Accounting : what the numbers mean
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Accounting : what the numbers mean
McGraw-Hill Irwin, c2014
10th ed
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Accounting has become known as the language of business. This new edition is written to meet the needs of those students who will not be accountants but who do need to understand accounting to learn the key language that embarks us in the business world. Marshall, the leading text in the Survey market, takes readers through the basics: what accounting information is, what it means, and how it is used. The authors help students succeed through clear and concise writing, a conceptual focus and unparalleled technology support. In using this text, students examine financial statements and discover what they do and do not communicate. This enables them to gain the crucial decision-making and problem-solving skills they need in order to succeed in a professional environment.
Table of Contents
1.Accounting–Present and PastPart 1 Financial Accounting2.Financial Statements and Accounting Concepts/Principles3.Fundamental Interpretations Made From Financial Statement Data4.The Bookkeeping Process and Transaction Analysis5.Accounting for and Presentation of Current Assets6.Accounting for and Presentation of Property, Plant and Equipment,and other Noncurrent Assets7.Accounting for and Presentation of Liabilities8.Accounting for and Presentation of Stockholders' Equity9.The Income Statement and the Statement of Cash Flows10.Corporate Governance, Notes to the Financial Statements and Other Disclosures11.Financial Statement AnalysisPart 2 Managerial Accounting12.Managerial Accounting and Cost–Volume–Profit Analysis13.Cost Accounting and Reporting14.Cost Planning15.Cost Control16.Costs for Decision MakingEpilogue: Accounting–The FutureAppendix: Excerpts from 2008 Campbell Soup Company Annual Report
by "Nielsen BookData"