Accounting and The Hospitality Manager
Accounting and The Hospitality Manager
Accounting and The Hospitality Manager
INSTRUCTOR
Learning Objectives:
1. Define accounting and explain its role in business.
2. Have a fair knowledge of the evolution of accounting and fins how it affected accounting
pedagogy, policy and practice.
3. Ascertain the need to adapt Fra Luca Pacioli’s system for the modern times.
4. Discuss the basis of ASEAN 2015 and recognize how it will affect the professionals in the
region.
5. Explain the need for hospitality managers to study accounting.
6. Narrate briefly the development of accountancy in the Philippine and describe the
attributes that makes it a profession including the scope of its practice
7. Summarize the salient features of the Code of Ethics for Professional Accountants.
8. Explain the role of ethics in business.
9. Recount the accounting standard-setting bodies.
10.Identify and discuss the career opportunities open to accounts.
The word account in everyday language is often used as a substitute for an
explanation or a report of certain actions or events. If you are an employee, for
example, you may have to explain to your employer just how you have been
spending your time, or if you are a manager, you may have to report to the
owner on how the business is doing. In order to explain or to report, you, of
course, have to remember what you were doing or what happened. As it is not
always easy to remember, you many need to keep some written record. In
effect, such records can be said to form the basis of a rudimentary
accounting (or reporting) system.
ACCOUNTING—THE LANGUAGE OF BUSINESS
The main purpose of accounting is to provide the information necessary to the organization's
management to enable it to plan and control its business activities. Implicit in this objective is
the idea that accounting is a very important management tool. Accordingly, accounting has
been referred to as "the language of business" because it is the primary means of
communicating business information.
Learning accounting is like learning a new language. If hospitality managers are to effectively
use accounting information, they must acquire an adequate understanding of the accounting
system, including its nature and limitations. Because good decisions require proper analysis of
accounting data, the hospitality manager who lacks training in accounting is unable to identify
all the pertinent elements of the decision-making process, and thus, it is highly doubtful that
he can function as an effective manager.
Definition of Accounting
Accounting is the art of recording, classifying and summarizing in a significant manner and in
terms of money, transactions and events which are, in part at least, of a financial character,
and interpreting the results thereof.
Financial records that he kept for the firm's branch in Salon, Provence, survive
from 1299-1300. Although these records are incomplete, they show enough
detail to be identified as double-entry bookkeeping. These details include the use
of debits and credits and duality of entries. They are the oldest known existing
examples of the double-entry system.
v Amatino Manucci
ü Was the inventor of double-entry bookkeeping. He managed to construct a
comprehensive and fully-articulated set of double-entry records, with a regular
balancing procedure on closure of the General Ledger.
ü He used five books—general ledger, two merchandise ledgers, expenses ledger, and
cash book (with the white ledger as a sixth)—constituted what looks very like a
true double-entry system. In addition, there were at least two subsidiary books.
ü He gave importance to the aspect of financial control. The books were logically
subdivided, with segregation of cash and goods accounts from the main ledger, a
perpetual inventory of each line of agricultural produce and each grade of cloth or
yarn dealt in, and full records of debtors and creditors, expenses, profits, interest
and partners' drawings, as well as the state of account with the head office at
Nimes, and an estimate (15% per annum) of the expected rate of return on capital
employed.
v The Method of Venice
ü Luca Pacioli who was known as the father of accounting born in 1446 in
Sansepolcro where he also received his earlier education known as abbaco
education.
ü The contribution of Luca pacioli in accounting was honored by accountants
around the world who gathered in San Sepulcro an Italian village to pay their
huge tribute to his book published on double-entry accounting. The first
accounting book which was published in 1494 was based on five sections in
his mathematical book title in which he showed ‘Everything about Arithmetic,
Geometry and Proportions’. Until the 16th century, this book written on
accounting served as the only textbook on accounting around the world and
due to this significant contribution, Luca Pacioli, was no doubt the father of
accounting.
v The Method of Venice
ü He did not invent the system but he described the method which was used by
merchants in Venice during the period of Italian Renaissance. The system he
introduced in his book of accounting was mostly the accounting cycle which
is well-known in the modern world of accounting. Luca Pacioli introduced the
use of journals and ledgers in accounting systems and warned that the
accountant must not sleep until the debits are equaled to credits. The ledgers
he introduced were based on assets receivables and inventories, liabilities,
capital, expenditure and income accounts.
