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Page 1: Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.Glencoe Accounting Accounting = Language of Business
Page 2: Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.Glencoe Accounting Accounting = Language of Business

Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Glencoe Accounting

Accounting = Language of Business

Page 3: Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.Glencoe Accounting Accounting = Language of Business

Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Glencoe Accounting

Identify career opportunities in the accounting field.

Describe the types of businesses and organizations that hire accountants.

Compare for-profit businesses and not-for-profit organizations.

Glencoe Accounting Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

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Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Glencoe Accounting

Accounting Careers:The Possibilities are Endless!

Section 1.2

Key Terms

accountant

accounting clerk

for-profit business

not-for-profit organization

public accounting firm

audit

certified public accountant (CPA)

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Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Glencoe Accounting

1.2

Accounting Careers:The Possibilities are Endless!

Section 1.2

As an accountant, you could work for

Big-name businesses like Nike or Hard Rock Cafe

Movie producers

The Changing Horizon

Well-known celebrities like Will Smith or Natalie Portman

Publishers of magazines such as PC World or Sports Illustrated

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Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Glencoe Accounting

Types of Organizations

There are many career opportunities for accountants in

For-profit businesses

Not-for-profit organizations

Public accounting firms

for-profit businessA business that operates to earn money for its owners.

not-for-profit organization

An organization that operates for purposes other than making a profit.

Section 1.2Accounting Careers:

The Possibilities are Endless!

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Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Glencoe Accounting

Types of Organizations

Section 1.2

accounting clerkAn entry-level job that can vary from specializing in one part of the system to doing a wide range of tasks.

What Is an

Accounting Clerk?

Accounting Careers:The Possibilities are Endless!

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Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Glencoe Accounting

Types of Organizations

Section 1.2

Revenues Expenses

$ $Donations Tax Dollars

Accounting Careers:The Possibilities are Endless!

Not-for-profit organizations

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Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Glencoe Accounting

Types of Organizations

Section 1.2

Certified public accountants perform: Some well-known public accounting firms are:

audits financial planning tax document preparation

Ernst & Young Deloitte & Touche KPMG PricewaterhouseCoopers

auditThe review of a company’s accounting systems and financial statements to confirm that they follow generally accepted accounting principles.

Public Accounting Firms

Accounting Careers:The Possibilities are Endless!

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Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Glencoe Accounting

F = businesses you think are for-profit businesses N = businesses you think are not-for-profit organizations P = businesses you think are public accounting firms

Question 1

Fill in the blank to identify:

6. Deloitte & Touche 1. General Motors

10. KPMG 5. Walt Disney World

9. Ernst & Young 4. PricewaterhouseCoopers

8. Boeing 3. American Lung Association

7. National Cathedral 2. MTV

F

F

N

P

F

P

N

F

P

P

What about our list?

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Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Glencoe Accounting

Disclosure Time

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End of

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Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Glencoe Accounting Glencoe Accounting Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

The accounting system produces information used by businesses to make decisions.

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Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Glencoe Accounting

Describe profit, risk-taking, and entrepreneurs.

Describe service, merchandising, and manufacturing businesses.

Compare the sole proprietorship, partnership, and corporate forms of businesses.

List the advantages and disadvantages of each form of business organization.

Describe the purpose of accounting.

Explain financial and management accounting.

Describe the three basic accounting assumptions.

Glencoe Accounting Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

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Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Glencoe Accounting

Key Terms

free enterprise system

profit

loss

entrepreneur

capital

service business

Exploring the Worldof Business

Section 2.1

merchandising business

manufacturing business

sole proprietorship

partnership

corporation

charter

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Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Glencoe Accounting

Exploring the Worldof Business

The Environment of Business

Free Enterprise System

Profit Loss

free enterprise systemA system in which individuals are

free to produce the goods and services they choose.

profitThe amount of money earned

over and above the amount spent to keep the business operating.

lossWhen a business spends more

money than it earns.

Section 2.1

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Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Glencoe Accounting

Exploring the Worldof Business

The Environment of Business

Section 2.1

What a business needs to survive

Operate at a profit

An individual willing to take the risk

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Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Glencoe Accounting

Exploring the Worldof Business

The Environment of Business

Section 2.1

Roles ina Business

Inventors

Investors

EmployeesManagers

Entrepreneurs

entrepreneurA person who

transforms ideas for products or services

into real-world businesses.

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Exploring the Worldof Business

The Environment of Business

Section 2.1

Traits of Entrepreneurs

Self-Starters OrganizationalSkills

MarketingKnowledge

AccountingSkills

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Exploring the Worldof Business

Types and Forms of Businesses

Section 2.1

Three Types of Business Operations

ServiceBusiness

MerchandisingBusiness

ManufacturingBusiness

service business

A business that provides a

needed service for a fee.

merchandising business

A business that buys finished products and

resells them to individuals or other

businesses.

manufacturing businessA business that buys raw materials, uses labor and

machinery to transform them into finished products, and

sells the finished products to individuals or other

businesses.

