预算差异∙flexible exchange rate弹性汇率∙flexible price弹性价格∙flexible rate loan弹性利率贷款∙flexible retirement age弹性退休年龄∙flexible standard cost弹性标准成本∙flexible trust弹性信托∙flexible working hours弹性工时∙flight of capital资本外流∙flight of currency抛售货币∙float浮存;浮动;发行∙floater浮动利率国库券∙floating asset流动资产∙floating capital流动资金∙floating charge流动留置权∙floating exchange rate浮动汇率∙floating interest rate浮动利率∙floating liability流动负债∙floating lien流动留置权∙floating money浮动资金∙floating mortgage流动抵押∙floating rate浮动利率,浮动汇率∙floating-rate bond浮动利率债券∙floating-rate certificate of deposit浮动利率存款单∙floating-rate note浮动利率国库券∙floor股票交易所交易厅;底价∙floor broker交易厅经纪人,交易所内经纪人∙floor price最低限价∙floppy disk软磁盘,软盘∙flotation发行∙flotation cost发行成本∙flow assumption流转假设∙flow chart流程图表∙flow of cash现金流转,现金流量∙flow of costs成本流转∙flow statement流量报表∙flow-through method全部流过法,当期记列法∙fluctuating exchange rate波动汇率∙fluctuating price contract变动价格合同∙FMA Membership国际财务管理人员学会会员资格∙FMA Publication国际财务管理人员学会出版物∙FOB price船上交货价格,离岸价格∙folio reference参见帐页∙follow-up check追查核对∙footing加总,合计∙footing test加总抽查∙footnote附注∙for cash付现,付现交易∙forced auction强制拍卖∙forced insurance强制保险∙forced liquidation强迫清算∙forced sale迫卖,迫售∙forced sale value迫卖价值∙forced saving强迫储蓄∙forecast预测∙forecast budget预测,预算∙forecasted statement 预测报表∙forecasting cash disbursement预计现金支出∙forecasting cash receipt预计现金收入∙forecasting earning per share预测每股收益∙forecasting technique预测技术∙forecasting technique预测技术∙foreclosure取消抵押财产赎回权,没收抵押财产∙foreign aid外援,国外援助∙foreign banking外国银行业务∙foreign bank supervision enhancement act 加强监督国外银行法∙foreign bill国外汇票∙foreign bond国外债券∙foreign branch国外分支机构∙foreign collection国外托收∙foreign corporation外国公司,外州公司∙foreign corrupt practices act国外行贿法案∙foreign credit insurance association国外信用保险协会∙foreign currency外币∙foreign currency account外币帐户∙foreign currency accounting 外币会计∙foreign currency deposit外币存款∙foreign currency futures外币期货∙foreign currency option外币购买权,外币期权∙foreign currency securities外币有价证券∙foreign currency statement外币报表∙foreign currency swaps外币互换,外币掉换∙foreign currency transaction外币经济业务,外币业务∙foreign currency translation外币折算∙foreign currency translation risk外币折算风险∙foreign direct investment国外直接投资∙foreign exchange外汇,外币兑换,外币汇兑∙foreign exchange accounting外汇会计∙foreign exchange arbitrage外汇套利∙foreign exchange broker外汇经纪人∙foreign exchange contract外汇合同∙foreign exchange dealer外汇经销商∙foreign exchange gain or loss外汇兑换损益∙foreign exchange market外汇市场∙foreign exchange rate外汇汇率∙foreign exchange reserve外汇储备∙foreign exchange risk外汇风险∙foreign exchange risk exposure外汇风险暴露∙foreign exchange risk management外汇风险管理∙foreign exchange risk sharing 共同分担外汇风险∙foreign exchange settlement结汇∙foreign exchange transaction外汇经济业务,外汇业务∙foreign income国外收益∙foreign investment国外投资∙foreign loan国外贷款∙foreign market beta国外证券市场贝塔风险∙foreign market value国外市场价值∙foreign money order国外汇票∙foreign operation国外业务∙foreign payments国外付款∙foreign risk国外风险∙foreign sales corporation国外销售公司∙foreign subsidiary国外子公司∙foreign tax credit国外税收抵免[编辑]G∙gross profit ratio毛利率∙gain获利,收益∙gain and loss损益∙gain and loss account损益帐户∙gain contingency或有收益,或有利得∙gain on disposal of fixed assets变卖固定资产收益∙gain on foreign exchange外汇收益∙gain on inventory taking存货盘盈收益∙fain on investment投资收益∙game theory对策论,博弈论∙GAO Fraud Net美国审计总署揭发舞弊网络∙GAO Report美国审计总署审计报告∙GAO’s value concept美国审计总署的价值观∙GAO Yellow Book美国审计总署黄皮书∙garbage in,garbage out无用输入,无用输出∙garnished wage扣发工资∙garnishee第三债务人∙garnishment扣押,扣发∙GASB Concepts Statements政府会计准则委员会会计概念公报∙GASB Guiding Principles政府会计准则委员会指导原则∙GASB Standard政府会计准则委员会准则∙geared investment trust举债经营投资信托公司∙gearing 财务传动作用∙gearing adjustment财务传动作用调整∙gearing effect财务传动作用效应∙gearing ratio财务传动率∙general acceptance普通汇票∙general accountant总会计师,总会计∙general accounting普通会计∙general accounts总帐∙general agent总代理商∙General Agreement on Tariff and Trade关税和贸易总协定∙general and administrative expense一般管理费用∙general arrangements to borrow 10国集团借款总安排∙general assignment普通转让,一般转让∙general audit普通审计∙general auditor总审计师,总审计∙general average共同海损∙general average contribution共同海损分配∙general balance sheet普通资产负债表∙general budget总预算∙general cash普通现金∙general casher出纳主任,总出纳∙general contractor总承包商∙general counsel法律总顾问∙general creditor普通债权人∙general crossed check普通划线支票∙general debt普通债务∙general endorsement普通背书∙general entry普通分录∙general expense一般费用,总务费用∙general fund普通基金∙general insurance普通保险∙general inventory财产目录,财产总目录∙generalized audit software通用审计软件∙general journal普通日记帐∙general ledger总分类帐∙general legacy普通遗嘱∙general lien总括留置权∙general accepted accounting principle公认会计原则∙general accepted auditing standards公认审计准则∙general manager总经理∙general