Accounting For Dummies®, 6th edition
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You may know individuals who make their living as accountants. You may be thankful that they’re the accountants and you’re not. You may prefer to leave accounting to the accountants and think that you don’t need to know anything about accounting. This attitude reminds me of the old Greyhound Bus advertising slogan: “Leave the Driving to Us.” Well, if you could get around everywhere you wanted to go on the bus, that would be no problem. But if you have to drive most places, you’d better know something about cars. Throughout your life, you do a lot of “financial driving,” and you should know something about accounting.
Sure, accounting involves numbers. So does watching your car mileage, knowing your blood pressure, keeping track of your bank balance, negotiating the interest rate on your home mortgage, monitoring your retirement fund, and bragging about your kid’s grade point average. You deal with numbers all the time. Accountants provide financial numbers, and these numbers are very important in your financial life. Knowing nothing about financial numbers puts you at a serious disadvantage. In short, financial literacy requires a working knowledge of accounting, which this book provides.
Here are some advantages this book offers over other accounting texts:
I should mention one thing: This book is not an accounting textbook. Introductory accounting textbooks are ponderous, dry as dust, and overly detailed. However, textbooks have one useful feature: They include exercises and problems. If you have the time, you can gain additional insights and test your understanding of accounting by working the exercises and short problems in my book Accounting Workbook For Dummies (Wiley).
I assume that you have a basic familiarity with the business world, but I take nothing for granted regarding how much accounting you know. I start at the beginning. Even if you have some knowledge of accounting and financial statements, I think you’ll find this book useful. The book should provide insights you haven’t thought of before (I gained many new insights about accounting while writing this book, that’s for sure).
I’ve written this book with a wide audience in mind. You should find yourself more than once in the following list of potential readers:
I could put others in the preceding list, but I think you get the idea that many different people need to understand the basics of accounting. Perhaps someone who leads an isolated contemplative life and renounces all earthly possessions doesn’t need to know anything about accounting, but, then again, I don’t know.
The following icons can help you find information quickly and easily.
This book is packed with useful information, but if you’re looking for a super-compact overview of the most important points, check out the online Cheat Sheet. Simply go to www.dummies.com
and search for “Accounting For Dummies Cheat Sheet” in the Search box. You’ll find FAQs on financial statements, accounting tips for business managers, and definitions of key accounting terms.
There’s no law against starting on page 1 and reading through to the last page. However, you may first want to scan the book’s Contents at a Glance and see which chapters pique your interest.
Perhaps you’re an investor who’s interested in learning more about financial statements and the key financial statement ratios for investors. In that case, you might start with Chapters 5, 6, and 7, which explain the three primary financial statements of businesses, and finish with Chapter 10, on reading a financial report. (And don’t overlook Chapter 16.)
Or maybe you’re a small-business owner/manager with a basic understanding of your financial statements, but you need to improve how you use accounting information for making key profit decisions and for planning and controlling your cash flow. You might jump right into Chapters 12 and 14, which explain analyzing profit behavior and budgeting cash flows.
The book is not like a five-course dinner, in which you have to eat in the order the food is served to you. It’s more like a buffet line, from which you can pick and choose and eat in whatever order you like.
Part 1
IN THIS PART …
Discover how accountants are the financial information gatekeepers in the economy and why accounting is so important for for-profit businesses, nonprofit organizations, and government agencies.
Find out how a business or other entity prepares its financial statements, its tax returns, and the reports to its managers. Know how to make sure these documents conform to established standards.
Get the lowdown on bookkeeping — the record-keeping part of accounting — to ensure that the financial information of a business is timely, complete, accurate, and reliable, especially the numbers reported in financial statements and tax returns.
Understand the various types of business entities and how accounting differs for each one.
Chapter 1
IN THIS CHAPTER
Realizing how accounting is relevant to you
Grasping how all economic activity requires accounting
Watching an accounting department in action
Shaking hands with business financial statements
Mapping a career in accounting
I had a captive audience when I taught Accounting 101 because, then as well as now, all business school students have to take this course. In contrast, very few arts and science students elect the course, which is their loss. Accounting 101 teaches about business, including the nature of profit (which most people don’t fully understand) and the fundamentals of capitalism.
