historical cost - translation to greek
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historical cost - translation to greek

ORIGINAL MONETARY VALUE OF AN ITEM
Accounting cost; Historic cost; Historical Cost concept; Historical cost accounting; Historic cost accounting; Stable measuring unit assumption; Nominal monetary units; Amortized cost

historical cost         
ιστορικί κόστος
alternative cost         
  • Simplified example of comparing economic profit vs accounting profit
  • Demand and supply of hospital beds and days during Covid-19q
  • Opportunity cost to implement additional hijacking prevention methods
WHEN PRESENTED WITH MULTIPLE OPPORTUNITIES, THE COST OF MAKING A CERTAIN CHOICE IN COMPARISON TO ITS ALTERNATIVES
Alternative cost; Hidden cost; Opportunity costs; Opportunity Cost; Oppurtunity Cost; Oppetunity cost; Hidden costs; Opprtunity cost
διαζευκτικό κόστος
marginal cost         
  • Relationship between marginal cost and average total cost
  • Average cost
  • Long Run Marginal Cost
  • Profit Maximizing Graph
  • Short Run Marginal Cost
FACTOR IN ECONOMICS
Marginal costs; Incremental cost; Marginal-Cost Pricing; Marginal cost pricing; Marginal cost of capital; Full marginal cost; Marginal Cost; Zero marginal cost; Marginal-cost; Differential cost
οριακό κόστος

Definition

opportunity cost
¦ noun Economics the loss of other alternatives when one alternative is chosen.

Wikipedia

Historical cost

In accounting, an economic item's historical cost is the original nominal monetary value of that item. Historical cost accounting involves reporting assets and liabilities at their historical costs, which are not updated for changes in the items' values. Consequently, the amounts reported for these balance sheet items often differ from their current economic or market values.

While use of historical cost measurement is criticised for its lack of timely reporting of value changes, it remains in use in most accounting systems during periods of low and high inflation and deflation. During hyperinflation, International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) require financial capital maintenance in units of constant purchasing power in terms of the monthly CPI as set out in IAS 29, Financial Reporting in Hyperinflationary Economies. Various adjustments to historical cost are used, many of which require the use of management judgment and may be difficult to verify. The trend in most accounting standards is towards more timely reflection of the fair or market value of some assets and liabilities, although the historical cost principle remains in use. Many accounting standards require disclosure of current values for certain assets and liabilities in the footnotes to the financial statements instead of reporting them on the balance sheet.

For some types of assets with readily available market values, standards require that the carrying value of an asset (or liability) be updated to the market price or some other estimate of value that approximates current value (fair value, also fair market value). Accounting standards vary as to how the resultant change in value of an asset or liability is recorded; it may be included in income or as a direct change to shareholders' equity.

The capital maintenance in units of constant purchasing power model is an International Accounting Standards Board approved alternative basic accounting model to the traditional historical cost accounting model.

Examples of use of historical cost
1. The IMF‘s total gold holdings are valued on its balance sheet at about $' billion on the basis of historical cost.
2. Those developments are reflected in the rapid growth of U.S. direct financial services investment in Japan, which has grown from $6Yi billion in 1''4 to more than $38 billion last year on a historical cost basis.