Definisi of accounting
accounting, is the production of information about an enterprise and the transmission of that information from people who have it to those who need it.[1] The communication is generally in the form of financial statements that show in money terms the economic resources under the control of management; the art lies in selecting the information that is relevant to the user and is representationally faithful. The principles of accountancy are applied to business entities in three divisions of practical art, named accounting, bookkeeping, and auditing.[2]
Information technology plays a vital role within accounting. Today many tedious accounting practices have been simplified with the help of computer software. Software such as enterprise resource planning (ERP) software systems help to manage value chain of companies. ERP systems provide a comprehensive, centralized, integrated source of information that companies can use to manage all major business processes, from purchasing to manufacturing to human resources. this software can replace up to 200 individual software programs that were previously used. there is also computer integrated manufacturing that allows products to be made and completely untouched by human hands and can increase production by having less errors in manufacturing process. Computers have reduced the cost of accumulating, storing, and reporting managerial accounting information and have made it possible to produce a more detailed account of all data that is entered into any given system. Computers have changed business to business interaction through e-commerce. rather than dealing with multiple companies to purchase products a business can purchase a product at a less expensive price and take out the third party and vastly reduces expenses companies once accrued. Inter-organizational information system enable suppliers and businesses to be connected at all times. When a company is low on a product the supplier will be notified and fulfill an order immediately which eliminates the need for someone to do inventory, fill out the proper documents, send them out and wait for their products. [3]
Early accounts served mainly to assist the memory of the businessperson and the audience for the account was the proprietor or record keeper alone. Cruder forms of accounting were inadequate for the problems created by a business entity involving multiple investors, so double-entry bookkeeping first emerged in northern Italy in the 14th century, where trading ventures began to require more capital than a single individual was able to invest. The development of joint-stock companies created wider audiences for accounts, as investors without firsthand knowledge of their operations relied on accounts to provide the requisite information.[6] This development resulted in a split of accounting systems for internal (i.e. management accounting) and external (i.e. financial accounting) purposes, and subsequently also in accounting and disclosure regulations and a growing need for independent attestation of external accounts by auditors.[7]
Today, accounting is called "the language of business"[8] because it is the vehicle for reporting financial information about a business entity to many different groups of people. Accounting that concentrates on reporting to people inside the business entity is called management accounting and is used to provide information to employees, managers, owner-managers and auditors. Management accounting is concerned primarily with providing a basis for making management or operating decisions. Accounting that provides information to people outside the business entity is called financial accounting and provides information to present and potential shareholders, creditors such as banks or vendors, financial analysts, economists, and government agencies. Because these users have different needs, the presentation of financial accounts is very structured and subject to many more rules than management accounting. The body of rules that governs financial accounting in a given jurisdiction is called Generally Accepted Accounting Principles, or GAAP. Other rules include International Financial Reporting Standards, or IFRS,[9] or US GAAP.
