The core of GAAP revolves around a list of ten principles. Together, these principles are meant to clearly define, standardize and regulate the reporting of a company’s financial information and to prevent tampering of data or unethical practices.
1. Principle of Regularity
GAAP must always be followed by accountants and businesses when handling financial information. At no point can a company or financial team choose to ignore or modify any of the regulations.
2. Principle of Consistency
Accountants are responsible for using the same standards and practices for all accounting periods. If a method or practice is changed, or if you hire a new accountant with a different system, the change must be fully documented and justified in the footnotes of the financial statements. This principle ensures that any company’s internal financial documentation is consistent over time.
3. Principle of Sincerity
This principle states that any accountant or accounting team hired by a company is obligated to provide the most unbiased, accurate financial report possible. Although a business may be in a bad financial situation, one that may even compromise its future, the accountant may only report on the situation as it is.
4. Principle of Permanence of Methods
This principle requires accountants to use the same reporting method procedures across all the financial statements prepared. Though it is similar to the second principle, it narrows in specifically on financial reports—ensuring any report prepared by one company can be easily compared to one another.
5. Principle of Non-Compensation
All negative and positive values on a financial statement, regardless of how they reflect upon the company, must be clearly reported by the accounting team. Accountants cannot try to make things look better by compensating a debt with an asset or an expense with revenue.
6. Principle of Prudence
Formally reported data must be fact-based and dependent on clear, concrete numbers. It’s easy to start wandering into speculation when you talk about finance—especially when thinking about the future of the company—and this principle makes sure to keep accountants firmly grounded in reality. Businesses can still engage in speculation and forecasting, of course, but they cannot add this information to formal financial statements.
7. Principle of Continuity
When compiling reports, accountants must assume a business will continue to operate. The principle applies regardless of the status of the company.
8. Principle of Periodicity
Essentially, this principle requires accountants to report financial information only in the relevant accounting period. For example, if an accounting team is compiling a report on the revenue earned within a quarter, the report must focus only on that exact period. This is intended to prevent any possibility of fudging numbers or data across time—e.g., if a company earns more one quarter than the next, the accountant must truthfully represent this fact instead of changing the period dates or altering the data to hide or reduce the difference.
9. Principle of Materiality
Accountants must, to the best of their abilities, fully and clearly disclose all the available financial data of the company. They are obligated to acquire this information from the business, which is why an accounting team’s requests may seem intensely thorough when requesting financial information.
10. Principle of Utmost Good Faith
Any person or party involved in, or responsible for, the financial side of a business must be honest in all reports and transactions. Along with several other principles, this serves to maintain an ethical standard and responsibility in all financial dealings.
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