Download Financial Accounting Notes
ATD LEVEL II
FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING UNIT DESCRIPTION
This paper is intended to equip the candidate with knowledge, skills and attitudes that will enable him/her to prepare financial statements for different entities.
Contents
- 1 LEARNING OUTCOMES
- 2 CONTENT
- 3 Introduction to accounting
- 4 Recording transactions
- 5 Accounting for assets and liabilities
- 6 Assets
- 7 Liabilities
- 8 Correction of errors and suspense accountFinancial statements of a sole trader
- 9 Financial statements of a partnership
- 10 Financial statements of a company
- 11 Financial statements of a manufacturing entity
- 12 Accounts from incomplete records
- 13 Financial statements of a not for profit organisation
- 14 Analysing financial statements
- 15 Introduction to Public Sector Accounting
- 16 Emerging issues and trends
LEARNING OUTCOMES
A candidate who passes this paper should be able to:
· Prepare books of original entry and basic ledger accounts under double entry
system
· Prepare basic financial statements of sole traders, partnerships, companies,
manufacturing entities and not for profit organisations
· Comply with the regulatory framework in the accounting field
· Account for assets and liabilities
· Analyse financial statements by use of ratios and statement of cash flows.
CONTENT
Introduction to accounting
- The nature and purpose of accounting
- Objectives of accounting
- Users of accounting information and their respective needs
- The accounting equation
- Regulatory framework of accounting (regulatory bodies such as ICPAK, IFAC,
 IASB, IPSASB, IAESB)
- Accounting standards (IASs/IFRSs) (importance and limitations)
- Professional ethics
- Accounting concepts/principles
- Qualities of useful accounting information
Recording transactions
- Source documents: quotations, purchase orders, statement of account,
 remittance advice, receipts, petty cash vouchers, sales and purchase invoice,
 credit notes and debit notes, bank statements
- Books of original entry: sales journal, purchases journal, returns inwards journal,
 returns outward journal, cash book, petty cash book and general journal
- Double entry and the ledger; use of T- accounts and double entry aspects (debit
 and credit), sales ledger and purchases ledger
- The trial balance
- Computerised accounting systems – role of computers, application and
 accounting softwares in the accounting process, benefits and challenges of
 operating computerised accounting systems
Accounting for assets and liabilities
Assets
- Property, plant and equipment – recognition, capital and revenue
 expenditure, measurement (depreciation and revaluation), disposal and
 disclosures, property, plant and equipment schedule
- Intangible assets – recognition, measurement (amortisation, impairment
 and revaluation), disposals and disclosures
- Financial assets – examples and risks only
- Inventory – recognition, measurement and valuation using specific cost
 method, FIFO and weighted average cost only
- Trade receivables – bad debts and allowance for doubtful debts and
 receivables control accounts
- Accrued income and prepaid expenses
- Cash at bank – cash book and bank reconciliation statement
- Cash in hand – cash book and petty cash books
Liabilities
- Bank overdraft – cash book and bank reconciliation statement
- Trade payables – control accounts
- Loans – accounting treatment of repayment of principal and interest
- Prepaid incomes and accrued expenses
Correction of errors and suspense account
Financial statements of a sole trader
- Income statement
- Statement of financial position
Download FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING ATD NOTES
Financial statements of a partnership
- Partnership agreement
- Introduction to partnership accounts
- Distinction between current and fixed capital
- Income statement
- Statement of financial position
- Changes in partnership – admission of a new partner, retirement, death and
 change in profit sharing ratio
Financial statements of a company
- Types of share capital – ordinary shares and preference shares
- Issue of shares (exclude issue by instalment and forfeiture)
- Types of reserves – share premium, revaluation reserve, general reserves and
 retained profits
- Income tax – accounting treatment and presentation (exclude computation)
- Financial statements – income statement and statement of financial position
- Published financial statements (describe a complete set of published financial
 statements but not preparation)
Financial statements of a manufacturing entity
- Features of a manufacturing entity
- Classification and apportioning costs between manufacturing, selling and
 administration
- Financial statements – manufacturing account, income statement and statement
 of financial position
Accounts from incomplete records
- Features
- Types of incomplete records(pure single entry, simple single entry, quasi single
 entry)
- Ascertainment of profit by capital comparison
- Preparation of statement of affairs and profit determination
- Techniques of obtaining complete accounting information
Financial statements of a not for profit organisation
- Distinction between not for profit making organisation and profit making
 organisation
- Nature of receipts and payments account
- Accounting treatment of some special items
- Income and expenditure account
- Statement of financial position
Analysing financial statements
- Statement of cash flows (categories of cash, methods of preparing statement of
 cash flows and the importance)
- Financial ratios – definition, categories, analysis and interpretation, application
 and limitations
Introduction to Public Sector Accounting
- Features of public sector entities (as compared to private sector)
- Structure of the public sector (National and county governments, state
 corporations and other agencies)
- Regulatory structures and oversight [IPSASB, PSASB (establishment, mandate
 and functions), Director of Accounting Services, National Treasury, Parliamentary
 Committees, Accounting Officers at national and county levels]
- Objectives of public sector financial statements
- Objectives of IPSAS
- Accounting techniques in public sector (budgeting, cash, accrual, commitment
 and fund)
 (Preparation of financial statements excluded)
