Constraints of accounting principle - Banking Diploma Education

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Thursday, November 21, 2013

Constraints of accounting principle

Q. Constraints of accounting principle.Cost and Benefit Paradox – there is a very real cost to recording and reporting accounting information. Hence, some potentially important events relevant to a business may not be disclosed because it was too expensive or cumbersome to gather the data. We must read between the lines of financial statements and add information to which we have access in order to make the best decisions.

Materiality – small financial events are not as important large financial events to the typical, reasonable reader of financial statements. That makes sense but our decision making process  may be different from the typical user of financial statements as understood by the accounting folks; some small financial event may not be disclosed even though it is very relevant to our decision.

Industry Practice – one size does not fit all when reporting financial activities. Some industries have peculiar products/services or have special ways of distributing the products/services to customers, so we cannot understand an Internet retailer the same way we would analyze and automobile manufacturer.

Conservatism – to avoid investor misinterpretation of assets and income, accountants choose accounting methods that do not overstate what the business owns or the profits achieved. Again, this is an important consideration for financial reporting, but we need to modify the notion somewhat to make decisions about the business between accounting periods.

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