Accounting
Principles & Standards: Avoid Them At Your Peril
The article is a brief overview of the difference
between accounting principles and accounting standards. Accounting principles
are the basic assumptions, rules of operation, and essential characteristics
that make up the framework for the construction of accounting financial
statements.
Long ago, I was perplexed to discover that
there was no “set” of accounting principles that was presented in one form
such as you might find in the Bill of Rights. This is not to say that the
principles are incomplete or vague, it only means that the definitions
of accounting principles can be presented in various formats, which may
lead to confusion for some people, especially beginners.
Be that as it may, accounting principles
are absolutely necessary when preparing financial statements, just as the
rules of a particular card game make the card game possible in the first
place. Accounting principles are like the glue that holds the accounting
process together. For example, financial statements have an overall objective,
which is to provide the user of the statements a useful tool for making
business decisions.
In order to be useful, the accounting information
must have certain characteristics, such as being dependable and practical.
To be dependable, the accounting information must be unbiased, accurate,
and verifiable. To be practical, accounting information must be predictable,
prepared in a timely fashion, and be able to provide meaningful feedback.
Additional characteristics are that the accounting information must be
consistent, comparable, serve a utilitarian need (such as cost/benefit),
and make a material difference.
Besides characteristics, certain operational
rules are established as to when revenue and expenses are reported; how
expenses are matched to revenue; what to do when a choice can be made that
might overstate or understate figures; and, what information should be
disclosed so that the reader will fully understand the circumstances under
which the information is being presented.
There are also basic assumptions that the
reader can count on, such as: the information is related to the business
entity only and doesn’t have any unrelated information mixed in; the business
is a going concern and won’t cease operations soon; the financial information
presented is measured in specific time intervals such as a month, quarter
or year; the financial information is using a certain unit of measure such
as dollars, not board feet, etc.; the information is presented at historical
cost, i.e., when received, paid, or incurred; and, the method of accounting
being used is double-entry and not some other method.
These are accounting principles as opposed
to accounting standards. An accounting standard is an agreement as to how
an accounting issue will be treated. For instance, a standard might state
what type of inventory system is appropriate to use for a certain type
of business; how capital leases should be recorded; how many years intangible
assets should be amortized; what methods of depreciation should be used,
and so on. There are literally thousands of accounting standards that have
been issued over the years. These standards are constantly being revised
or discarded as they become outdated.
If you want to play the accounting “game
of cards”, you must become familiar with the “rules of the game”, which
are accounting principles and standards. If you choose to not play by the
rules, you do so at your own peril, as we have seen recently in the U.S.
corporate accounting scandals.
John W. Day, MBA is the author of Real
Life Accounting for Non-Accountants, an online course in accounting basics.
He has written 3 e-Books pertaining to small business accounting and writes
a monthly newsletter on accounting issues.
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