Main articles: Luca Pacioli and Double-entry bookkeeping system
When medieval Europe moved to a monetary economy in the 13th century, sedentary merchants depended on bookkeeping to oversee multiple simultaneous transactions financed by bank loans. One important breakthrough took place around that time: the introduction of double-entry bookkeeping,[21] which is defined as any bookkeeping system in which there was a debit and credit entry for each transaction, or for which the majority of transactions were intended to be of this form.[22] The historical origin of the use of the words 'debit' and 'credit' in accounting goes back to the days of single-entry bookkeeping in which the chief objective was to keep track of amounts owed by customers (debtors) and amounts owed to creditors. 'Debit,' is Latin for 'he owes' and 'credit' Latin for 'he trusts'.[23]
The earliest extant evidence of full double-entry bookkeeping is the Farolfi ledger of 1299-1300.[21] Giovanno Farolfi & Company were a firm of Florentine merchants whose head office was in Nîmes who also acted as moneylenders to the Archbishop of Arles, their most important customer.[24] The oldest discovered record of a complete double-entry system is the Messari (Italian: Treasurer's) accounts of the city of Genoa in 1340. The Messari accounts contain debits and credits journalised in a bilateral form, and contain balances carried forward from the preceding year, and therefore enjoy general recognition as a double-entry system.[25]
Luca Pacioli's "Summa de Arithmetica, Geometria, Proportioni et Proportionalità" (early Italian: "Review of Arithmetic, Geometry, Ratio and Proportion") was first printed and published in Venice in 1494. It included a 27-page treatise on bookkeeping, "Particularis de Computis et Scripturis" (Latin: "Details of Calculation and Recording"). It was written primarily for, and sold mainly to, merchants who used the book as a reference text, as a source of pleasure from the mathematical puzzles it contained, and to aid the education of their sons. It represents the first known printed treatise on bookkeeping; and it is widely believed to be the forerunner of modern bookkeeping practice. In Summa Arithmetica, Pacioli introduced symbols for plus and minus for the first time in a printed book, symbols that became standard notation in Italian Renaissance mathematics. Summa Arithmetica was also the first known book printed in Italy to contain algebra.
Although Luca Pacioli did not invent double-entry bookkeeping,[27] his 27-page treatise on bookkeeping contained the first known published work on that topic, and is said to have laid the foundation for double-entry bookkeeping as it is practiced today.[28] Even though Pacioli's treatise exhibits almost no originality, it is generally considered as an important work, mainly because of its wide circulation, it was written in the vernacular Italian language, and it was a printed book.[29]According to Pacioli, accounting is an ad hoc ordering system devised by the merchant. Its regular use provides the merchant with continued information about his business, and allows him to evaluate how things are going and to act accordingly. Pacioli recommends the Venetian method of double-entry bookkeeping above all others. Three major books of account are at the direct basis of this system: the memoriale (Italian: memorandum), the giornale (Journal), and the quaderno (ledger). The ledger is considered as the central one and is accompanied by an alphabetical index.
vokebulary
accelerated depreciation
account book
accounting - book-keeping
accounting criteria - accounting standards
accounts payable
accrual
accrued liability - accrued expense
accrued revenue - accrued income
actual cost
added value
adjustment
administrative expenses
advances
affiliated company
allocation of the dividend
amortization - depreciation
to amortize - to depreciate
annual general meeting (AGM)
to approve a balance
articles of association
asset
assets
assets and liabilities
assets side
assets value
associated companies
auditing - audit
auditors' certificate
balance-sheet analysis
balance-sheet consolidation
balance-sheet items
balance-sheet ratios
balance sheet
board of directors
Book Keeping loss
book profit
book value
break-up value
break even point (BEP)
budget
industrial and commercial equipment
intangible assets
interests earned
interests paid
inventories - stock
inventory
inventory accounting - stock accounting
inventory book
inventory records - stock records
inventory turnover index
inventory value
