CFAS CHAPTER 1-3 Study online at https://quizlet.com/_91dj3t 1. ASC: Accounting is a service activity 2. CATAICPA: Accounting is the art of recording, classifying and summarizing in a signigicant manner 3. AAA: Accounting is the process of identifying, measuring and communicating economic information 4. Identifying: recognition or nonrecognition of business activities as accountable events 5. External Transaction: involve economic events between the company and some outside enterprise 6. Internal transaction: economic events that occur entirely within one company 7. Production: process by which resources are transformed into products 8. Casualty: any sudden and unanticipated loss from fire, flood, earthquake and other event ordinarily termed as an act of God 9. Measuring: is the assigning of peso amounts to the accountable economic transactions and events 10. Historical Cost: is the original acquisition cost and the most common measure of financial transactions 11. current value: includes fair value, value in use, fulfillment value and current cost 12. Communicating: is the process of preparing and distributing accounting reports to potential users of accounting information 13. Recording: process of systematically maintaining a record of all economic business transactions after they have been identified and measured 14. Classifying: is the sorting or grouping of similar and interrelated economic transactions into their respective classes 15. Ledger: A group of accounts which are systematically categorized 16. Summarizing: is the preparation of financial statements 17. Accounting as an information system: measures business activities, processes information into reportsa and communicates the reports to decision makers 18. Overall Objective of accounting: is to provide quantitative financial information about a business that is useful to statement users 1/8 CFAS CHAPTER 1-3 Study online at https://quizlet.com/_91dj3t 19. Board of Accountancy: Body authorized by law to promulgate rules and regulations affecting the practice of the accountancy profession in the Philippines 20. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC): shall not register any corporation organized for the practice of public accountancy 21. Auditing: has traditionally been the primary services offered by most public accounting practitioners 22. Auditing: is the examination of fiancial statements by independent CPA for the purpose of expressing an opinion as to the fairness with which the fs are prepared 23. Taxation: includes the preparation of annual income tax returns and determination of tax consequences of certain proposed business endeavors 24. Management Advisory Services: refers to the services to clients on matters of accounting, finance, business policies, etc. 25. Controller: highest ranking accountant in a company 26. Government Accounting: encompasses the processes of analyzing, recording, classifying, summarizing and communicating all transactions involving the receipt and disposition of government funds and property and interpreting the results thereof 27. Continuing Professional Development (CPD): The inculcation of advanced knowldege, skills, and ethical values in a post licensure specialized or in an inter or multidisciplinary field of study for assimilation into professional practice, self-directed research and/or lifelong learning 28. CPD credit unit: refer to the CPD credit hours required for the renewal of CPA license 29. 120 CPD credit Units: are required for accreditation of a CPA to practice the accountancy profession 30. constructive: Accounting vs. Auditing: Accounting 31. analytical: Accounting vs. Auditing: Auditing 32. procedural: Accounting vs. Bookkeeping: Bookkeeping 33. conceptual: Accounting vs. Bookkeeping: Accounting 34. Bookkeeeping: how of accounting 35. Financial Accounting: The field of accounting that focuses on providing information for internal external decision makers. 2/8 CFAS CHAPTER 1-3 Study online at https://quizlet.com/_91dj3t 36. Managerial Accounting: the area of accounting that focuses on reporting information to internal users only 37. GAAP: political process 38. Financial Reporting Standards Council: accounting setting body created by PRC. main function is to establish and improve accountjng standards 39. International Accounting Standards Committee: An accounting organization whose purpose is to formulate and publish international accounting standards and to promote their acceptance worldwide 40. International Accounting Standards Board (IASB): An organization that issues International Financial Reporting Standards for many countries outside the United States. 41. Philippine Financial Reporting Standards: issues standards in a series of pronouncement 42. Conceptual framework for financial reporting: ia a complete, comprehensive and single document promulgated by the IASB 43. Contribute Transparency: by enhancing international comparability and quality of financial information 44. strengthen accountability: by reducing information gap between the providers of capital and the people to whom they have entrusted their money 45. Contribute to economic efficiency: by helping investors to identify opportunities and risks across the world 46. Standard: If there is a conflict between standard and conceptual framework, which will prevail? 