meeting of stockholders股东大会∙general mortgage普通抵押∙general mortgage bond普通抵押债券∙general obligation bond普通信用担保债券∙general overhead一般间接费用∙general partner普通合伙人∙general partnership普通合伙∙general policy总括保险单∙general price index一般物价指数∙general price level accounting一般物价水平会计∙general price level adjusted statement 按一般物价水平调整的报表∙general property tax普通财产税∙general purchasing power accounting一般购买力会计∙general purchasing power gain or loss一般购买力损益∙general purpose financial statement通用财务报表,通用会计报表∙general purpose language通用语言∙general records普通帐薄∙general reserve普通准备金∙general standard for audit一般性审计准则∙general tariff普通税则,一般税则∙general term and conditions一般交易条件∙gentlemen’s agreement君子协定∙geographic segment地区分部∙geographic segment地区分部∙geographic wage differential 地区工作差别∙GFOA Membership政府财务官员协会会员资格∙GFOA publication政府财务官员协会出版社∙gift tax赠与税∙gilt-edged bill金边证券,优质证券∙Ginnie Mae政府全国抵押协会∙giro银行自动直接转帐∙giro system直接转帐制度∙Gitman disk吉特曼磁盘∙glamour stock热门股票∙global accounting全球会计∙global accounting standards全球会计准则∙global alliance全球联盟∙global auditing standards全球审计准则∙global bond全球债券∙global capital market全球资本市场∙global custody全球证券投资保管业务∙global depositary receipts全球证券存单∙global economy全球经济∙global fund全球基金∙globalization全球化∙global knowledge network全球知识互联网∙global logistic network全球后勤网络∙global marketing全球销售∙global reserve全球储备∙global village全球村∙glossary of accounting 会计词汇∙glossary of budgetary and economics预算和经济词汇∙glut产品充斥,供过于求∙GNP Implicit Price Deflator国民生产总值物价折算指数∙goal congruence目标一致性∙goal programming目标规划∙goal seeking目标寻求,目标搜索∙go-go fund冒险投资基金∙going concern连续经营的企业∙going concern postulate连续经营假设∙going concern review连续经营审查∙going-concern value连续经营的价值∙going price时价,现时价格∙going private私售股份,少数私人持股∙going public公开招股,股票公开上市∙going rate现行费率∙gold arbitrage黄金套利∙gold bond黄金债券∙gold bullion金块,金砖∙gold card金卡∙gold clause黄金条款,黄金结算条款∙gold coin金币∙golden handcuff 黄金手链∙golden handshake黄金握别,优厚解雇费∙golden hello黄金问候,高额待遇∙golden parachute黄金降落伞,优厚退职金∙golden share黄金股份∙gold futures黄金期货∙gold market黄金市场∙gold option黄金期权∙gold proviso clause黄金保值条款∙gold stock黄金股票∙gone concern停止营业的公司∙good accounting practice健全会计实物∙good faith善意,诚意∙goods商品,货物∙goods and services商品和劳务∙goods available for sale本期待销商品∙goods in bond关栈保管货物∙goods in process在产品∙goods-in-process inventory在产品存货∙goods in transit在途商品∙goods on consignment寄售商品∙goods on hand 存货∙goods received note收货单∙goods returned note退货单∙good title优良产权,有效产权∙goodwill商誉∙goodwill accounting商誉会计∙go private私售股份,股份私人持有∙go public公开招股,股票公开上市∙government accounting政府会计∙Government Accounting Service政府会计事务所∙government accounting standard政府会计准则∙governmental funds政府基金∙government audit政府审计∙government auditing standard政府审计准则∙government auditor政府审计师∙government bill政府短期债券∙government bond政府公债∙government borrowing政府借款∙government corporation国营公司∙government investment政府投资∙government monopoly政府垄断∙government national mortgage association 政府全国抵押协会∙government procurement policy政府采购政策∙government securities政府证券∙government subsidy政府补助金,政府补贴∙GPL accounting一般物价水平会计∙grace period宽限期∙graduated payment mortgage累进还款抵押∙graduated securities分级证券∙graduated tax分级税,累进税∙graduated wage累进工资∙grant赠款,财产转让∙grantee受助人,受让人∙grant in aid财政补助金,财政补贴∙grantor资助人,让与人∙graph图表∙graph evaluation and review technique图解评审法,图解网络技术∙graphical method图表法,图解法∙graphic software图表软件∙gray market灰市,受操纵的市场∙green accounting绿色会计∙green audit绿色审计∙greenback美钞∙greenmail payments绿色函件付款,股份回收付款∙gross总额∙gross accounts receivable应收帐款总额∙gross amount总金额∙gross book value帐面价值总额∙gross cash flow现金流量总额∙gross cost of merchandise sold销货总成本∙gross domestic product国内生产总值∙gross earnings收益总额∙gross income收益总额,毛收益;营业收入总额∙gross interest利息总额∙gross invoice price发货票总价∙gross lease租赁收入总额,租赁毛收入∙gross loss损失总额,毛损∙gross margin毛利∙gross margin rate毛利率∙gross national disproduct国民废品总额∙gross national product国民生产总值∙gross pay工薪总额∙gross price method总价法∙gross profit毛利∙gross profit analysis毛利分析∙gross profit test 毛利测试法,毛利抽查法∙gross profit ratio毛利率法∙gross profit method毛利法∙gross revenue营业收入总额∙gross sale销售收入总额∙gross wage工资总额∙gross working capital流动资金总额∙gross yield毛利收益率∙group accounts集团公司财务报表,集团公司会计报表∙group bonus集团奖金∙group company集团公司∙group depreciation method分类折旧法∙group financial statement集团公司财务报表,集团公司会计报表∙group incentive system集体奖励制度∙group insurance集体保险∙group of eight8国集团∙group of fifteen15国集团∙group of seventy seven77国集团∙group of ten10国集团∙growth options升值方式选择∙growth rate成长率∙growth stage增长阶段,成长阶段∙growth stock迅速升值股票∙guarantee受保人∙guaranteed bill担保票据∙guaranteed bond担保债券∙guaranteed dividend担保股利∙guaranteed letter of credit担保信用证∙guaranteed loan担保贷款∙guaranty担保,保证书∙guaranty fund保证金。