investment
invoicing - billing
land and buildings
legal reserve
liabilities
liabilities side
limited liability company
limited partner - sleeping partner
limited partnership
liquid assets
liquidity
long-term financing
loss
loss on credits
major shareholder
majority interest
majority shareholder
to make a list of inventory
to manage a company
management buy-out
memorandum of association
minority interest
minutes of a meeting
net assets
net margin
net profit
non-taxable income
on first call
one-man business
buildings tax
business consultant - expert in commercial law
to call a general meeting
capital
capital goods
capital increase
capital loss
to capitalize
cash cow product
cash flow
chairman of the board of directors
chart of accounts
clean factoring
closing balance
closing stock
company - firm
company merger
company profitability
consolidated statement
controlling company
corporate books
corporate purpose
corporate tax
cost centre
cost of goods sold
costs and revenues
credit
to credit an amount
credit column - credit side
credit note
current assets - floating assets
day book - journal book
debit and credit
debit column - debit side
debit note
debt
debtor
deed of association - company statute
deferred expense - deferred charge
deferred income - deferred revenue
opening balance sheet
opening stock - opening inventory
operating loss
operating profit
ordinary partnership
outstanding credits
overhead costs - overheads
owner's equity
owner
partner - shareholder
patent
periodical report
personnel costs
plant and equipment
plant and machinery
post a contra-entry
pre-tax profit
production costs
production value
professional accountant
profit and loss account (GB) - income statement (US)
profit distribution
provision
provision for doubtful accounts
proxy vote
to put into liquidation
quorum
to quote a company
raw materials inventories
real estate
records
registered office
reserve fund - reserve
return on investment (ROI)
revenue - earnings - incomes
revenue tax
revenues and expenses
rounding down
rounding up
running costs - operating costs
deferred tax
depreciable assets
depreciation
depreciation allowance - capital allowance
depreciation fund - amortization fund
double entry
entry
entry date
equity tax
expenditure - outflow - expense
expense centre
expense receipt
extraordinary meeting
false accounting
false factoring
fee
to fill in a VAT return
final balance
finance
financial leasing
financial management
financial resources
financial statement
financing - funds
finished products inventories
fiscal year - financial year
fixed assets (GB) - capital assets (US)
fixed costs
fully paid-up capital
general accounting
general partner
general partnership - ordinary partnership
goodwill expenses - start-up costs
gross margin
gross operating margin
gross operating profit
gross profit
in the black
income tax
industrial accounting cost
semifinished goods inventories
to set up a company
share capital (GB) - capital stock (US)
shareholders' calling
shareholders' meeting
shareholders register
stamp duty
state-controlled enterprise
statement of account - account statement
statutory balance
stocks and work in progress (GB) - inventories (US)
subscribed capital - underwritten capital
subsidiary
subsidiary company - controlled company
substitutive tax
take-over
tax
tax accounting
tax assessment
tax audit - tax inspection
tax base
tax credit
tax exemption - tax allowance
tax payer
tax rate
tax register
tax return - income tax return
tax revenue
taxable value - assessment
taxation
taxes and dues
temporary balance
total current assets
trial balance
value added tax (VAT)
variable costs
VAT return - VAT declaration
to veto withholding tax
year-end inventory
penyusutan dipercepat
buku rekening
akuntansi - pembukuan
kriteria akuntansi - standar akuntansi
hutang
akrual
masih harus dibayar kewajiban - Beban yang masih harus dibayar
masih harus dibayar pendapatan - pendapatan yang masih harus dibayar
biaya yang sebenarnya
nilai tambah
penyetelan
biaya administrasi
kemajuan
perusahaan afiliasi
alokasi dividen
amortisasi - penyusutan
melakukan amortisasi - terdepresiasi
rapat umum tahunan (AGM)
untuk menyetujui keseimbangan
anggaran dasar
aset
aktiva
aktiva dan kewajiban
sisi aktiva
Nilai aktiva
perusahaan asosiasi
audit - Audit
sertifikat auditor
analisis neraca
neraca konsolidasi
item neraca
rasio neraca
neraca keuangan
direksi
Buku Menjaga kerugian
Laba buku
nilai buku
nilai break-up
break even point (BEP)
anggaran belanja
peralatan industri dan komersial
aktiva tidak berwujud
kepentingan yang diterima
kepentingan dibayar
