The purpose of accounting is to accumulate and report on financial information about the performance, financial position, and cash flows of a business. This information is then used to reach decisions about how to manage the business, or invest in it, or lend money to it.
This information is accumulated in accounting records with accounting transactions, which are recorded either through such standardized business transactions as customer invoicing or supplier invoices, or through more specialized transactions, known as journal entries.
Once this financial information has been stored in the accounting records, it is usually compiled into financial statements, which include the following documents:
- Income statement
- Balance sheet
- Statement of cash flows
- Statement of retained earnings
- Disclosures that accompany the financial statements
The accountant may generate additional reports for special
purposes, such as determining the profit on sale of a product, or the revenues
generated from a particular sales region. These are usually considered to be
managerial reports, rather than the financial reports issued to outsiders.
Thus, the purpose of accounting centers on the collection and subsequent reporting of financial information.