Corporate Accounting – I, II
Keywords:
Corporate Accounting, Shares, Debenture, Premium and Discount, Forfeiture and Reissue, Liability of Underwriters, Redemption, Sale of Investments, Profit Prior to Incorporation, Company’s Final Accounts, Balance Sheet, of Managerial Remuneration, Goodwill and Shares, Internal Reconstruction, Capital Reduction, Human Resource Accounting, Accounting Standard, Financial Reporting Practices, Amalgamation, Absorption and External Reconstruction, Profit and Loss Account, Consolidated Balance Sheet, Liquidating, Payment Liquidator’s RemunerationSynopsis
Corporate Accounting is a subset of accounting that deals with the accounting for businesses. Corporate accounting typically entails the creation of financial statements and cash flow statements. It also includes the analysis and interpretation of the company's financial statements. Accounting, also known as book keeping, is the collection, analysis, classification, validation, interpretation, and presentation of a company's financial data. Accounting activities are carried out by all corporate entities in order to determine their financial standing.
This is where corporate accounting enters the picture. One of the many types of bookkeeping is corporate accounting. As the
name implies, it is typically undertaken by corporate entities to assess their financial status over a specific time period.
The book will be useful for both students and practitioners because it covers the course of B. Com/B.B.A/PGDM/MBA taught in most of the country's leading business schools. The level of discussion, illustrations, and exercises covered in each chapter are appropriate for professional courses such as Chartered Accountancy in India (ICAI) and the Association of Chartered Certified Accountants (ACCA) in the United Kingdom. In addition, the book chapters have been aligned with the course content required by the majority of Indian universities for Commerce/Accountancy courses.