ü He presented 36 short written chapters on bookkeeping in which he gave the
necessary instructions in the conduct of business and given the traders
precious information on accounting without any delay as to his assets and
liabilities.
v Industrial Revolution, Corporate Oragnization, Railroads,
United States Steel
v Schmalenbach and the Model Chart of Accounts
ü Eugen schmalenbach (1873-1955) was a german academic and economist. He was born
in Halver, and attended the Leipzig College of Commerce starting in 1898. Schmalenbach
was a professor at theUniversity of Cologne and as a contributor to German language
journals in the subjects of economics, business management and financial accounting.
ü In the early 1920s, professor schmalenbach was frustrated repeatedly with his failure to
compare meaningfully the financial data made available by different companies. This led to a
research on the problem and the publication of his book, The Model Chart of Accounts.
With this book, he laid the foundation for all subsequent developments in uniform
European countries.
ü Schmalenbach claimed that important information could be gained from a firm’s accounts.
The results of one’s firm should show through- flows more usefully than balances. What he
termed “Dynamic Balances” were to be promptly and regularly prepared and presented, so
that external changes and internal efficiencies could be gauged. Inter-firm comparisons
were also to be facilitated.
Imposition of Income Tax and Conflicts with Financial Accounting
ü In the year 10 CE, Xin Dynasty's Emperor Wang Mang instituted an unprecedented tax—the
income tax—at the "rate of 10% of profits, for professionals and skilled labor."
ü To pay for weapons and equipment in preparation for the Napoleonic wars, William Pitt the
Younger of Britain levied an income tax in his budget of December 1798. The 1862 Union
Government established the Bureau of Internal Revenue to assess personal and corporate
income taxes to help finance the Civil War. In 1943, the US Congress passed income tax
withholding as the only way to collect on high tax rates to fund World War II. The
Philippines' Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) was created through the passage of
Reorganization Act No. 1189 dated July 2, 1904. On August 1, 1904, the BIR was formally
organized and made operational under the Secretary of Finance.
ü Financial accounting is conservative and it's about matching efforts and resultS. Tax
accounting, in turn, is about improving the amount and timing of collections. Note that
"taxes are the lifeblood of the government and their prompt and certain availability are an
imperious need (Commissioner vs. Pineda, 21 SCRA 105)." This difference in perspective
produces conflicts.
DEFINITION
Opportunities
ü What are the opportunities? Ten member states with an 2013 population of 625
million. ASEAN is characterized by rising incomes, young population, with combined
gross domestic product (GDP) at current prices of US$2,399 billion or a GDP per
capita at current prices of US$3,839 and GDP growth rate of 5.1.
Four Pillars of ASEAN Economic Community
ü The ASEAN Community is comprised of three pillars, namely: the ASEAN Political-Security
Community, ASEAN Economic Community and ASEAN Socio-Cultural Community.
ü In turn, the ASEAN Economic Community (AEC is the blueprint) has four pillars. They are
as follows: Single market and production base (measures to ensure the free flow of
goods, services, investment, capital, skilled labor, priority integration sectors), competitive
economic region (actions on competition policy, consumer protection, intellectual
property rights, infrastructure development, taxation, e-commerce), equitable economic
development (SME development, initiative for ASEAN integration) and integration into
the global economy (coherent approach towards external economic relations, enhanced
participation in global supply networks).
ü What are the priority integration sectors? Goods (agro-based goods, automotive
products, electronics/electrical, fisheries, rubber-based goods, textiles/clothing and
wood-based products). Services (air transport, e-ASEAN, health care services, logistic,
tourism)
ASEAN Framework Agreement on Services