The course is a very good training ground for becoming financially literate. Accounting is the language of business, finance, investing, and taxes. To be financially literate, you need to know basic accounting. These days, there’s a big push to improve financial literacy, and a basic accounting course offers a useful framework for understanding and thinking about financial issues.
In one sense, this book is the accounting course you never took. For business grads, the book presents an opportune review of topics you’ve gotten rusty on. I dare say that even accounting majors can glean a lot of insights from this book. You don’t need a college education to gain from this book, however. Like all the For Dummies books, this book delivers useful information in a plain-talking manner, with a light touch to keep it interesting.
As you go through life, you come face to face with a flood of accounting-generated information — more than you would ever imagine. Regrettably, much of this information isn’t intuitive, and it doesn’t come with a user’s manual. In short, most of the accounting information you encounter is not readily transparent.
One main reason for learning some accounting is to understand its vocabulary and valuation methods so you can make more intelligent use of the information. Accountants are financial scorekeepers. In playing or watching any game, you need to know how the score is kept. The purpose of this book is to make you a knowledgeable spectator of the accounting game.
You probably fall in with the majority of people who have preconceptions about accounting — which in fact may be way off the mark. For instance, most people think that you have to be good at math to understand accounting. Accounting deals with numbers, that’s for sure, but by no means does it require calculus or other math — just arithmetic. Accountants make calculations and compare numbers. That’s about it. I’ve never heard of an accountant taking the first derivative of an accounting equation or doing any other calculus computation.
The problem is that many people — perhaps even you — are number-phobic. They avoid anything to do with digits. They wouldn’t think of doing their annual income tax return. Accountants deal in numbers. But be aware that every accounting number has a name or label attached. There are no naked numbers in accounting. The basic unit of information in accounting is the account, which consists of both
The vocabulary of accounting consists of accounts. Accountants communicate in terms of accounts.
Another preconception is that accountants have their heads buried in a torrent of details. Accountants have no choice; they have to be detail-oriented. At the same time, they have to see how the details fit into the overall scheme of things. The avalanche of details is condensed into accounting reports that disclose relatively few aggregate accounts. One reason for learning accounting is to understand what these collective accounts include.
I explain later that accountants decide how to record transactions, which are economic exchanges (see “Focusing on Transactions” later in this chapter). Many people aren’t aware of the double duty of accountants in recording transactions. Accountants look at things from two points of view — the give and the take of the transaction. This is called double entry accounting, which I explain in Chapter 3. The following example illustrates the two-sided nature of accounting.
Suppose a business reports $1,000,000 in total assets at the end of its most recent year. Most people, quite naturally, focus on the makeup of its assets (how much cash, for example). But the composition of its assets is only half the financial picture of a business. You’ve heard the expression that there are two sides to every story. Well, in accounting, there are two sides to the financial condition of a business.
Accounting deals with assets, of course. Accountants are equally concerned with the sources of the assets. In this example, the $1,000,000 in assets comes from three sources: $300,000 liabilities; $500,000 capital; and $200,000 surplus. You probably have a good idea of what liabilities are. Capital is money invested in the business by the owners. Surplus is profit that has been earned and not distributed to the owners. The sum of all three sources taken together equals the total assets of the business. The books are in balance.
Businesses are profit motivated, so a natural question is “How much profit did the business earn over the last year?” Suppose the business had $120,000 surplus at the beginning of the year, and the business didn’t distribute any of its profit to its owners during the year. Therefore, the business earned $80,000 profit for the year: $120,000 surplus at start of year → $200,000 surplus at end of year = $80,000 gain in surplus, which is the profit for the year.
I recently saw a cartoon in which the young son of clowns is standing in a circus tent and is dressed as a clown, but he’s holding a briefcase. He’s telling his clown parents that he’s running away to join a CPA firm. This cartoon plays off the stereotype of a CPA (certified public accountant) as a boring “bean counter” who wears a green eyeshade, has no sense of humor, and possesses the personality of an undertaker (no offense to morticians). Maybe you’ve heard the joke that an accountant with a personality is one who looks at your shoes when he’s talking to you instead his own shoes.