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Accounting Theory and Analysis10th EditionSolutions Manual and Test BankByRichard G. SchroederUniversity of North Carolina at CharlotteMyrtle W. ClarkUniversity of KentuckyJack M. Cathey University of North Carolina at CharlotteTable of ContentsPage number Using the Codification to Solve the FASB ASC Cases 3 Solutions ManualChapter 1 6 Chapter 2 32 Chapter 3 58 Chapter 4 65 Chapter 5 74 Chapter 6 100 Chapter 7 127 Chapter 8 144Chapter 10 184 Chapter 11 211 Chapter 12 254 Chapter 13 276 Chapter 14 291 Chapter 15 307 Chapter 16 337 Chapter 17 359Test BankChapter 1 386 Chapter 2 399Chapter 4 424 Chapter 5 432 Chapter 6 442 Chapter 7 453 Chapter 8 463 Chapter 9 471 Chapter 10 486 Chapter 11 491 Chapter 12 507 Chapter 13 520 Chapter 14 527Chapter 16 548 Chapter 17 559Using the Codification to Solve the FASB ASC CasesPrior to attempting to use the codification website to solve the FASB ASC cases, it is recommended that you read “Test Driving the Codification,” by Carolyn Ford and C. William Thomas, Journal of Accountancy, December, 2008. Available at/Issues/2008/Dec/TestDrivingtheCodification.htm, and review the tutorials on the codification website.Overview of the CodificationThe Financial Accounting Standards Board codification (FASB ASC) is organized into general topics listed on the left-hand side of the home page (General Principles, Presentation, etc.). Clicking on any of the general topics will bring up what the FASB terms a “landing page.” Each landing page contains a list of sub topics for that link. For example clicking on the general topic Assets brings up list of seven sub topics (Cash and Cash Equivalents, Receivables, etc.). Notice that each of the subtopics is identified by a three digit number. This allows for access via the go to function that we will discuss later.Clicking on any of the subtopics brings up a second link to what are termed sections and contain the content specific area of the FASB ASC. All Subtopics have a set of standard Sections unless there is nothing to include in a particular standard section, in which case that standard Section is left out of the Subtopic and therefore the FASB ASC. There are sixteen standard Sections for each Subtopic. Sections are indicated by a two digit number between 00 and 99. Some of the most frequently used sections are: 25 Recognition, 30 Initial Measurement 35 Subsequent Measurement, 50 Disclosure and Implementation Guidance and Instructions.Each Section has Paragraph numbers that start over at the beginning of each Section. Each Paragraph, therefore, has a two-part number. The first number is the Section number, and the second part is the Paragraph number within that Section. The Paragraphs are where “substantive content” of the FASB ASC is found. The rest of the levels only exist to organize the information in the Paragraphs and help navigate to the information contained in them. In order to view the specific content areas, it is necessary to click on the tab found on each section page. For example, assume we are interested in the authoritative literature on accounting for sales of products when a right to return exists. First, click on the topic Revenue at the left-hand side of the home page, then on the landing page Revenue Recognition. Next,click on the products subsection. Finally click the tab and all of the paragraph content will appear. Page down through the material and you will find that Paragraph 25-1 contains the authoritative guidance for accounting for sales of products with a right to return.The home page also gives other options for navigating the FASB ASC. Two of these are the SEARCH function and the option. We have found that using these functions is an easy way to start navigating the FASB ASC. To use the search method of navigating the FASB ASC, first, type the general topic in the search box at the top right of the FASB ASC home page. This will give you some references to specific FASB ASC sections where the topic is discussed. Choose the section that seems most appropriate and type the reference number in thebox at the top left-hand side of the FASB ASC homepage. Once you are redirected to the desired section, click combine sections and all of the information on the topic will be displayed. You can then browse through the material to find the appropriate subsection that addresses the case issue. Let’s use t his option to find the authoritative