Accounting Principles (Cambridge (CIE) O Level Accounting)

Revision Note

Donna Simpson

Written by: Donna Simpson

Reviewed by: Dan Finlay

Accounting Principles

What are accounting principles?

  • These are the rules, principles and guidelines used when preparing the financial statements of a business

  • These are used by all accountants internationally

  • Accountants must comply with these principles so that:

    • Financial statements can be accurately compared with those of similar businesses

    • The owner(s) of a business can compare the year-by-year performance of the business

  • The ten accounting principles are:

    • Business entity

    • Money measurement

    • Going concern

    • Historic cost

    • Materiality

    • Duality

    • Consistency

    • Matching

    • Realisation

    • Prudence

What is the business entity principle?

Definition

Financial statements only record and report on business activities

Applications

  • The records relate to the activities of one specific business

  • These records and reports must not include any personal assets, expenses and liabilities of the owner

  • Personal activities must be kept separate from the business

  • Assets invested into the business by the owner are recorded in the  capital account

  • Assets withdrawn from the business by the owner are recorded in the  drawings account

What is the money measurement principle?

Definition

Financial statements only contain information about the transactions involving money

Applications

  • Non-monetary information is not reported on the financial statements

  • Information such as experience of the staff and employee satisfaction are not included in the statements

What is the going concern principle?

Definition

The assumption that a business will continue to operate into the foreseeable future by undertaking its current trading activities

Applications

  • The business will not cease to operate in the near future 

  • The business will not liquidate its non-current assets

  • Assets are recorded at their net book value or cost and not their market value

  • The business will continue to maintain a set of accounting records yearly

What is the historic cost principle?

Definition

Assets and liabilities are valued at the cost of the original transaction and kept as such on the financial statements

Applications

  • The market value of an asset is not entered on the financial statement

  • It can be difficult to maintain non-current assets at their original cost

    • The net book value is adjusted for depreciation to present a more realistic view of the value

    • The cost of a non-current asset is recorded and kept separate from the provision for depreciation

What is the materiality principle?

Definition

Transactions which have a low monetary value can be grouped rather than entered into separate accounts

Applications

  • Small expense items such as window cleaning  may be grouped as sundry expenses

  • Non-current assets which are low cost such as staplers and calculators are treated as expenses on the income statement and not recorded as capital expenditure

    • Unused stationery at the end of the financial  year such as paper clips and photocopying paper should be included with the rest of the stationery as an expense on the income statement (instead of recording it as an asset)

What is the duality principle?

Definition

Each transaction is recorded using two accounting entries of opposite and equal values

Applications

  • Each transaction has a debit and a credit entry

  • The double entry system adheres to duality

What is the consistency principle?

Definition

When a business chooses a method for a particular item, it should continue to use that method each year

Applications

  • The method of depreciation used for a particular type of non-current asset should be used for that type each year

  • The method for deciding on a provision for doubtful debts should be used each year

  • The method for the valuation of inventory should be the same each year

  • The method can be changed if there is a good reason

    • But this decision and its impact needs to be recorded

What is the matching principle?

Definition

Incomes and expenses must be matched to the year to which they relate or in which the benefit is gained

Applications

  • Incomes and expenses must be adjusted on the income statement for accruals and prepayments to match the year in which the  benefit was gained

  • Non-current assets are depreciated and the yearly depreciation is charged as an expense to match the cost to the year of its useful life

  • A provision for doubtful debts is used to reduce the profit by an amount that is unlikely ever to be received

What is the realisation principle?

Definition

Business transactions are only recorded in the financial statements when a payment is made or the ownership has been transferred

Applications

  • A sale is included in the calculation of business profit only when a payment is made or there is a promise to pay

    • Such as agreed credit

  • The sale and purchases of goods are recorded when the goods are exchanged

What is the prudence principle?

Definition

A business should not overstate its profit or its net assets

Applications

  • A provision for doubtful debts is used to account for the debts that are unlikely to be paid

  • Inventory is valued at the lower value between the cost and the net realisable value

  • Non-current assets are depreciated to give a realistic net book value

  • Irrecoverable debts are written off if it is unlikely that the business will be able to retrieve the money

Examiner Tips and Tricks

You need to remember all ten accounting principles. Try to make a fun sentence to help you remember them.

"A business whose entity was called Prudence sold dual materials and measured its money consistently. It was a going concern that the historic cost did not match the realised cost."

Worked Example

Charity is a sole trader who applies all the accounting principles when maintaining her accounting records.

Name the accounting principle applied by Charity in each of the following situations.

Accounting principle

Charity goes on holiday with her family. She does not enter the costs into her business accounts.

A customer phones up Charity and asks her to reserve some goods for them to collect the following week. Charity does not record this as a sale.

Charity received a bad review from a customer. She did not enter this into her accounting records.

Charity has not paid her rent however she still enters the amount in her income statement.

Answer

Accounting principle

Charity goes on holiday with her family. She does not enter the costs into her business accounts.

Business entity

A customer phones up Charity and asks her to reserve some goods for them to collect the following week. Charity does not record this as a sale.

Realisation

Charity received a bad review from a customer. She did not enter this into her accounting records.

Money measurement

Charity has not paid her rent however she still enters the amount in her income statement.

Matching

Last updated:

You've read 0 of your 5 free revision notes this week

Sign up now. It’s free!

Join the 100,000+ Students that ❤️ Save My Exams

the (exam) results speak for themselves:

Did this page help you?

Donna Simpson

Author: Donna Simpson

Expertise: Accounting Content Creator

Donna is a classroom practitioner with over 25 years experience in teaching accounting and business studies at GCSE A-Levels and undergraduate levels, both in the UK and abroad. She currently works for a Multi-Academy Trust (MAT) as a teacher, instructional coach and mentor to other teachers. Donna is also an AQA A Level Accounting examiner as well as the content creator of resources used by all accounting teachers across the Trust. She enjoys designing and creating resources that provides students with deeper understanding of the subject content. Donna has a Bachelor of Science Degree in Business Administration with major in Accounting and Finance (BSc Hons) and ACCA certified to Level 2.

Dan Finlay

Author: Dan Finlay

Expertise: Maths Lead

Dan graduated from the University of Oxford with a First class degree in mathematics. As well as teaching maths for over 8 years, Dan has marked a range of exams for Edexcel, tutored students and taught A Level Accounting. Dan has a keen interest in statistics and probability and their real-life applications.