Like most stereotypes, there’s an element of truth in this image of accountants. As a CPA and accounting professor for more than 40 years, I’ve met and known a large number of accountants. Most accountants are not as gregarious as used-car salespeople (though some are). Accountants certainly are more detail-oriented than your average person, and they’re a little more comfortable with complex calculations. Accountants are very good at one thing: Examining both sides of financial transactions — the give and the take, what was gotten and what was given. Accountants know better than anyone that, as economists are fond of saying, there’s no such thing as a free lunch.
Because accountants work with numbers and details, you hear references to accountants as bean counters, digit heads, number nerds, and other names I don’t dare mention here. Accountants take these snide references in stride and with good humor. Actually, accountants rank among the most respected professionals in many polls.
If you walked down a busy street in Chicago, Denver, New York, or Los Angeles, I doubt that you could pick out the accountants. I have no idea whether accountants have higher or lower divorce rates, whether they go to church more frequently, whether most are Republicans or Democrats, or if they generally sleep well at night. I do think overall that accountants are more honest in paying their income taxes, although I have no proof of this. (And, yes, I know of a couple of accountants who tried to cheat on their federal income tax returns.)
In a nutshell, accountants “keep the books” of businesses — and of not-for-profit (NFP) and government entities also — by following systematic methods to record the financial activities of the entity. All this recordkeeping is done for one primary purpose: to create the database necessary for the preparation of financial reports, tax returns, and other types of financial communications. In financial reports, accounting information is presented in the form of financial statements that are packaged with other information such as explanatory footnotes and a letter from top management. Accountants design financial reports for non-accountants, such as business owners, lenders, and investors.
Financial reports are sent to people who have a stake in the outcomes of the activities. If you own stock in General Electric, for example, or you have money in a mutual fund, you receive regular financial reports. If you invest your hard-earned money in a private business or a real estate venture, or if you save money in a credit union, you receive regular financial reports. If you’re a member of a nonprofit association or organization, you’re entitled to receive regular financial reports. I hope you carefully read these financial reports, but if you don’t — or if you do yet don’t understand what you’re reading — it could be that you don’t understand the language of accounting.
People who use accounting information fall into two broad groups: insiders and outsiders. Business managers are insiders; they have the authority and responsibility to run a business. They need a good understanding of accounting terms and the methods used to measure profit and put values on assets and liabilities. Accounting information is indispensable for planning and controlling the financial performance and condition of the business. Likewise, administrators of NFP and governmental entities need to understand the accounting terminology and measurement methods in their financial statements.
The rest of us are outsiders. We aren’t privy to the day-to-day details of a business or organization. We have to rely on financial reports from the entity to know what’s going on. Therefore, we need to have a good grip on the financial statements included in the financial reports. For all practical purposes, financial reports are the only source of financial information we get directly from a business or other organization.
In your personal financial life, a little accounting knowledge is a big help for understanding investing in general, how investment performance is measured, and many other important financial topics. With some basic accounting knowledge, you’ll sound much more sophisticated when speaking with your banker or broker. I can’t promise you that learning accounting will save you big bucks on your income taxes, but it can’t hurt and will definitely help you understand what your tax preparer is talking about.
I’m sure you know the value of learning personal finance and investing fundamentals. (Given the big push these days on improving financial literacy, I recommend Personal Finance For Dummies and Investing For Dummies by Eric Tyson, MBA, both published by Wiley.) A great deal of the information you use in making personal finance and investment decisions is accounting information. However, I do have one knock on books in these areas: They don’t make clear that you need a solid understanding of financial statements to make good use of the financial information.
I’ve noticed that a sizable percent of the populace bash the profit motive and seem to think businesses should not make a profit. I would remind you, however, that you have a stake in the financial performance of the business you work for, the government entities you pay taxes to, the churches and charitable organizations you donate money to, the retirement plan you participate in, the businesses you buy from, and the healthcare providers you depend on. The financial performance and viability of these entities has a direct bearing on your personal financial life and well-being.