literature on accounting for sales of products with a right to return Type “right to return,” in the search box at the top right of the FASB ASC web page.You will get references to the place where this issue is discussed. Seven possibilities appear, but in reviewing we see that the criteria are contained in 605-15-25-1. Type this number in the box next to the link at the top left-hand side of the FASB ASC homepage. This will redirect you to the content specific paragraph that discusses accounting for sales of products where a right of return exists. (Note: in some searches you may be redirected to the section outline. If so, click the tab and all of the paragraph content will appear.If the issue involves accessing a previous specific pronouncement, it is also possible to access the topic through the cross reference function. On the home page, select Cross Reference. This feature allows you to access the relevant FASB ASC section by citing the original source. To use this feature, first access the drop down menu under Standard Type. (Standard Type refers to the authoritative body that originally issued the pronouncement. For example the Financial Accounting Standards Boards uses the acronym FAS. A discussion of the acronyms for the various standard types is contained through a link in the directions). Next, use the drop down menu under standard number and choose the appropriate number. Then click. When the results appear, click on the first paragraph number at the far right side. Next, click on the 3 digit topic at the top under Table of Contents. When the results appear, click and expand and all of the subtopics will appear. Choose the subtopic you wish to view and then combine sections and the relevant authoritative literature will be displayed.For example, to answer case 9-3, choose FAS from the drop down Standard Type menu. Then choose 143 from the standard number drop down menu. (Please note that the standardnumber for asset retirement obligations was misidentified in the case. It should be 143 not 144). Click on and when the results appear, click on 05-4 on the first line under paragraph number. When the results appear, click 410 Asset Retirement and Environmental Obligations. When the results appear, the most appropriate section seems to be 20 Asset Retirement Obligations. Select it and then click the tab and all of the paragraph content will appear.Finding original source material still contained in the CodificationSeveral of the FASB ASC cases ask for EITF pronouncements related to a particular topic. In order to find original source material from the EITF or any other authoritative body use the following steps:1. Find the relevant topic in the FASB ASC2. Click expand for the relevant subtopic3. Click the tab4. From the5. Page through the material to find content originally sourced from the EITFCHAPTER 1Case l-1a. The FASB had three primary goals in developing the Codification:1. Simplify user access by codifying all authoritative US GAAP in one spot.2. Ensure that the codified content accurately represented authoritative US GAAP as of July1, 2009.3. Create a codification research system that is up to date for the released results ofstandard-setting activity.b. The Codification is expected to improve accounting practice by:1. Reducing the amount of time and effort required to solve an accounting research issue2. Mitigating the risk of noncompliance through improved usability of the literature3. Provide accurate information with real-time updates as Accounting Standards Updates arereleased4. Assisting the FASB with the research and convergence efforts.c. The FASB ASC is composed of the following literature issued by various standard setters:1. Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB)a. Statements (FAS)b. Interpretations (FIN)c. Technical Bulletins (FTB)d. Staff Positions (FSP)e. Staff Implementation Guides (Q&A)f. Statement No. 138 Examples.2. Emerging Issues Task Force (EITF)a. Abstractsb. Topic D.3. Derivative Implementation Group (DIG) Issues4. Accounting Principles Board (APB) Opinions5. Accounting Research Bulletins (ARB)6. Accounting Interpretations (AIN)7. American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA)a. Statements of Position (SOP)b. Audit and Accounting Guides (AAG)—only incremental accounting guidancec. Practice Bulletins (PB), including the Notices to Practitioners elevated to Practice Bulletinstatus by Practice Bulletin 