persediaan - saham
inventarisasi
akuntansi persediaan - akuntansi saham
buku inventaris
catatan persediaan - catatan saham
Indeks perputaran persediaan
nilai persediaan
investasi
faktur - penagihan
tanah dan bangunan
cadangan hukum
Kewajiban
sisi kewajiban
perseroan terbatas
mitra terbatas - sleeping partner
komanditer
alat likuida
likuiditas
pembiayaan jangka panjang
kerugian
kerugian kredit
pemegang saham utama
saham mayoritas
pemegang saham mayoritas
untuk membuat daftar inventarisasi
untuk mengelola perusahaan
manajemen buy-out
anggaran dasar
minoritas
risalah rapat
aktiva bersih
margin bersih
laba bersih
Penghasilan tidak kena pajak
pada panggilan pertama
bisnis satu orang
pajak bangunan
konsultan bisnis - ahli dalam hukum dagang
untuk memanggil rapat umum
modal
barang modal
peningkatan modal
kehilangan modal
untuk memanfaatkan
produk sapi kas
arus kas
ketua dewan direksi
bagan akun
anjak bersih
menutup saldo
penutupan saham
Perusahaan - perusahaan
merger perusahaan
profitabilitas perusahaan
laporan laba rugi konsolidasi
mengendalikan perusahaan
buku perusahaan
Tujuan perusahaan
pajak perusahaan
pusat biaya
harga pokok penjualan
biaya dan pendapatan
kredit
untuk kredit jumlah
kredit kolom - sisi kredit
nota kredit
aktiva lancar - aset mengambang
hari buku - buku jurnal
debit dan kredit
kolom debit - sisi debet
nota debet
hutang
debitur
akta asosiasi - undang perusahaan
Beban ditangguhkan - biaya yang ditangguhkan
penghasilan tangguhan - pendapatan ditangguhkan
membuka neraca
membuka saham - persediaan pembukaan
kerugian operasional
laba operasi
kemitraan biasa
kredit yang beredar
biaya overhead - biaya overhead
ekuitas pemilik
pemilik
mitra - pemegang saham
paten
Laporan berkala
biaya personil
pabrik dan peralatan
pabrik dan mesin
memasukkan kontra-entry
laba sebelum pajak
biaya produksi
nilai produksi
akuntan profesional
laba akun (GB) rugi - laporan laba rugi (US)
distribusi keuntungan
ketentuan
penyisihan piutang tak tertagih
suara proxy
untuk dimasukkan ke dalam likuidasi
kuorum
mengutip sebuah perusahaan
persediaan bahan baku
real estate
arsip
Kantor terdaftar
dana cadangan - cadangan
return on investment (ROI)
pendapatan - pendapatan - pendapatan
pajak pendapatan
pendapatan dan beban
pembulatan ke bawah
pembulatan
menjalankan biaya - biaya operasi
pajak tangguhan
aset yang dapat disusutkan
penyusutan
tunjangan penyusutan - tunjangan modal
dana penyusutan - dana amortisasi
pembukuan rangkap
masuk
tanggal masuk
Pajak ekuitas
pengeluaran - keluar - Beban
pusat biaya
penerimaan biaya
pertemuan luar biasa
akuntansi palsu
anjak palsu
biaya
untuk mengisi kembali PPN
saldo akhir
keuangan
penyewaan keuangan
manajemen keuangan
sumber daya keuangan
laporan keuangan
pembiayaan - dana
produk persediaan jadi
tahun fiskal - tahun keuangan
aktiva tetap (GB) - aset modal (US)
biaya tetap
modal disetor
akuntansi umum
mitra umum
kemitraan umum - kemitraan biasa
Beban goodwill - biaya start-up
marjin kotor
marjin usaha kotor
laba kotor
laba kotor
di hitam
pajak pendapatan
biaya akuntansi industri
Persediaan barang setengah jadi
untuk mendirikan sebuah perusahaan
modal saham (GB) - modal (US)
panggilan pemegang saham
rapat pemegang saham
daftar pemegang saham
materai
perusahaan negara yang dikontrol
laporan rekening - rekening
keseimbangan hukum
saham dan work in progress (GB) - persediaan (US)
modal ditempatkan - modal ditanggung
subsider
anak perusahaan - perusahaan yang dikendalikan
Pajak substitusi
pengambilan alih
pajak
akuntansi pajak
Ketetapan Pajak
pemeriksaan pajak - Pemeriksaan Pajak
basis pajak
kredit pajak
pembebasan pajak - tax allowance
Wajib Pajak
persentase pajak
terdaftar sebagai wajib pajak
SPT - SPT pajak penghasilan
penerimaan pajak
Nilai kena pajak - assessment
perpajakan
pajak dan iuran
keseimbangan sementara
total aktiva lancar
neraca saldo
pajak pertambahan nilai (PPN)
biaya variabel
Kembali PPN - deklarasi PPN
untuk memveto pemotongan pajak
persediaan akhir tahun
Contoh Reading Inggris Bisnis
The Four Financial Statements
Businesses report information in the form of financial statements issued on a periodic basis. GAAP requires the following four financial statements:
Balance Sheet - statement of financial position at a given point in time.Income Statement - revenues minus expenses for a given time period ending at a specified date.Statement of Owner's Equity - also known as Statement of Retained Earnings or Equity Statement.Statement of Cash Flows - summarizes sources and uses of cash; indicates whether enough cash is available to carry on routine operations.