Your investments in businesses, whether direct or through retirement accounts and mutual funds, suffer if the businesses don’t turn a profit. I hope the stores I trade with make profit and continue in business. The federal government and many states depend on businesses’ making profit so they can collect income taxes from them.
Accounting extends into many nooks and crannies of your life. You’re doing accounting when you make entries in your checkbook and when you fill out your federal income tax return. When you sign a mortgage on your home, you should understand the accounting method the lender uses to calculate the interest amount charged on your loan each period. Individual investors need to understand accounting basics in order to figure their return on invested capital. And it goes without saying that every organization, profit-motivated or not, needs to know how it stands financially.
Accounting methods must fit the nature of the entity being accounted for and how the entity carries out its purpose. Accounting is not a case of one size fits all. Here’s a quick sweep of the radar screen to give you an idea of different types of entities that accounting methods are adapted to:
Accounting is necessary in a free-market capitalist economic system. It’s equally necessary in a centralized, government-controlled socialist economic system. All economic activity requires information. The more developed the economic system, the more the system depends on information. Much of the information comes from the accounting systems used by the businesses, institutions, individuals, and other players in the economic system.
Some of the earliest records of history are the accounts of wealth and trading activity. The need for accounting information was a main incentive in the development of the number system we use today. The history of accounting is quite interesting (but beyond the scope of this book).
Every business and not-for-profit entity needs a reliable bookkeeping system (see Chapter 3). Accounting is a much broader term than bookkeeping. For one thing, accounting encompasses the problems in measuring the financial effects of economic activity. Furthermore, accounting includes the function of financial reporting to those who need the information. Business managers and investors and many other people depend on financial reports for information about the performance and condition of the entity.
Bookkeeping — also called recordkeeping — refers to the process of capturing, accumulating, organizing, storing, protecting, and accessing the financial information base of the entity. Of course, the financial information base should be complete, accurate, and timely. Every recordkeeping system needs quality controls built into it, which are called internal controls or internal accounting controls. When an error creeps into the system, it can be difficult to root out and correct. Data entry controls are particularly important. The security of online and computer-based accounting systems has become a top priority of both for-profit businesses and not-for-profit entities. So-called cyber threats are a serious problem and can bring a big business to its knees.
Most people don’t realize the importance of the accounting department in keeping a business operating without hitches and delays. That’s probably because accountants oversee many of the back-office functions in a business — as opposed to sales, for example, which is frontline activity, out in the open and in the line of fire. Go into any retail store, and you’re in the thick of sales activities. But have you ever seen a company’s accounting department in action?
Folks may not think much about these back-office activities, but they would sure notice if those activities didn’t get done. On payday, a business had better not tell its employees, “Sorry, but the accounting department is running a little late this month; you’ll get your checks later.” And when a customer insists on up-to-date information about how much he or she owes the business, the accounting department can’t very well say, “Oh, don’t worry, just wait a week or so, and we’ll get the information to you then.”
Typically, the accounting department is responsible for the following:
Payroll: The total wages and salaries earned by every employee every pay period, which are called gross wages or gross earnings, have to be calculated. Based on detailed private information in personnel files and earnings-to-date information, the correct amounts of income tax, Social Security tax, and several other deductions from gross wages have to be determined.
Actually, a good deal of information has to be reported to employees each pay period, regarding withholdings and employee benefits. Retirement, vacation, sick pay, and other benefits earned by the employees have to be updated every pay period. Many employees do not get a payroll check. Instead, their money is sent electronically to the employee’s bank account. The total amounts of withheld income tax and Social Security taxes, plus the employment taxes imposed on the employer, have to be paid to federal and state government agencies on time.
In short, payroll is a complex and critical function that the accounting department performs. Note: Many businesses outsource payroll functions to companies that specialize in this area.
In most businesses and other entities, the accounting department is assigned other functions as well, but this list gives you a pretty clear idea of the back-office functions that the accounting department performs. Quite literally, a business could not operate if the accounting department did not do these functions efficiently and on time. And to repeat one point, to do these back-office functions well, the accounting department must design a good bookkeeping system and make sure that it’s accurate, complete, and timely.