1d. Technical Inquiry Service (TIS)—only for Software Revenue RecognitionAdditionally, in an effort to increase the utility of the FASB ASC for public companies, relevant portions of authoritative content issued by the SEC and selected SEC staff interpretations andadministrative guidance have been included for reference in the Codification, such as:1. Regulation S-X (SX)2. Financial Reporting Releases (FRR)/Accounting Series Releases (ASR)3. Interpretive Releases (IR)4. SEC Staff guidance in:a. Staff Accounting Bulletins (SAB)b. EITF Topic D and SEC Staff Observer co mmentsd. The FASB ASC contains all current authoritative accounting literature. However, if the guidance for aparticular transaction or event is not specified within it, the first source to consider is accounting principles for similar transactions or events within a source of authoritative GAAP. If no similar transactions are discovered, nonauthoritative guidance from other sources may be considered.Accounting and financial reporting practices not included in the Codification are nonauthoritative.Sources of nonauthoritative accounting guidance and literature include, for example, the following:i.Practices that are widely recognized and prevalent either generally or in the industryii. FASB Concepts Statementsiii.American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) Issues Papersiv.International Financial Reporting Standards of the International Accounting Standards Board Pronouncements of professional associations or regulatory agenciesv.Technical Information Service Inquiries and Replies included in AICPA Technical Practice Aids vi.Accounting textbooks, handbooks, and articlesCase 1-2a. Inclusion or omission of information that materially affects net income harms particularstakeholders. Accountants must recognize that their decision to implement (or delay) reporting requirements will have immediate consequences for some stakeholders.b. Yes. Because the FASB standard results in a fairer presentation, it should be implemented assoon as possible--regardless of its impact on net income.c. The accountant's responsibility is to provide financial statements that present fairly the financialcondition of the company. By advocating early implementation, Hoger fulfills this task.d. Potential lenders and investors, who read the financial statement and rely on its fairrepresentation of the financial condition of the company, have the most to gain by early implementation. A stockholder who is considering the sale of stock may be harmed by early implementation that lowers net income (and may lower the value of the stock).Case 1-3a. CAP. The Committee on Accounting Procedure, CAP, which was in existence from 1939 to 1959,was a natural outgrowth of AICPA (then AIA) committees, which were in existence during the period 1933 to 1938. The committee was formed in direct response to the criticism received by the accounting profession during the financial crisis of 1929 and the years thereafter. The authorization to issue pronouncements on matters of accounting principles and procedures was based on the belief that the AICPA had the responsibility to establish practices that would become generally accepted by the profession and by corporate management.As a general rule, the CAP directed its attention, almost entirely, to resolving specific accounting problems and topics rather than to the development of generally accepted accounting principles.The committee voted on the acceptance of specific Accounting Research Bulletins published by the committee. A two-thirds majority was required to issue a particular research bulletin. The CAP did not have the authority to require acceptance of the issued bulletins by the general membership of the AICPA, but rather received its authority only upon general acceptance of the pronouncement by the members. That is, the bulletins set forth normative accounting procedures that "should be" followed by the accounting profession, but were not "required" to be followed.It was not until well after the demise of the CAP, in 1964, that the Council of the AICPA adopted recommendations that departures from effective CAP Bulletins should be disclosed in financial statements or in audit reports of members of the AICPA. The demise of the CAP could probably be traced by four distinct factors: (1) the narrow nature of the subjects covered by the bulletins issued by the CAP, (2) the lack of any theoretical groundwork in