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ACCT 1001 CHAPTER 1: ACCOUNTING IN ACTION

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This is a professionally written, concise yet comprehensive summary of Chapter 1: Accounting in Action from the ACCT 1001 course at George Brown College. It is designed to provide clear conceptual understanding, making it perfect for students who are new to accounting or preparing for exams. The notes cover every core concept explained in class and include material from the official PowerPoint and instructor explanations. Highlights include: The purpose and users of accounting Forms of business organizations (proprietorship, partnership, corporation) Accounting assumptions and principles (Going Concern, Historical Cost, Fair Value, Periodicity, Revenue Recognition, Matching) Complete breakdown of financial statements: Income Statement Owner’s Equity Statement Balance Sheet Cash Flow Statement The Accounting Equation and its applications Recognition, measurement, and transaction analysis GAAP, IFRS, ASPE and their relevance Ethical standards in accounting Sample transaction effects on financial position Terminologies explained with clarity for first-time learners These notes are ideal for assignment prep, quizzes, tests, and midterms. They are structured to help you understand and retain key ideas with ease. Whether you're trying to pass comfortably or aim for top grades, these notes will save you hours of study time.

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Uploaded on
May 30, 2025
Number of pages
5
Written in
2024/2025
Type
Class notes
Professor(s)
Dr. mohammad h. a. khan
Contains
Chapter 1: accounting in action

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ACCT 1001
CHAPTER 1: ACCOUNTING IN ACTION


INTRODUCTION TO ACCOUNTING
Accounting is an information system that identifies, records, and
communicates economic events of an organization to interested users.

Purpose of Accounting
 To provide financial information that is relevant, reliable, comparable,
and useful.
 Supports internal decision-making (management) and external
decision-making (investors, creditors, regulators).



USERS OF ACCOUNTING INFORMATION

Internal Users External Users
Managers, Finance, HR, Investors, Creditors, CRA, Customers, Labour
Marketing Unions

 Internal users use accounting data for planning, control, and
operational decisions.
 External users use it to assess business performance, make lending or
investing decisions, and ensure regulatory compliance.



FORMS OF BUSINESS ORGANIZATION

Type Description Liability
Proprietorship Owned by one person Unlimited
Partnership Owned by two or more individuals Unlimited
Corporation Separate legal entity owned by shareholders Limited



FUNDAMENTAL ACCOUNTING ASSUMPTIONS AND
CONCEPTS

, Principle/Concept Explanation
Financial activities of a business are kept separate from
Reporting Entity
its owners and other businesses.
Business will continue operations into the foreseeable
Going Concern
future.
Financial reporting is done for specific and regular time
Periodicity
intervals (e.g., monthly, annually).
Only economic activities measurable in currency (e.g.,
Monetary Unit
CAD) are recorded.




KEY ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES

Principle Description
Revenue Revenue is recognized when earned and realizable, not
Recognition necessarily when cash is received.
Matching Expenses must be recorded in the same period as the
Principle revenues they help generate.
Assets are recorded at their original purchase cost,
Historical Cost
regardless of current market value.
Assets and liabilities may be recorded at current market
Fair Value
value when more relevant.
General Determines when and how to record financial statement
Recognition items.



GAAP AND ACCOUNTING STANDARDS

 Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP): A common set
of rules and guidelines.
 IFRS (International Financial Reporting Standards): Mandatory
for publicly accountable enterprises in Canada.
 ASPE (Accounting Standards for Private Enterprises): Optional
for private companies.


COMPONENTS OF FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

Element Description
Resources controlled by a business that provide future
Assets
economic benefit.
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