47. not a standard: Conceptual is a standard or not? 48. Primary Users: include the existing and potential investors, lenders, and other creditors 49. other users: include the employees, customers, governments and their agencies, and the public 50. Existing and potential investors: are concerned with the risk inherent in and return provided by their investments 51. Lenders and other creditors: are interested in information which enables them to determine whether their loans, interest thereon and other amounts owing to them will be paid when due 3/8 CFAS CHAPTER 1-3 Study online at https://quizlet.com/_91dj3t 52. other users: are users of financial information other than existing and potential investors, lenders and other creditors 53. Employees: are interested in information about the stability and profitability of the entity 54. Customers: have an interest in information about the continuance of an entity especially when they have a long-term involvement with or are dependent on the entity 55. Government and their agencies: are interested in the allocation of resources and therefore the activities of the entity 56. Public: these users need information on trends and recent developments where an entity makes a substantial contribution 57. overall objective of financial reporting: is to provide financial information about the reporting entity that is useful to existing and potential investors, lenders and other rcreditors 58. overall objective of financial reporting: is the why, purpose or goal of accounting 59. to provide information: useful in making decisions about providing resources to the entity; useful in assessing the cash flow prospects of the entity and; about entity resources, claims, and changes in resources and claims: specific objective of financial reporting 60. economic decisions: existing and potential investors and lenders and other creditors need general purpose financial reports in order to enable them in making decisions whether to buy,, sell, or hold equity investments and in making decisions whether to provide or settle loans and other forms of credit, respectively 61. Assessing Cash Flow Prospects: for existing and potential investors, it depends on the return while lenders and other creditors dpend on the principal and interst payments 62. economic resources and claims: GPFR provide information about the FINANCIAL POSITION of a reporting entity 63. Financial Position: is information about the entity's economic resources and the claims against the reporting entity 64. economic resources: are the assets in financial position 65. claims: are the liabilities and equity of the entity in the financial position 4/8 CFAS CHAPTER 1-3 Study online at https://quizlet.com/_91dj3t 66. liquidity: availability of cash in the near future to cover currently maturing obligations 67. solvency: availability of cash over a long term to meet financial commitments when they fall due 68. financial performance/ results of operation: comprises revenue, expenses and net income or loss for a period of time 69. accrual accounting: depicts the effects of transactions and other events are recognized when they occur and not as cash is received or paid. 70. Accrual Accounting: means that income is recognized when earned regardless of when received and expense is recognized when incurred regardless of when paid 71. Management Stewardship: information about how efficiently and effectively management has discharged its responsibilities to use entity's economic resources help users to assess this of those resources 72. Qualitative Characteristics: are the qualities or attributes that make financial accounting information useful to the users 73. Fundamental Qualitative Characteristics: relate to the content or substance of financial information 74. relevance and faithful representation: Two fundamental qualities that make accounting information useful for decision-making purposes. 75. relevance: is the capacity of the information to influence a decision 76. predictive value and confirmatory value: ingredients of relevance 77. predictive value: if it can be used as an input to processes employed by users to predict future outcome/ forecasting outcome of events 78. confirmatory value: if it provides feedback about previous evaluations/ when it enable users confirm or correct earlier expectations 79. Materiality: also known as the doctrine of convenience 80. nature and materiality: the relevance of information is affected by its ___ 81. materiality: subquality of relevance based on the nature or magnitude or both of the items to which the information relates 82. materiality is relativity: depends on relative size or absolute size? 83. True: An item is material if knowledge of it could reasonably affect or influence the economic decision of the primary users of the financial statements 5/8 CFAS CHAPTER 1-3 Study online at https://quizlet.com/_91dj3t 84. It should still be material: if a big company lost 10,000 due to fraud, what will happen? 