establishing the procedures presented in the bulletins, (3) the lack of any real authority by the CAP in prescribing adherence the procedures described by the bulletins, and (4) the lack of any formal representation on the CAP of interest groups such as corporate managers, governmental agencies, and security analysts.APB. The objectives of the APB were formulated mainly to correct the deficiencies of the CAP as described above. The APB was thus charged with the responsibility of developing written expression of generally accepted accounting principles through consideration of the research done by other members of the AICPA in preparing Accounting Research Studies. The committee was in turn given substantial authoritative standing in that all opinions of the APB were to constitute substantial authoritative support for generally accepted accounting principles. If anindividual member of the AICPA decided that a principle of procedure outside of the official pronouncements of the APB had substantial authoritative support, the member had to disclose the departure from the official APB opinion in the financial statements of the firm in question.The membership of the committee comprising the APB was also extended to include representation from industry, government, and academe. The opinions were also designed to include minority dissents by members of the board. Exposure drafts of the proposed opinions were readily distributed.The demise of the APB occurred primarily because the purposes for which it was created were not being accomplished. Broad generally accepted accounting principles were not being developed. The research studies supposedly being undertaken in support of subsequent opinions to be expressed by the APB were often ignored. The committee in essence became a simple extension of the original CAP in that only very specific problem areas were being addressed. Interest groups outside of the accounting profession questioned the appropriateness and desirability of having the AICPA directly responsible for the establishment of GAAP. Politicization of the establishment of GAAP had become a reality because of the far-reaching effects involved in the questions being resolved.FASB. The formal organization of the FASB represents an attempt to vest the responsibility of establishing GAAP in an organization representing the diverse interest groups affected by the use of GAAP. The FASB is independent of the AICPA. It is independent, in fact, of any private or governmental organization. Individual CPAs, firms of CPAs, accounting educators, and representatives of private industry will now have an opportunity to make known their views to the FASB through their membership on the Board. Independence is facilitated through the funding of the organization and payment of the members of the Board. Full-time members are paid by the organization and the organization itself is funded solely through contributions. Thus, no one interest group has a vested interest in the FASB.Conclusion. The evolution of the current FASB certainly does represent "increasing politicization of accounting standard setting." Many of the efforts extended by the AICPA can be directly attributed to the desire to satisfy the interests of many groups within our society. The FASB represents, perhaps, just another step in this evolutionary process.b.Arguments for politicization of the accounting rule-making process:1. Accounting depends in large part on public confidence for its success. Consequently,the critical issues are not solely technical, so all those having a bona fide interest in theoutput of accounting should have some influence on that output.2. There are numerous conflicts between the various interest groups. In the face of this,compromise is necessary, particularly since the critical issues in accounting are valuejudgments, not the type which are solvable, as we have traditionally assumed, usingdeterministic models. Only in this way (reasonable compromise) will the financialcommunity have confidence in the fairness and objectivity of accounting rule making.3. Over the years, accountants have been unable to establish, on the basis of technicalaccounting elements, rules, which would bring about the desired uniformity andacceptability. This inability itself indicates rule setting is primarily consensual in nature.4. The public accounting profession, through bodies such as the Accounting PrinciplesBoard, made rules which