Balance Sheet
The balance sheet is based on the following fundamental accounting model:
Assets = Liabilities + Equity
Assets can be classed as either current assets or fixed assets. Current assets are assets that quickly and easily can be converted into cash, sometimes at a discount to the purchase price. Current assets include cash, accounts receivable, marketable securities, notes receivable, inventory, and prepaid assets such as prepaid insurance. Fixed assets include land, buildings, and equipment. Such assets are recorded at historical cost, which often is much lower than the market value.
Liabilities represent the portion of a firm's assets that are owed to creditors. Liabilities can be classed as short-term liabilities (current) and long-term (non-current) liabilities. Current liabilities include accounts payable, notes payable, interest payable, wages payable, and taxes payable. Long-term liabilities include mortgages payable and bonds payable. The portion of a mortgage long-term bond that is due within the next 12 months is classed as a current liability, and usually is referred to as the current portion of long-term debt. The creditors of a business are the primary claimants, getting paid before the owners should the business cease to exist.
Equity is referred to as owner's equity in a sole proprietorship or a partnership, and stockholders' equity or shareholders' equity in a corporation. The equity owners of a business are residual claimants, having a right to what remains only after the creditors have been paid. For a sole proprietorship or a partnership, the equity would be listed as the owner or owners' names followed by the word "capital". For example:
Sole Proprietorship:
John Doe, Capital
Partnership:
John Doe, Capital
Josephine Smith, Capital
In the case of a corporation, equity would be listed as common stock, preferred stock, and retained earnings.
The balance sheet reports the resources of the entity. It is useful when evaluating the ability of the company to meet its long-term obligations. Comparative balance sheets are the most useful; for example, for the years ending December 31, 2000 and December 31, 2001.
Income Statement
The income statement presents the results of the entity's operations during a period of time, such as one year. The simplest equation to describe income is:
Net Income = Revenue - Expenses
Revenue refers to inflows from the delivery or manufacture of a product or from the rendering of a service. Expenses are outflows incurred to produce revenue.
Income from operations can be separated from other forms of income. In this case, the income can be described by:
Net Income = Revenue - Expenses + Gains - Losses
where gains refer to items such as capital gains, and losses refer to capital losses, losses from natural disasters, etc.
Statement of Owners' Equity (Statement of Retained Earnings)
The equity statement explains the changes in retained earnings. Retained earnings appear on the balance sheet and most commonly are influenced by income and dividends. The Statement of Retained Earnings therefore uses information from the Income Statement and provides information to the Balance Sheet.
The following equation describes the equity statement for a sole proprietorship:
Ending Equity = Beginning Equity + Investments - Withdrawals + Income
For a corporation, substitute "Dividends Paid" for "Withdrawals". The stockholders' equity in a corporation is calculated as follows:
Common Stock (recorded at par value)
+ Premium on Common Stock (issue price minus par value)
+ Preferred Stock (recorded at par value)
+ Premium on Preferred Stock (issue price minus par value)
+ Retained Earnings
----------------------------------------------------------------
= Stockholders' Equity
Note that the premium on the issuance of stock is based on the price at which the corporation actually sold the stock on the market. Afterwards, market trading does not affect this part of the equity calculation. Stockholders' equity does not change when the stock price changes!