85. new definition of materiality: information is ______ if omitting, misstating or obscuring it could reasonably be expected to influence the economic decisions that primary users of GPFS make on the basis of those statements which provide financial information about a specific reporting entity 86. could reasonably be expected to influence, obscuring information, and primary users: three important aspects of revised definition of materiality 87. could reasonably be expected to influence: threshold adds an element of reasonability of financial information on which economic decisions is used 88. could reasonably be expected to influence: shall be limited to the economic decision of primary users rather than to all users which is to broad in scope 89. could reasonably be expected to influence: threshold insures that information capable of influencing economic decision of primary users shall be included in the financial statements 90. obscuring information: if presenting or communicating it would have similar effect as omitting or misstating the information 91. obscuring information: means the presentation of financial information not readily understood or not clearly expressed 92. primary users: these groups are users to whom GPFS are primaryily directed 93. magnitude and nature: factors of materiality 94. size of the item: in relation to the total of the group to which the item belongs is taken into account 95. nature of the item: may be inherently material because by its very nature it affects economic decision 96. faithful representation: means that financial reports represent economic phenomena or transactions in words and numbers, the descriptions and figures must match what really existed or happened 97. completeness, neutrality, free from error: ingredients of faithful representation 98. completeness: requires that relevant information should be presented in a way that facilitates understanding and avoids erroneous implication 99. completeness: is the result of the adequate disclosure standard or the principle of full disclosure 6/8 CFAS CHAPTER 1-3 Study online at https://quizlet.com/_91dj3t 100. Standard of adequate disclosure: means that all significant and relevant information leading to the preparation of financial statements shall be clearly reported 101. Notes to the financial statements: is to provide the necessary disclosure required by PFRS 102. Neutrality: is without bias in the preparation or presentation of financial information 103. Prudence: is the exercise of care and caution when dealing with the uncertainties in the measurement process such that assets or income are not overstated and liabilities or expenses are not understated. Neutrality is supported by this exercise 104. conservatism: means that when alternatives exist, the alternative which has the least effect on equity should be chosen 105. contingency loss is recognized: contingency loss is ______ as a provision if the loss is probable and the amount can be reliably measured 106. contingency gains is not recognized: contingency gains is _______ but disclosed only 107. free from error: means that there are no errors or omissions in the description of the phenomenon or transaction 108. measurement uncertainty: arises when monetary amounts in financial reports cannot be observed directly and must instead be estimated 109. substance over form: If information is to represent transactions and events faithfully it is necessary that they are accounted for and presented in accordance with their substance and economic reality and not merely their legal form 110. enhancing fundamental characteristics: relates to the presentation or form of the financial information 111. comparability, verifiability, timeliness, understandability: the enhancing qualitative characteristics 112. comparability: means the ability to bring together for the purpose of noting points of likeness and difference 113. Comparability within an entity/ horizontal comparability/ intracomparability: is the quality of information that allows comparisons within a single entity through time or from one accounting period to next 7/8 CFAS CHAPTER 1-3 Study online at https://quizlet.com/_91dj3t 114. comparability between and across an entity/ dimensional comparability/ intercomparability: is the quality of information that allows comparisons between two or more entities engaged in the same industry 115. consistency: refers to the use of the same method for the same item, either from period to period within an entity or in single period across entities 116. True: Comparability is the goal and consistency help to achieve the goal 117. consistency: is the uniform application of accounting method from period to period within an entity 118. comparability: is the uniform application of accounting method between and across entities in the same industry 119. Understandability: requires that financial information must be comprehensive or intelligible if it is to be most useful 120. verifiability: implies consensus 121. Verifiability: different knowledgeable and independent observers can reach consensus that a particular representation is faithful 122. direct verification: occurs from physically counting the inventory 123. Indirect Verification: Verification may occur by checking the inputs (quantity and costs) and recalculating the outputs (ending inventory value) using the same accounting convention or methodology 124. timeliness: means that financial information must be available or communicated early enough when a decision is to be made 125. less useful: the older the information, ______ 126. cost constraint: The pervasive constraint that ensures that the value of the information provided in financial reporting is greater than the cost of providing it. 8/8