Chapter 1: Fundamental Principles and the Accounting Equation#
Accounting is often called the language of business, and like any language, it rests on a few simple building blocks. This chapter introduces the most important of those blocks — the accounting equation — and the core ideas that make financial information trustworthy and useful.
The Big Picture#
Every business, from a corner shop to a large company, can be described by a single relationship: what it owns, what it owes, and what is left for its owners. That relationship is the accounting equation. But numbers alone are not enough — we need a shared set of ground rules to decide when and how to measure those items. In this chapter we will explore the equation itself and the key concepts that guide accountants in painting a faithful picture of a business’s financial health.
The Accounting Equation: The Financial DNA of a Business#
The accounting equation is the foundation of all financial accounting. It states that at any moment, a business’s resources come from two sources: outside parties and the owners themselves.
Accounting equation:
Let’s unpack the three pieces in plain English.
Assets: Things the business owns or controls that will bring in money or value in the future. Think cash, stock, equipment, or money customers owe.
Liabilities: Debts the business must pay. Money owed to suppliers, bank loans, taxes due.
Capital (Owner’s equity): What’s left for the owner after all debts are paid. If the business sold everything and paid off what it owes, the remainder is capital.
The equation shows that every penny of assets is financed either by borrowing (liabilities) or by the owners (capital). It must always balance — that is why it is called an equation.
Imagine you start a coffee cart with £500 of your own savings. The business now has an asset (cash of £500) and capital of £500.
If the business then borrows £200 from a friend, assets rise to £700 (cash), liabilities become £200, and capital stays at £500. The equation holds:
Every transaction changes at least two items in the equation, but the equality never breaks. This double effect is the heartbeat of double-entry bookkeeping, which we will see in action later. For now, the key takeaway is that the accounting equation is a snapshot of a business’s financial position — a simple, powerful tool that tells you where the money came from and where it is right now.
📝 Section Recap: The accounting equation
shows that everything a business owns is funded by borrowing or by the owner. It always balances and forms the backbone of financial reporting.
The Going Concern Assumption#
When we look at a business’s assets, we normally value them on the assumption that the business will keep running for the foreseeable future. This is the going concern assumption.
Why does it matter? If we thought a business was about to close down, we would have to value its assets at what they could be sold for in a hurry — often a much lower figure. For example, a specialised machine might be worth a lot to a company that uses it daily, but if the business shuts down, that machine might fetch only scrap value. Under the going concern assumption, we keep the asset at its cost (less depreciation) because we expect to keep using it to generate revenue.
Without this assumption, financial statements would look very different and would not reflect the business’s ongoing ability to create value. It is the default lens through which we prepare accounts, unless there is clear evidence that the business is in serious trouble.
📝 Section Recap: The going concern assumption means we prepare accounts expecting the business to continue operating. This allows us to value assets based on their ongoing usefulness rather than a forced-sale price.
The Accruals Concept#
Cash is easy to see, but business activity does not always line up neatly with cash movements. The accruals concept (also called the matching principle) says we should record revenue when it is earned and expenses when they happen — not when cash changes hands.
Suppose you run a web design firm. In December you complete a £3,000 project for a client but agree they can pay in January. Under the accruals concept, the £3,000 of revenue belongs in December’s accounts, because that is when you did the work and earned the income. Similarly, if you received an electricity bill for December usage but pay it in January, the expense is recorded in December.
This concept ensures that the profit for a period reflects all the resources consumed and all the value created during that period, regardless of cash timing. It gives a truer picture of performance than a simple cash-in, cash-out diary.
📝 Section Recap: The accruals concept records revenue and expenses when they are earned or happen, not when cash is received or paid. This matches economic activity to the correct period and gives a more accurate view of profit.
The Prudence Concept#
Accounting is not about wild optimism; it is about being sensibly cautious. The prudence concept means we should not overstate assets or income, and we should not understate liabilities or expenses. In practice, this means we recognise potential losses as soon as they become probable, but we only recognise gains when they actually happen.
For example, if you hold inventory that has become damaged and can only be sold for less than it cost, you must write down its value immediately — even if you haven’t sold it yet. That is an impairment loss. Likewise, if a customer is unlikely to pay what they owe, you set aside an amount for debts that might not be paid, which lowers the asset (money owed by customers) and records an expense.
On the other hand, if the market value of a building you own goes up, you do not record that gain in the accounts until you actually sell the building. That gain is unrealised, and prudence tells us to wait.
Prudence injects a dose of realism into the numbers, protecting users of financial statements from being misled by overly rosy pictures.
📝 Section Recap: The prudence concept requires a cautious approach: recognise losses early, but only book gains when they are certain. This prevents assets and profits from being overstated.
The Consistency Concept#
Imagine trying to compare a company’s performance this year with last year, only to find that the company switched its method of calculating depreciation halfway through. The numbers would be scrambled. The consistency concept says that once a business chooses an accounting policy, it should stick with it from one period to the next, unless there is a very good reason to change.
