AFM Assignment 2 (October 2011)
Contributors:
- Introduction part:
Parminder Kaur
1st Sem, MBA (B)
MB – 98
- Discussion part:
Saksham Duggal
MBA 1-C
MB-163
- Conclusion part:
Jyotin David
1st Sem, MBA (A)
MB - 39
Topic: Difference between Financial and Managerial Accounting
We have divided the assignment into three parts:
- Introduction
- Discussion
- Conclusion
Introduction
Management accounting is a field of accounting that analyzes and provides cost information to the internal management for the purposes of planning, controlling and decision-making.
CIMA (Chartered Institute of Management Accountants) defines Management accounting as “Management Accounting is the process of identification, measurement, accumulation, analysis, preparation, interpretation, and communication of information that used by management to plan, evaluate, and control within an entity and to assure appropriate use of an accountability for its resources”.
Financial accounting is concerned with providing information to stockholders, creditors, and others who are outside an organization. Managerial accounting provides the essential data with which organizations are actually run. Financial accounting provides the scorecard by which a company’s past performance is judged.
Discussion
Now, let us discuss both Management as well as financial accounting and compare them:
Even though both financial and managerial accounting often rely on the same underlying financial data. In addition to the to the differences in who the reports are prepared for, financial and managerial accounting also differ in their emphasis between the past and the future, in the type of data provided to users, and in several other ways. These differences are discussed as follows:
Emphasis on the Future:
Since planning is such an important part of the manager's job, managerial accounting has a strong future orientation. In contrast, financial accounting primarily provides summaries of past financial transactions. These summaries may be useful in planning, but only to a point. The future is not simply a reflection of what has happened in the past. Changes are constantly taking place in economic conditions, and so on. All of these changes demand that the manager's planning be based in large part on estimates of what will happen rather than on summaries of what has already happened.
Relevance of Data:
Financial accounting data are expected to be objective and verifiable. However, for internal use the manager wants information that is relevant even if it is not completely objective or verifiable. By relevant, we mean appropriate for the problem at hand. For example, it is difficult to verify estimated sales volumes for a proposed new store at good Vibrations, Inc., but this is exactly the type of information that is most useful to managers in their decision-making. The managerial accounting information system should be flexible enough to provide whatever data are relevant for a particular decision.
Less Emphasis on Precision:
Timeliness is often more important than precision to managers. If a decision must be made, a manager would rather have a good estimate now than wait a week for a more precise answer. A decision involving tens of millions of dollars does not have to be based on estimates that are precise down to the penny, or even to the dollar. In fact, one authoritative source recommends that, "as a general rule, no one need more than three significant digits. This means, for example, that if a company's sales are in the hundreds of millions of dollars, than nothing on an income statement needs to be more accurate than the nearest million dollars. Estimates that accurate to the nearest million dollars may be precise enough to make a good decision. Since precision is costly in terms of both time and resources, managerial accounting places less emphasis on precision than does financial accounting. In addition, managerial accounting places considerable weight on no monitory data, for example, information about customer satisfaction is tremendous importance even though it would be difficult to express such data in monitory form.
Segments of an Organization:
Financial accounting is primarily concerned with reporting for the company as a whole. By contrast, managerial accounting forces much more on the parts, or segments, of a company. These segments may be product lines, sales territories divisions, departments, or any other categorizations of the company's activities that management finds useful. Financial accounting does require breakdowns of revenues and cost by major segments in external reports, but this is secondary emphasis. In managerial accounting, segment reporting is the primary emphasis.
Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP):
Financial accounting statements prepared for external users must be prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP). External users must have some assurance that the reports have been prepared in accordance with some common set of ground rules. These common ground rules enhance comparability and help reduce fraud and misrepresentations, but they do not necessarily lead to the type of reports that would be most useful in internal decision-making. For example, GAAP requires that land be stated at its historical cost on financial reports. However if, management is considering moving a store to a new location and then selling the land the store currently sits on, management would like to know the current market value of the land, a vital piece of information that is ignored under generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP).
Managerial Accounting - Not Mandatory:
Financial accounting is mandatory; that is, it must be done. Various out side parties such as Securities and exchange commission (SEC) and the tax authorities require periodic financial statements. Managerial accounting, on the other hand, is not mandatory. A company is completely free to do as much or as little as it wishes. No regularity bodies or other outside agencies specify what is to be done.
Above we have compared the two forms of accounting in brief , now let us come on to a conclusion.
Conclusion
- The differences between financial and management accounting are not merely academic. These distinctions are significant to management and accountants. Information is produced to satisfy the needs of its internal and external users of an entity, and the two branches of accounting consider this.
- Managerial accounting is concerned with providing information to managers i.e. people inside an organization who direct and control its operations. In contrast, financial accounting is concerned with providing information to stockholders, creditors, and others who are outside an organization. Managerial accounting provides the essential data with which organizations are actually run. Financial accounting provides the scorecard by which a company’s past performance is judged.
References :
http://www.accountingcoach.com/online-accounting-course/financial-accounting.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Financial_accountancy
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Differences_between_managerial_accounting_and_financial_accounting
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