Accounting Principles
Accounting Assumptions
Accounting Constraints
GAAP
100

Requires assets to be recorded at cost.

What is the Historical Cost Principle?

100

An accounting term indicating ongoing business operations.

What is Going Concern?

100

These are the two accounting constraints.

What are the Materiality Constraint and the Cost-Benefit Constraint?

100

This is abbreviated to GAAP.

What are Generally Accepted Accounting Principles?

200

This principle requires a statement for subsequent events.

What is the Full Disclosure Principle?

200

Commingling of funds violates this assumption.

What is The Business Entity Assumption?

200

States disclosures are only necessary if the benefits outweigh the costs.

What is the Cost-Benefit Constraint?
200
This governing body created and maintains the GAAP rules.
What is FASB (Financial Accounting Standards Board)?
300

Income is accounted for by the quantity of cash received and value of other assets obtained through sale of goods.

What is the Revenue Recognition Principle?

300

Quarterly and annual statements are examples of this assumption.

What is The Time Period Assumption?

300

Although subjective, accountants adhere to rules to determine if this type of person would find information material.

What is a Reasonable Person?

300

GAAP helps to identify this type of income.

What is Sustainable Income?

400

This principle requires expenses to be recorded in the same period as related revenues.

What is the Matching Principle?

400

This assumption requires statements to use a consistent currency in statement presentation

What is The Monetary Assumption?

400
This requires businesses to record only information that may influence 3rd party decisions.

What is the Materiality Constraint?

400

Three factors that are the primary purpose and benefit of GAAP.

What is Consistency, Transparency, and Comparability?