FOUNDATIONS OF ACCOUNTING
| Institution | TVET |
| Course | Diploma in Social Wo... |
| Year | 1st Year |
| Semester | Unknown |
| Posted By | stephen |
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| Pages | 58 Pages |
| File Size | 1.07 MB |
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Description
Definition Accounting is defined as the process of identifying, measuring and
reporting economic information to the users of this information to permit informed
judgment
Many businesses carry out transactions. Some of these transactions have a financial
implication i.e. either cash is received or paid out. Examples of these transactions
include selling goods, buying goods, paying employees and so many others.
Accounting is involved with identifying these transactions measuring (attaching a
value) and reporting on these transactions. If a firm employs a new staff member then
this may not be an accounting transaction. However when the firm pays the employee
salary, then this is related to accounting as cash involved. This has an economic
impact on the organization and will be recorded for accounting purposes. A process is
put in place to collect and record this information; it is then classified and
summarized so that it can be reported to the interested parties.
The main purpose of Accounting is to provide financial information about an
economic entity. It provides a means where the steward reports to the owner how the
funds entrusted to him are used to enhance the wealth of the business.
Business Transaction is an event which involves the transfer of money or money‘s
worth of financial events. The following summarises the business transaction that a
firm might have:
Acquisition of assets from owners and other creditors
Investing resources in assets to produce goods or services
Using resources to produce goods and services
Selling goods or services of the firm
Paying those to whom money is owned
Returning assets to owners
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Substitution and Elimination Electron Flow Pathway
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Path Limitations
There are three requirements for the S N 2 reaction.
In order to be pushed out, the leaving group must be at least fair, usually good. The nucleophile also must be reactive enough to push out the leaving group.
Finally, the back side of the tetrahedral carbon attacked must be
accessible to the nucleophile and not blocked by other groups.
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The SN2 reaction
The hydroxide ion is a good nucleophile since the oxygen atom has a negative charge and a pair of unshared electrons.
The carbon atom is electrophilic since it is bound to a (more electronegative)
halogen, which pulls electron density away from the carbon, thus polarizing the
bond with carbon bearing partial positive charge and the halogen bearing partial negative charge.
The nucleophile is attracted to the electrophile by electrostatic charges.
The nucleophile attacks the electrophilic carbon through donation of 2 electrons. Carbon can only have a maximum of 8 valence electrons, so as the carbon nucleophile bond is forming, then the carbon-leaving group bond must be breaking. Iodide is the leaving group since it leaves with the pair of electrons that once bound it to carbon.
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This module unit is intended to impart in trainees cooking skills and attitudes required
for professional cookery. It gives the trainees a broad knowledge of raw food
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XEA 406: Poverty and Development
Economic Growth
Economic growth and economic development are generally not one and the same thing but most
people use the terms interchangeably.
What is economic growth and how is it different from economic development?
Economic growth means increase in per capita income or sustained increase in a country's output
of goods and services.
Kenya’s Growth Performance
Kenya’s economic growth has followed an oscillating pattern since independence in 1963 as
shown in Figure 1. In 1964, the economy took an upward trajectory up to 1972 when the growth
took a nosedive but started rising again in 1975. Following two decades of stagnation in per
capita income and high volatility of economic activity, Kenya’s economy moved to a path of
accelerating growth after 2002 when a new government was sworn in. The rate of economic
growth increased steadily from below 1percent in 2002 to 7percent in 2007. Following the December 2007
elections, the country was hit by post election violence in January 2008 followed by global
financial crisis in 2008/2009 and this negatively impacted the rate of economic growth as shown
in Figure 1.
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