business enterprises and individuals "had" to follow. For manyyears, these businesses and individuals had little say as to what the rules would be, inspite of the fact that their economic well being was influenced to a substantial degreeby those rules. It is only natural that they would try to influence or control the factorsthat determine their economic well being.c. Arguments against the politicization of the accounting rule-making process:1. Many accountants feel that accounting is primarily technical in nature. Consequently,they feel that substantive, basic research by objective, independent and fair-mindedresearchers ultimately will result in the best solutions to critical issues, such as theconcepts of income and capital, even if it is accepted that there isn't necessarily a single"right" solution.2. Even if it is accepted that there are no "absolute truths" as far as critical issues areconcerned, many feel that professional accountants, taking into account the diverseinterests of the various groups using accounting information, are in the best position,because of their independence, education, training, and objectivity, to decide whatgenerally accepted accounting principles ought to be.3. The complex situations that arise in the business world require that trained accountantsdevelop the appropriate accounting principles.4. The use of consensus to develop accounting principles would decrease the professionalstatus of the accountant.5 This approach would lead to "lobbying" by various parties to influence theestablishment of accounting principles.Case 1-4a.The term "accounting principles" in the auditor's report includes not only accounting principlesbut also\practices and the methods of applying them. Although the term quite naturally emphasizes the primary or fundamental character of some principles, it includes general rules adopted or professed as guides to action in practice. The term does not however, mean rules from which there can be no deviation. In some cases the question is which of several partially relevant principles has determining applicability. Neither is the term "accounting principles" necessarily synonymous with accounting theory. Accounting theory is the broad area of inquiry devoted to the definition of objectives to be served by accounting, the development and elaboration of relevant concepts, the promotion of consistency through logic, the elimination of faulty reasoning, and the evaluation of accounting practice.b.Generally accepted accounting principles are those principles (whether or not they have onlylimited usage) that have substantial authoritative support. Whether a given principle has authoritative support is a question of fact and a matter of judgment. Since September 15, 2009 the primary source of GAAP has been the FASB’s accounting standards codification. However, i f the guidance for a transaction or event is not specified within a source of authoritative GAAP for that entity, an entity shall first consider accounting principles for similar transactions or events within a source of authoritative GAAP for that entity and then consider nonauthoritative guidance from other sources (FASB ASC 105-10-5-2).. The CPA is responsible for collecting the available evidence of authoritative support and judging whether it is sufficient to bring the practice within bounds of generally accepted accounting principlesc.The auditor’s report states that a company’s financial statements present “fairly,” in all materialrespects, its financial position, based on his or her judgment as to whether the accounting principles selected and applied have general acceptance and that the accounting principles selected are appropriate given the circumstances. This statement is necessary because there are many areas where companies make choices among and between accounting principles (Depreciation method, inventory cost flow assumptions, etc). Therefore,, it is expected thatfinancial reports are prepared in a manner that reflects the underlying economic events and activities of the reporting entity. This expectation was stressed in SAS No. 90 which stated, "In each SEC engagement, the auditor should discuss with the audit committee the auditor's judgments about the quality, not just the acceptability, of the entity's accounting principles applied in its financial reporting. The discussion should also include items that have a significant impact on the representational