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Economics /Management 4 Financial Accounting A First Course in Financial Accounting for: Producers (accountants) and Users (analysts & economists) L-1
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Economics /Management 4 Financial Accounting

Oct 05, 2021

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Page 1: Economics /Management 4 Financial Accounting

Economics /Management 4 Financial Accounting

A First Course in Financial Accounting for:

Producers (accountants) and

Users (analysts & economists)

L-1

Page 2: Economics /Management 4 Financial Accounting

Course Objectives

1. Learn the Language of accounting. 2. Become a sophisticated Financial

Statement user. 3. Be able to differentiate between

Economic information and Accounting information.

Page 3: Economics /Management 4 Financial Accounting

Grading

o One Quiz 10 percent o Midterm #1 20 percent o Midterm #2 20 percent o Final Exam 45 percent o Participation 5 percent

Final “letter” Grades will be curved. You need 55 percent for a “C- / P”.

Page 4: Economics /Management 4 Financial Accounting

Grading Extras • There will be one A+, regardless of score. • Up to 10%, of students will receive an “A”. • There will be as many “A-’s” as practical where

there is a gap in scores. For example, in Winter 2016, the lowest A- had a score of 73.01, the highest B+ had a score of 72.30. Thus 0.71 points was The Gap.

• The student ranked #1 at the beginning of 10th week will be excused from the final exam, with an “A” grade for the course.

Page 5: Economics /Management 4 Financial Accounting

Grade Insurance

During the quarter, unannounced, there will be at least two A- grade insurance exercises. These exercises will be challenging in scope with only a little allotted time. Should you solve the exercise perfectly, or near perfectly, you will receive: • an “A-” guarantee , or a “B+” guarantee,

respectively • regardless of end of term scores as long as you

get a 60% score on the final exam.

Page 6: Economics /Management 4 Financial Accounting

Reminders • Read the Syllabus. • Bring a couple of 3x5 index cards to class each

day. This is how I will record “participation”.

• Participation? Get involved with the subject.

• Start looking for a Partner for Midterm #1.

• All exams are M/C. You will need Scantrons. • You may use your Reader during exams; write in

it but add no separate sheets of paper. • The Quiz will be a crossword puzzle. Reader

Chapters 1-2, Slides L-1 and L-2.

Page 7: Economics /Management 4 Financial Accounting

Attitude

Keep an open mind. Accounting is simple, relatively deterministic, but it has a few nuances.

Attend lectures and visit the TA’s regularly. Practice. Set your standards high - have zero tolerance

for error; limited tolerance for mistakes. Read the Reader. Stay awake in class. Accounting is a professional

art, so practice being professional.

Page 8: Economics /Management 4 Financial Accounting

Accounting Firms Globals 1. Ernst & Young (E&Y). 2. Deloitte & Touche (D&T). 3. KPMG. 4. Price-Coopers (PwC). 5. Arthur Anderson Regionals 1. Moss Adams. 2. H&R Block-McGladry (Pullen). 3. Century

The Big Four

Page 9: Economics /Management 4 Financial Accounting

Accounting – recording & reporting business financial performance & financial position. a) Control (bookkeeping & internal controls); b) Financial reporting; c) Auditing; d) Tax-planning; e) Management & Information systems

consulting; f) Forensic accounting & litigation support.

Credentials: CPA, CIA, EA, CFE, CMA

Page 10: Economics /Management 4 Financial Accounting

Accounting Terminology

• Terms of Art

– New words

– Old words w/ new meanings

– to expedite conversations and identify imposters

• Abbreviations (get used to them)

• Online glossaries and an acronym finders.

Page 11: Economics /Management 4 Financial Accounting

Firms Need Cash (to acquire Assets),

so they create Financial Capital

• Financial Capital represents the Cash raised when firms sell Financial Securities

1. Stocks – shares of the Firm sold to investors, also called Share-holders – Equity Capital

2. Bonds – loans from creditors, bond-holders – Debt

Capital

Page 12: Economics /Management 4 Financial Accounting

Financial Accounting

A highly-stylized Information System

Formulated as a system of Simultaneous Equations

Organized around the fundamental Accounting Equation

Assets = Liabilities + Equity

Page 13: Economics /Management 4 Financial Accounting

The Fundamental Equation of Accounting

Assets = Liabilities + Equity

What we OWN “Assets” must have a Source =

Liabilities are what we owe to others Equity is what we owe to ourselves

Page 14: Economics /Management 4 Financial Accounting

Designed to provide Useful information to

Direct Providers of Financial Capital 1. Owners/Investors (they buy stock) 2. Creditors / Lenders (who buy bonds) Indirect Providers of Financial Capital 3. Suppliers/Vendors 4. Customers 5. Government Tax & Regulatory Agencies

Page 15: Economics /Management 4 Financial Accounting

What are the Characteristics of Useful?

a) Relevant – for decision-making

b) Reliable – consistent & comparable

c) Independent

d) Timely – result of recent activities How timely is publicly-reported financial accounting?