Cash Flow Statement
The nature of accrual accounting is such that a company may be profitable but nonetheless experience a shortfall in cash. The statement of cash flows is useful in evaluating a company's ability to pay its bills. For a given period, the cash flow statement provides the following information:
Sources of cashUses of cashChange in cash balance
The cash flow statement represents an analysis of all of the transactions of the business, reporting where the firm obtained its cash and what it did with it. It breaks the sources and uses of cash into the following categories:
Operating activitiesInvesting activitiesFinancing activities
The information used to construct the cash flow statement comes from the beginning and ending balance sheets for the period and from the income statement for the period.
job aplication later
MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING
Management accounting itself is the unification of the management section covers, presentation and interpretation of the information used for strategy formulation, activity planning and control, decision making, optimizing resource use, disclosure to the owners and outsiders, disclosure to workers, safeguarding assets.
the general objectives of management accounting systems are:
Provide the information needed for the calculation of the cost of services, products, and othe objects of interest managementProvide information needed for planning, control, evaluation, and continuous improvementProvide information for decision making.
Management accounting information is divided into three types based on relationship. namely
Full accounting information (Full Accounting Information) for the presentation of information that serves as an example for the full product information, department, activity.Differential accounting information (Differential Accounting Information) shows the comparison so as to produce an alternative or choice.Responsibility accounting information (Responsibility Accounting Information) as the responsibility of the authority such information manager.
Role in Organization and Management Accounting Information for Managers role.
Organization and goal
Organization can be defined as a group of people united together for some common purpose. Common goals that direct labor organization called the organization's objectives. Not all organizations have the same goals, but most organizations have a goal to make a profit. (Ray, H, Garrinson, DBA, Management Accounting 1987)
In addition to target to benefit from the funds that have been invested in the company, organization / company also has another goal which is to acquire and maintain a reputation for integrity, fair, and credible. The company wants to also be a positive force in the social and ecological environment where the company activities.
Differences between management accounting and financial accounting are:
Management accounting is the process of identifying, drafting, interpretation and delivery of information to help managers in the organization.
While financial accounting refers to the preparation of accounting information to be used by external parties such as shareholders and creditors.
management accounting
MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING
Management accounting itself is the unification of the management section covers, presentation and interpretation of the information used for strategy formulation, activity planning and control, decision making, optimizing resource use, disclosure to the owners and outsiders, disclosure to workers, safeguarding assets.
the general objectives of management accounting systems are:
Provide the information needed for the calculation of the cost of services, products, and othe objects of interest managementProvide information needed for planning, control, evaluation, and continuous improvementProvide information for decision making.
Management accounting information is divided into three types based on relationship. namely
Full accounting information (Full Accounting Information) for the presentation of information that serves as an example for the full product information, department, activity.Differential accounting information (Differential Accounting Information) shows the comparison so as to produce an alternative or choice.Responsibility accounting information (Responsibility Accounting Information) as the responsibility of the authority such information manager.
Role in Organization and Management Accounting Information for Managers role.
Organization and goal
Organization can be defined as a group of people united together for some common purpose. Common goals that direct labor organization called the organization's objectives. Not all organizations have the same goals, but most organizations have a goal to make a profit. (Ray, H, Garrinson, DBA, Management Accounting 1987)
In addition to target to benefit from the funds that have been invested in the company, organization / company also has another goal which is to acquire and maintain a reputation for integrity, fair, and credible. The company wants to also be a positive force in the social and ecological environment where the company activities.
Differences between management accounting and financial accounting are:
Management accounting is the process of identifying, drafting, interpretation and delivery of information to help managers in the organization.
While financial accounting refers to the preparation of accounting information to be used by external parties such as shareholders and creditors.
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