Learning outcomes / skills:
To
extent knowledge in Management Accounting and Financial Reporting, IFRS:
“The
age of free trade and the interdependence of national economies is now with us.
Many of the largest companies in the world often do more of their business in
foreign lands than in their home country. Companies now access not only their
home capital markets for financing but others as well. As this globalization
takes place, companies are recognizing the need to have one set of financial
reporting standards.” Kieso (Accounting 2014) S. 2, pls. see literature
The
basic concepts of IFRS shall be part of this course.
The
course should also help students to find a more elaborate access to cost
accounting in order to fulfill requirements being asked for in a commercial
management position. Beside the traditional methods of cost accounting, the
students will get familiar with the concepts of Activity based costing, Target
Costing and capital investment decisions, planning and budgetary control
systems as well as the concept of performance measurement.
On the
basis of an integrated financial model, which the students will design and
build themselves, they will intensify their understanding regarding the
connection between income and balance sheet and the cash flow statement.
Furthermore will the students be introduced to the requirements a reporting
system asks for in order to be able to develop an adequate controlling system.
Contents:
IFRS (International
Financial Reporting Standards)
Financial Reporting and
Accounting Standards
Conceptual Framework
for Financial Reporting
The Accounting
Information System
Income Statement and
Related Information
Statement of Financial
Position and Statement of Cash Flows
Accounting and the Time
Value of Money
Accountants’ role in an
organization
Cost Terms and purposes
Cost Allocation
Process costing system
– Activity based costing
Target Costing
Capital investment
decisions
Planning budgetary
control systems
Performance measurement
Deployed
methods of business administration:
·
Models and Methods of analytics (research- and
analytic models):
o
Process models (e. g. procedure of due diligence)
o
Component models (e. g. time series analyses for key
figures development)
o
Normative decision theory
(e. g. assessment of the impacts of individual forms of financing)
o
Qualitative optimization
models
o
Quantitative optimization
models
o
Forecasting models (budget
figures)
o
Models of interaction
(communication)
·
Quantitative-empirical methods (comparative –
statistic, mathematic methods, data analyses):
o
Key figures on the financial situation (such as
liquidity, inventory turnover period), the income situation (e. g. return on
investment, interest expense ratio), the financial position (e. g. cash flow
figures, days payables outstanding); in this context, working with primary data
and secondary data
o
Quantitative comparative analyses (e. g. statistical
references from Standard & Poor’s)
o
Statistical analyses (e. g. medians of key figures in
rating classes)
·
Qualitative-interpretative methods (expert interview, surveys, standardized
inquiry):
o
Qualitative company analyses (branch, organizational
structure, management, business relationships, payment behavior)
o
Descriptive decision theory
o
Prescriptive decision theory
o
It is possible to conduct expert interviews as part of
the project work
Methods of Teaching and Learning:
·
Lectures
and discussions: Theory and Reality
·
Case
studies and group work
·
Self-controlled
learning
·
Special
guests lectures (N.N.)
·
Seminar
paper
Literature:
·
A.
Bhimani, C. Horngren, S. Datar; Management and Cost Accounting, Prentice Hall
International, 2011
·
Kieso,
Donald E., Weygandt, Jerry J., Warfield, Terry D.; Intermediate Accounting,
IFRS Edition, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2nd Edition, 2014
·
More
literature at the beginning of the course