What about our list?

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Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Glencoe Accounting

Exploring the Worldof Business

Types and Forms of Businesses

Section 2.1

$All types of businesses need capital to begin.

capitalMoney that investors, banks, or business owners supply for a

business to begin.

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Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Glencoe Accounting

sole proprietorshipA business owned by one person.

partnershipA business owned by two or more persons.

corporationA business recognized by law to have a life of its own.

Exploring the Worldof Business

Types and Forms of Businesses

Section 2.1

Three Types of Business Organization

SoleProprietorship

Partnership Corporation

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Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Glencoe Accounting

Exploring the Worldof Business

Types and Forms of Businesses

Section 2.1

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Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Glencoe Accounting

Exploring the Worldof Business

Types and Forms of Businesses

Section 2.1

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Exploring the Worldof Business

Types and Forms of Businesses

A corporation must obtain a charter.

charterLegal permission to operate.

Section 2.1

What about our list?

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Accounting: The Universal Language of Business

Section 2.2

Key Terms

accounting system

manual accounting system

computerized accounting system

GAAP

financial reports

financial accounting

management accounting

business entity

accounting period

going concern

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Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Glencoe Accounting

Accounting: The Universal Language of Business

Section 2.2

The Accounting System

Two types of accounting systems

Manual AccountingSystem

Computerized Accounting System

accounting systemDesigned to collect, document, and report on financial transactions affecting

the business.

manual accounting systemWhen accounting information is

processed by hand.

computerized accounting systemWhen accounting information is processed by recording it into a

computer.

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Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Glencoe Accounting

Accounting: The Universal Language of Business

Section 2.2

The Accounting System

GAAP (generally accepted accounting principles)The set of rules that all accountants use to prepare

financial reports.

What Is

GAAP?

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Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Glencoe Accounting

The Accounting System

Accounting: The Universal Language of Business

Section 2.2

What Are

financial reports?

financial reportsDocuments that present summarized information

about the financial status of a business.

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Using Accounting Reports for Making Business Decisions

Accounting: The Universal Language of Business

Section 2.2

Two groups that useaccounting reports

Individuals outside the business who have an interest in the business

Individuals inside the business

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Using Accounting Reports for Making Business Decisions

Accounting: The Universal Language of Business

Section 2.2

Those interested in the financial accounting reports of a business include:

InvestorsLocal, state, and

federal government

Employees, consumers, and

competitors

financial accountingThe type of accounting that focuses on reporting information to external users.

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Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Glencoe Accounting

Using Accounting Reports for Making Business Decisions

Accounting: The Universal Language of Business

Section 2.2

Management accounting reports are prepared for managers involved in:

management accountingThe type of accounting that focuses on reporting information to management; often referred to as

accounting for internal users of accounting information.

Purchasing decisionsHiring decisionsProduction decisionsPaymentsSalesCollections

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Accounting Assumptions

Accounting: The Universal Language of Business

Section 2.2

GAAP Assumptions

Business entity

Accounting period

Going concern

business entityThe accounting assumption that a business exists independently of its owner’s personal holdings.

The accounting records and reports are maintained separately and contain financial information

related only to the business.

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Accounting Assumptions

Accounting: The Universal Language of Business

Section 2.2

GAAP Assumptions

Business entity

Accounting period

Going concern

accounting periodThe period of time covered by

an accounting report.

going concernThe accounting assumption that a business is expected to operate

indefinitely.

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Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Glencoe Accounting

Question 1

DePalm Pizza had the following cash transactions yesterday.

Receipts (money in): Checks: $650.00, Cash $500.00

Expenditures (money out): Gas and oil for delivery vehicle $75.98, supplies $477.50, salaries $380.00, and miscellaneous expenditures $123.76.

Did DePalm have a “profit” or “loss” for the day?

Step 1Calculate the total receipts.

Step 2Calculate the total expenditures.

Step 3Calculate the net profit (loss).

$650.00 + $500.00 = $1,150

$75.98 + $477.50 + $380.00 + $123.76 = $1,057.24

$1,150.00 - $1,057.24 = $92.76 profit (Receipts exceed expenditures)

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Question 2

Sole proprietorship is the most popular form of business ownership, yet very few large businesses are sole proprietorships. Give at least two reasons to explain this.

1. Sole proprietorships have the expertise of only the owner to call on. For example, the owner may be a great accountant but only a fair salesperson.

2. The business has the promise of only one owner to use to try to secure money from investors or lenders.

3. The owner bears all of the risk of loss, or unlimited liability. The owner could lose personal equity if the business fails.

4. The most talented potential employees would tend to prefer the job security of working in larger firms.