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Lecture Note - Chapter 3

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These lecture notes from Chapter 3 of Financial Accounting (11th Edition) by Libby, Libby, and Hodge explore how businesses measure and report operating activities. They explain the business operating cycle and the importance of the time period assumption, emphasizing accrual accounting principles such as revenue recognition and expense matching. Students learn to analyze and record transactions using journal entries and understand their impact on the accounting equation and income statement. The notes cover how to prepare a classified income statement, calculate and interpret the net profit margin ratio, and identify operating cash flows, with examples to clarify key concepts throughout.

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Uploaded on
April 9, 2025
Number of pages
7
Written in
2024/2025
Type
Class notes
Professor(s)
Irina luneva
Contains
Chapter 3

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Lecture Notes: Chapter 3 – Operating Decisions and the Accounting System
Based on Financial Accounting, 11th Edition by Libby, Libby, and Hodge



Introduction

This chapter focuses on how businesses report and analyze operating activities through the
accounting system. The income statement reflects a company’s performance over a period, and
accurate measurement requires understanding of the time period assumption, accrual
accounting, and the recognition principles. We explore how transactions are recorded using
journal entries and transaction analysis, how to prepare a classified income statement, how
to interpret the net profit margin ratio, and how operating activities impact cash flows. Mastery
of these concepts is critical for making informed business and financial decisions.




1. The Business Operating Cycle and the Time Period
Assumption
1.1 The Business Operating Cycle

A typical business operating cycle refers to the time it takes for a company to:

1. Purchase inventory or supplies
2. Sell goods or services
3. Collect cash from customers

This cycle may be days, weeks, or months depending on the industry.

Example:
A retailer purchases inventory in January, sells it in February, and collects payment in March.
This full cycle spans three months.



1.2 The Time Period Assumption

Because companies must report financial results regularly (e.g., quarterly, annually), accountants
adopt the time period assumption:

The life of a business can be divided into artificial time periods for reporting purposes.

This enables stakeholders to assess performance over consistent intervals, even though the
business operates continuously.

, 2. Operating Activities and the Income Statement
2.1 What Are Operating Activities?

Operating activities are the day-to-day transactions related to the company's core operations,
including:

 Selling products/services
 Paying wages
 Buying inventory
 Paying for utilities and rent



2.2 The Income Statement

The income statement reports revenues and expenses for a specific period, revealing net income
or loss.




Components:

 Revenues: Income from goods/services sold
 Expenses: Costs incurred in earning revenues



2.3 How Business Activities Affect the Income Statement

Each operating transaction changes the company’s revenues, expenses, or both.

Example 1 – Revenue Transaction:
A business delivers services and earns $5,000.
→ Increase in revenue, which increases net income and retained earnings.

Example 2 – Expense Transaction:
A business pays $2,000 in employee wages.
→ Increase in expenses, which decreases net income and retained earnings.
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