faithfulness, verifiability, and neutrality of the accounting information included in the financial statements. “ As a consequence, the choices of accounting principles made by one company are often different than those made by another company. Case 1-6Another factor that influenced the development of accounting during the 19th century was the evolution of joint ventures into business corporations in England. The fact that many individuals, external to the business, needed information about the corporation's activities created the necessity for periodic reports. Additionally, the emerging existence of corporations created the need to distinguish between capital and income.The statutory establishment of corporations in England in 1845 stimulated the development of accounting standards, and laws were subsequently passed that were designed to safeguard shareholders against improper actions by corporate officers. Dividends were required to be paid from profits, and accounts were required to be kept and audited by persons other than the directors. However, initially anyone could claim to be an accountant, as there were no organized professions or standards of qualifications.The industrial revolution and the succession of Companies Acts in England also served to increase the need for professional standards and accountants. In the later part of the 19th century, the industrial revolution arrived in the United States, and with it came the need for more formal accounting procedures and standards. This period was also characterized by widespread speculation in the securities markets, watered stocks, and large monopolies that controlled segments of the United States economy.In the 19th century the progressive movement was established in the United States, and in 1898 the Industrial Commission was formed to investigate and report on questions relating to immigration, labor, agriculture, manufacturing, and business. Although no accountants were either on the Commission or used by the Commission, a preliminary report issued in 1900 suggested that an independent public accounting profession should be established in order to curtail observed corporate abuses.Although most accountants did not necessarily subscribe to the desirability of the progressive reforms, the progressive movement conferred specific social obligations on accountants. As a consequence accountants generally came to accept three general levels of progressiveness: (1) a fundamental faith in democracy, a concern for morality and justice and a broad acceptance of the efficiency of education as a major tool in social amelioration; (2) an increased awareness of the social obligation of all segments of society and introduction of the idea of accountability to the public of business and political leaders; and (3) an acceptance of pragmatism as the most relevant operative philosophy of the day.The major concern of accounting during the early 1900s was the development of a theory that could cope with corporate abuses that were occurring at that time, and capital maintenance emerged as a concept. This concept evolved from maintaining invested capital intact, to the maintenance of the physical productive capacity of the firm, to the maintenance of real capital. In essence this last view of capital maintenance was an extension of the economic concept of income (see Chapter 3) that there could be no increase in wealth unless the stockholder or the firm were better off at the end of the period than at the beginning.During the period 1900-1915 the concept of income determination was not well developed. There was, however, a debate over which financial statement should be viewed as most important, the balance sheet or the income statement. Implicit in this debate was the view that either the balance sheet or the income statement must be viewed as fundamental and the other residual, and that relevant values could not be disclosed in both statements.The 1904 International Congress of Accountants marked the initial development of the organized accounting profession in the United States, although there had been earlier attempts to organize and several states had state societies. At this meeting, the American Association of Public Accountants was formed as the professional organization of accountants in the United States. In 1916, after a decade of bitter interfactional disputes, this group was reorganized into the American Institute of Accountants (AIA).。