📖 Samacheer Kalvi · 11th TN - English Medium · Accountancy · Page 9question

INTRODUCTION TO ACCOUNTING · Part 8

Chapter 6: INTRODUCTION TO ACCOUNTING · Accountancy

refers to the financial obligation of the business. Debtor A person who receives a benefit without giving money or money’s worth immediately, but liable to pay in future or in due course of time. Creditor A person who gives a benefit without receiving money or money’s worth immediately but to claim in future. Accountancy - Depreciation It refers to the gradual reduction in the value of fixed assets due to usage and passage of time.

Bad debt It is a loss to the business arising out of failure of a debtor to pay the dues. It is irrecoverable debt. . Branches of Accounting Depending on the informational needs of various users of accounting information, several branches or subfields of accounting have been developed.

The various branches of accounting are: (i) Financial Accounting It involves recording of financial transactions and events. It is historical in nature and records are maintained for transactions and events which have already occurred. It provides financial information to the users for taking decisions. It is concerned with identification, recording, classifying and summarising of financial transactions and events and ends up with the preparation of financial statements, namely, trading and profit and loss account or income statement and balance sheet and communication of the same to the interested users.

Trading and profit and loss account shows the profit or loss made during an accounting period and the balance sheet shows the financial position of the business as on a particular date. (ii) Cost Accounting It involves the collection, recording, classification and appropriate allocation of expenditure for the determination of the costs of products or services and for the presentation of data for the purposes of cost control and managerial decision making. (iii) Management Accounting It is concerned with the presentation of accounting information in such a way as to assist management in decision making and in the day-to-day operations of an enterprise. The information collected from financial accounting, cost accounting, etc.

are grouped, modified and presented as per the requirements of management for discharging their functions and for decision making. (iv)

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