Consistency allows users of financial statements to spot real trends. If a policy does need to change — perhaps a new standard requires it — the change must be clearly explained, and often the previous year’s figures are adjusted so that comparisons remain meaningful.
This concept does not mean a business can never change its methods; it simply means changes should not be made lightly or without explanation. It is about keeping the measuring stick the same so that you can trust the comparisons you make.
📝 Section Recap: The consistency concept requires applying the same accounting policies over time, making financial statements comparable across periods. Any change must be explained and justified.
The Materiality Concept#
Not every penny needs to be tracked with the same level of strictness. The materiality concept says that information is material — and should be properly disclosed — if leaving it out or getting it wrong could change someone’s decision. Small, insignificant items can be handled in a simpler way.
For instance, buying a £15 stapler is technically the purchase of a long-lived asset that could be depreciated over several years. But the cost is so tiny that expensing it immediately does not distort the financial statements. The treatment is not strictly correct by the letter of the rules, but it is acceptable because the amount is too small to matter.
Materiality depends on both the size and the nature of an item. A £1,000 error might be immaterial for a large corporation but very material for a small café. Similarly, even a small amount might be material if it relates to an illegal payment. Applying materiality keeps accounting practical and stops us from drowning in unnecessary detail.
📝 Section Recap: The materiality concept allows us to ignore strict rules for trivial items that would not affect a reader’s decisions. It helps focus attention on what really matters.
Substance Over Form#
Sometimes a transaction’s legal paperwork tells one story, but its economic reality tells another. The principle of substance over form says we should account for transactions according to their true economic substance, not merely their legal form.
A classic example is a lease. Legally, a company might sign a contract to rent a piece of machinery for five years, with the rental payments covering almost the entire value of the machine. In economic substance, the company effectively owns the machine — it has the risks and rewards of ownership. Following substance over form, the company would record the machine as an asset and the future lease payments as a liability, even though the legal title may not transfer until the end (or ever).
This principle prevents businesses from dressing up transactions to hide debt or inflate profits. It ensures the financial statements reflect what is really happening, not just what the contracts say.
📝 Section Recap: Substance over form means we look at the economic reality of a transaction, not just its legal shape. This stops companies from hiding the true nature of their deals.
Objective vs Subjective Valuations#
When you look at a set of financial statements, some numbers are rock-solid facts, while others are the accountant’s best judgement. This distinction is captured by the ideas of objective and subjective valuations.
Objective valuations are based on hard evidence. The amount of cash in the bank is objective — you can point to a bank statement. The cost of a vehicle you just bought is objective because you have an invoice.
Subjective valuations involve estimates and judgement. Deciding how many years a machine will last (its useful life for depreciation) is subjective. Estimating how much of your receivables will never be collected is subjective. Even inventory valuation can involve judgement about items becoming outdated or unsellable.
Both types of valuation are necessary. Financial accounting is not a pure science — it is a blend of facts and reasoned estimates. The key is that subjective estimates should be based on the best available information and applied consistently and prudently. When estimates are used, the notes to the financial statements often explain the assumptions, so readers can understand the degree of uncertainty.
📝 Section Recap: Objective valuations rely on hard evidence like invoices and bank statements, while subjective valuations involve judgement and estimates. Both are essential, and the principles of prudence and consistency guide how estimates are made.
Summary#
We have covered the bedrock of financial accounting: the accounting equation that keeps every business in balance, and the set of guiding concepts that ensure the numbers are reliable, comparable, and honest. Think of the equation as the skeleton, and the principles as the muscles and nerves that give it life — they tell us when to recognise a sale, how to value an asset, and what to disclose. With these tools, you can begin to read and understand the financial story any business is telling.
| Key idea | What it means (plain English) | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Accounting equation | It is the foundation of all financial records; every transaction must keep this equation in balance. | |
| Going concern | We assume the business will keep running unless there is strong evidence otherwise. | It lets us value assets based on their ongoing usefulness rather than a forced-sale price. |
| Accruals concept | Record revenue when earned and expenses when they happen, not when cash moves. | It gives a true picture of profit for a period, matching effort and reward correctly. |
| Prudence concept | Be cautious: recognise losses early, but only book gains once they are certain. | It prevents overstating assets and profits, protecting users from misleading optimism. |
| Consistency concept | Stick with the same accounting policies year after year, or explain any change. | It makes financial statements comparable over time, so trends can be trusted. |
| Materiality concept | Only worry about strict rules for items that are big enough to influence decisions. | It keeps accounting practical and avoids drowning in trivial details. |
| Substance over form | Account for the economic reality of a deal, not just its legal paperwork. | It stops companies from hiding debt or inflating profits through clever contract wording. |
| Objective vs subjective valuations | Some numbers are hard facts (objective); others are best estimates (subjective). | It reminds us that financial statements mix evidence and judgement, so we must apply principles carefully. |