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U N I T - V II

U N I T - V II. INTRODUCTION TO FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING. Introduction to Final Final Accounts. Finance means Cash, Money, Price, Value and Cost Its relating to Monetary benefit Basically 3 Concepts. Introduction to Final Final Accounts.

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U N I T - V II

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  1. UNIT - VII

  2. INTRODUCTION TO FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING

  3. Introduction to Final Final Accounts • Finance means Cash, Money, Price, Value and Cost • Its relating to Monetary benefit Basically 3 Concepts

  4. Introduction to Final Final Accounts • Account – It’s a summarized statement of Debit and Credit • Accounting – it’s a process of all types of accounts such as PA, RA & NA • Accountancy – its law of accounts.

  5. Introduction to Accounting • Accounting is a old concept. It was introduced by Edward Jones in 1795 in the books of “Modern Accounting System”. • Accounting is “Method of Identifying, Classifying, Summarizing in a significant manner in terms of Money”.

  6. Principles of Accounting • Recording • Identifying • Classifying • Summarizing • Balancing Eg. 1. Mr. Ramu Purchased a book of Rs. 150/- from kiran at Koti. 2. Mrs. Aishwarya Sold a Machinery of Rs. 10000/- to Bharati by cash.

  7. Types of Financial Accounting • Personal Accounts • Real Accounts • Nominal Accounts

  8. Types of Accounting • Financial Accounting • Management Accounting • Cost Accounting

  9. Concepts of Accounting • Money Measurement concept • Business Entity concept • Going concern concept • Cost concept • Dual aspect concept • Accounting period concept • Matching concept • Reliasation concept • Objective concept • Other concepts

  10. Conventions of Accounting • Convention of Disclose • Convention of Consistency • Convention of Conservatism • Convention of Materiality

  11. Principles of Double Entry system Principles Personal Accounts Real Accounts Nominal Accounts Debit Credit Debit Credit Debit Credit What comes in What goes out Exp and Loss Income & Gain Receiver Giver

  12. Journal • When the size of the business firm is big. All the business transections are first recorded in a Rough Book, before entering them in “JOURNAL”. • After words these transactions are recorded in a chronological order. • After analyzing, classifying these benefits according to the principles of debit & Credit is called “Journal”.

  13. Advantages of Accounting • Replacing money • Assisting the performance of the business • Assessing the financial status of the business • Documentary evidence • Assisting in realisation of debts. • Facilitating & detecting frauds • Preventing & detecting frauds • Help full to Management

  14. Classification of Ledger • Debtors ledger • Creditors ledger • General ledger • Self ledger

  15. Types of Subsidiary books • Purchase book • Sales book • Purchase returns book • Sales returns book • Cash book • Bill receivable book • Bills payable book • Journal proper

  16. Characteristics of Cash book • It can also be treated as a subsidiary book • Like ledger, there are the debit and credit columns in cash book • Only cash transactions are recorded • It always shows debit balance but it never shows the credit balance • The balance of cas can be known at any point of time

  17. Types of cash transactions • Cash Receipts • Cash Payments

  18. Types of Cash books • Simple cash book • Double column cash book • Triple column cash book • Petty cash book

  19. Trial Balance • M.S gosav defined the Trail Balance as “The Trail balance is a statement containing the balances of all ledger accounts., as at any given date, arranged in the form of debit and credit columns placed side by side and prepared with the object of checking the arithmetical accuracy of the ledger postings”.

  20. Characteristics of Trial Balance • Basically Trial Balance is a statement or list • It contains all the Debit and Credit balances • It total debit balances must be equal in aggregate to the total of the credit balances when accounts are balanced at any given time. • Trial Balance is the only base for the preparation of final accounts

  21. Advantages of Trial balance • Preparation of final accounts will become easy with the preparation of Trail balance • When the total balance of debit is equal to the total balance of credit in a trial balance one can confidently rely on the results derived out of such trail balance.

  22. Final Accounts • Relating to Trading Concern • Trading Account • Profit & Loss Account • Balance sheet • Relating to Manufacturing Firm • Manufacturing Account • Trading Account • Profit & Loss Account • Balance Sheet

  23. Importance of Trading Account • We can ascertain Gross Profit / Gross Loss • We can observe the changes in direct expenses. • We can calculate the cost of production • We can establish the relation b/w the costs and revenues • We can analyze the trend in sales • We can decide the earning capacity of the firm

  24. Importance of Profit & Loss Account • The main purpose of preparing the Profit & Loss account is to ascertain Net profit / Net Loss of the firm • It is also useful to establish a relationship b/w the sales and the total indirect expenses through percentages. • Its relating to the expenses and Incomes of the firm

  25. Balance Sheet • “Balance Sheet is a statement prepared on a particular date of reflect the financial position of the firm with all assets and liabilities of the firm”.

  26. Types of Balance Sheet • Rigidity preference order • Liquidity preference order

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