Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (USA)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Generally accepted accounting principles or US GAAP are the accounting rules used to prepare financial statements for publicly traded companies and many private companies in the United States. Generally accepted accounting principles for local and state governments operates under a different set of assumptions, principles, and constraints, as determined by the Governmental Accounting Standards Board (GASB).
In the United States, as well as in other countries practicing under the English common law system, the government does not set accounting standards, in the belief that the private sector has better knowledge and resources. The GAAP is not written in law, although the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) requires that it be followed in financial reporting by publicly traded companies. Currently, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) sets accounting principles for the profession. The US GAAP provisions differ somewhat from International Financial Reporting Standards though efforts are underway to reconcile the differences so that reports created under international standards will be acceptable to the SEC for companies listed on US markets.
Contents |
[edit] Basic objectives
Financial reporting should provide information that is:
- useful to present to potential investors and creditors and other users in making rational investment, credit, and other financial decisions.
- helpful to present to potential investors and creditors and other users in assessing the amounts, timing, and uncertainty of prospective cash receipts.
- about economic resources, the claims to those resources, and the changes in them.
[edit] Fundamental qualities
To be useful and helpful to users, financial statements must be:
- Relevant: relevant information makes a difference in a decision. It also helps users make predictions about past, present and future events (it has predictive value). Relevant information helps users confirm or correct prior expectations (it has feedback value). It must also be available on time, that is before decisions are made.
- Reliable: reliable information is verifiable (when independent auditors using the same methods get similar results), neutral (free from bias), and demonstrate representational faithfulness (what really happened or existed).
- Comparable: information must be measured and reported in a similar manner for different enterprises (allows financial statements to be compared between different companies).
- Consistent: the same accounting methods should be applied from period to period and all changes in methods should be well explained and justified.
[edit] Basic concepts
To achieve basic objectives and implement fundamental qualities GAAP has four basic assumptions, four basic principles, and four basic constraints.
[edit] Assumptions
- Economic Entity Assumption assumes that the business is separate from its owners or other businesses. Revenues and expenses should be kept separate from personal expenses. This applies even for partnerships and sole proprietorships. as corporates they are considered separate legal entities
- Going Concern Assumption assumes that the business will be in operation for a long time. This validates the methods of asset capitalization, depreciation, and amortization. Only when liquidation is certain is this assumption not applicable.
- Monetary Unit Assumption assumes a stable currency is going to be the unit of record. The FASB accepts the nominal value of the US Dollar as the monetary unit of record (unadjusted for inflation).
- Periodic Reporting Assumption assumes that the business operations can be recorded and separated into different periods (most common periods are months, quarters and years). This is required for comparison between present and past performance.
the assumptions above are very important
[edit] Principles
- The historical cost principle requires companies to account and report based on acquisition costs rather than fair market value for most assets and liabilities. This principle provides information that is reliable (removing opportunity to provide subjective and potentially biased market values), but not very relevant. Thus there is a trend to use fair values. Most debts and securities are now reported at market values.
- The revenue recognition principle requires companies to record when revenue is (1) realized or realizable and (2) earned, not when cash is received. This way of accounting is called accrual basis accounting.
- The matching principle. Expenses have to be matched with revenues as long as it is reasonable to do so. Expenses are recognized not when the work is performed, or when a product is produced, but when the work or the product actually makes its contribution to revenue. Only if no connection with revenue can be established, cost can be charged as expenses to the current period (e.g. office salaries and other administrative expenses). This principle allows greater evaluation of actual profitability and performance (shows how much was spent to earn revenue). Depreciation and Cost of Goods Sold are good examples of application of this principle.
- The full disclosure principle. Amount and kinds of information disclosed should be decided based on trade-off analysis as a larger amount of information costs more to prepare and use. Information disclosed should be enough to make a judgment while keeping costs reasonable. Information is presented in the main body of financial statements, in the notes or as supplementary information.
[edit] Constraints
- Cost-benefit relationship states that the benefit of providing the financial information should also be weighed against the cost of providing it.
- Materiality states that the significance of an item should be considered when it is reported. An item is considered significant when it would affect the decision of a reasonable individual.
- Industry practices states that accounting procedures should follow industry practices.
- Conservatism states that when choosing between two solutions, the one that will be least likely to overstate assets and income should be picked.
[edit] Setting GAAP
These organizations influence the development of GAAP in the United States.
- Audit and Accounting Guidelines, which summarizes the accounting practices of specific industries (e.g. casinos, colleges, airlines, etc.) and provides specific guidance on matters not addressed by FASB or GASB.
- Statements of Position, which provides guidance on financial reporting topics until the FASB or GASB sets standards on the issue.
- Practice Bulletins, which indicate the AcSEC's views on narrow financial reporting issues not considered by the FASB or the GASB.
- Statements of Financial Accounting Standards - the most authoritative GAAP setting publications. More than 150 have been issued to date.
- Statements of Financial Accounting Concepts - first issued in 1978. They are part of the FASB's conceptual framework project and set forth fundamental objectives and concepts that the FASB use in developing future standards. However, they are not a part of GAAP. There have been 7 concepts published to date.
- Interpretations - modify or extend existing standards. There have been around 50 interpretations published to date.
- Technical Bulletins - guidelines on applying standards, interpretations, and opinions. Usually solves some very specific accounting issue that will not have a significant, lasting effect.
- Other influential organizations (e.g. American Accounting Association, Institute of Management Accountants, Financial Executives Institute)
[edit] House of GAAP
House of GAAP | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Category (a) (Most authoritative) |
FASB Standards and Interpretations | Accounting Principles Board (APB) Opinions | AICPA Accounting Research Bulletins (ARBs) | |
Category (b) | FASB Technical Bulletins | AICPA Industry Audit and Accounting Guides | AICPA Statements of Position (SOPs) | |
Category (c) | FASB Emerging Issues Task Force (EITF) | AICPA AcSEC Practice Bulletins | ||
Category (d) (Least authoritative) |
AICPA Accounting Interpretations | FASB Implementation Guides (Q and A) | Widely recognized and prevalent industry practices |
Accountancy |
---|
Basic Accounting |
Bookkeeping | Auditing | Cost of goods sold | Public accountancy | Internal accountancy | External accountancy | Accountant | Financial audit | Balance Sheet | Income Statement | Cash flow statement | Financial accountancy | Management accounting | Cost accounting | Certified Public Accountant | General Ledger | Bank Reconsiliation | Trial Balance | Debits and Credits |
Other |
Invoice | double-entry book-keeping | Standard accounting practices | Cash-basis and accrual-basis | Fund Accounting | GAAP | Forensic accountancy | Tax Accounting | Accounting education | Accountancy qualifications and regulation | Sarbanes-Oxley Act | Big Four auditors | FIFO and LIFO accounting | Environmental accounting |