Financial Accounting is the branch of accounting focused on preparing, presenting, and communicating an organization’s financial performance and position to external stakeholders. It provides standardized reports—such as the income statement, balance sheet, and statement of cash flows—so that investors, creditors, regulators, and the public can make informed decisions. Its purpose is accountability and transparency.


Core Functions

  1. Recording Transactions
    • Using double-entry bookkeeping to capture all business activity.
    • Maintaining ledgers and journals.
  2. Preparing Financial Statements
  3. Compliance with Standards
    • Governed by GAAP (in the U.S.) or IFRS (internationally).
    • Ensures comparability and reliability across firms and industries.
  4. Disclosure and Reporting
    • Notes and supplementary information explaining accounting methods, risks, and commitments.
    • Required by regulators (e.g., SEC in the U.S.).
  5. Audit and Assurance
    • External auditors verify that financial statements present a true and fair view.
    • Builds trust in reported results.

Key Principles


Stakeholders Served


Role in Knowledge

As part of Accounting, financial accounting provides:


Distinction


In the Logos Framework

Financial Accounting embodies Structure and Value:

It is the science of accountability: dividing raw activity into standardized statements that reveal the financial reality of organizations.