Features
- Cover Type: Hard Cover with 256 pages
- Published by: Wiley
- Edition: 2nd Edition April 27, 2007
- Written in: English
- ISBN 10 Number: 0471789798
- ISBN 13 Number: 978-0471789796
-
Book Dimensions:
9 x 6.1 x 1 inches
- Weighs: 1 pounds
Product Description
A hands-on guide to the ins and outs of nonprofit accounting
Not-for-Profit Accounting Made Easy, Second Edition equips you with the tools you need to run the financial and accounting operations within your nonprofit organization. Even if you do not have a professional understanding of accounting principles and financial reporting, this handy guide makes it all clear with complex accounting rules explained in terms nonaccountants can easily understand in order to help you better fulfill your managerial and fiduciary duties. Always practical and never overtechnical, this helpful guide conforms to FASB and AICPA standards and:
Discusses federal single audit and its impact on nonprofits
Offers examples of various types of split-interest agreements
Shows you how to read and understand a nonprofit financial statement
Explains financial accounting and reporting standards
Helps you become conversant in the rules and principles of accounting
Updates board members, executive directors, and other senior managers on the accounting basics they should know for day-to-day operations
Features tables, exhibits, and charts that illustrate the content in a simple and easy-to-understand manner
Suitable for fundraising managers and executives-as well as anyone who requirements to read and understand a nonprofit financial statement-this is the ultimate not-an-accountant's guide to nonprofit accounting.
From the Inside Flap
Not-for-Profit
Accounting Made Easy
Second Edition
The world of accounting can be intimidating but there's no way to avoid it-even nonprofit organizations must venture into financialjargon and concepts. Now in a second edition, Not-for-Profit Accounting Made Easy, Second Edition shows you how to read and understand a nonprofit financial statement, while providing you with a basic understanding of the accounting and financial reporting practices of a nonprofit.
Clarifying nonprofit accounting principles and reporting standards in simple terms that are easily understood by those with little or no prior accounting experience, Nonprofit Accounting Made Easy, Second Edition conforms to FASB and AICPA standards and forms and introduces you to:
Basic accounting terminology
Fundamental accounting concepts
Basic financial statements of a nonprofit organization
Accounting for contributions, investments and financial instruments, activities with joint costs, affiliated organizations, and collections
Accounting peculiarities of health care, education, and religious and cultural nonprofits
Accounting for leases
Accounting for pension plans and other employee benefit plans
Simple and practical in approach, this book is helpful not only for nonaccountants with accounting duties but also for people who work with nonprofits in a variety of capacities. Since nonprofit accounting differs in many subtle ways from normal business accounting, this book shows you how to brush up on the idiosyncrasies that separate the two. Management and staff, board members, consultants, donors, and creditors can all benefit from understanding the fundamental principles of nonprofit accounting.
With updated GAAP hierarchy discussions including the PCAOB and its impact on standards setting and applicability to nonprofit organizations, Nonprofit Accounting Made Easy, Second Edition offers a wealth of practical information on putting accounting principles to work for your nonprofit.
Reader Reviews
This review is from: Not-for-Profit Accounting Made Easy (Hardcover)
This book is exactly what I (as a newly-minted board member) needed to help me figure out some of the oddities and kinks in nonprofit financial reports. Information is presented clearly and logically. Only two little problems kept me from awarding five stars. 1. If you have no accounting background at all, you may find it difficult to make sense of some parts of the book. At several points, a general familiarity with accounting concepts and terms is assumed. I had taken an introductory accounting class a few years ago at a community college, and with that background, had no trouble at all with the book. I suspect that if I'd read this book before taking that class, I would have given up in hopeless confusion after the first chapter. Be warned. 2. The book contains examples of financial reports. That's good. Unfortunately, it shows all the dollar amounts as "$XXXX.XX" or similar. That's bad. It would have been much better to construct an example with actual numbers, so the reader could see which numbers flowed where. If you know even a little bit about accounting, and you are involved with the finances of a nonprofit organization (staff, board, major donor), this is a valuable resource.
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