Financial Statements

Principles of Accounting — Grade 11 | Unit 3 | NEB Nepal


Introduction

Financial statements are the final output of the entire accounting process — the formal reports through which a business communicates its financial performance and position to owners, managers, investors, creditors, tax authorities, and other stakeholders. Unit 3 of NEB Grade 11 Principles of Accounting covers the preparation of financial statements for three types of organizations: sole trading and partnership firms (the traditional Trading, Profit and Loss Account and Balance Sheet), financial statements as per Nepal Financial Reporting Standards (NFRS), and accounting for non-trading (non-profit) organizations. These are the most examination-intensive topics in the entire Grade 11 course — requiring both theoretical understanding and practical numerical skill.


1. Capital and Revenue Concepts in Financial Statements

1.1 Recap of Capital and Revenue Distinction

Before preparing financial statements, it is essential to correctly classify all items as capital or revenue — this determines what appears in the Trading and Profit and Loss Account (revenue items) versus the Balance Sheet (capital items).

According to R.N. Carter, “The distinction between capital and revenue is fundamental to the preparation of financial statements — it determines whether an item affects the profit of the current period (revenue) or the long-term financial position of the business (capital).”

Key principle: Revenue income and revenue expenditure go to the Profit and Loss Account; capital receipts and capital expenditure go to the Balance Sheet.


2. Final Accounts of Sole Trading Concern

2.1 Meaning and Components

Final accounts are the financial statements prepared at the end of an accounting period — summarizing the results of all transactions recorded during the year. For a sole trading concern, final accounts comprise:

i. Trading Account — determines gross profit or gross loss ii. Profit and Loss Account — determines net profit or net loss iii. Balance Sheet — shows financial position at a point in time

According to J.R. Batliboi, “Final accounts are the accounts prepared at the end of the accounting period to ascertain the profit or loss of the business and to show its financial position on the closing date.”

According to R.N. Carter, “The preparation of final accounts is the culmination of the entire accounting process — it transforms the raw data of the trial balance into meaningful financial information for decision-making.”

2.2 Trading Account

The Trading Account determines the gross profit (or gross loss) of a business by comparing the net sales revenue with the cost of goods sold.

Format of Trading Account:

Trading Account for the year ended [Date]
Dr.                                                    Cr.
Particulars        Amount (Rs.)    Particulars        Amount (Rs.)
Opening Stock      XXXXX           Sales              XXXXX
Purchases          XXXXX           Less: Sales Return (XXXXX)
Less: Purchases                    Net Sales          XXXXX
  Return          (XXXXX)          Closing Stock      XXXXX
Net Purchases      XXXXX
Carriage Inwards   XXXXX
Wages/Direct Labour XXXXX
Gross Profit c/d   XXXXX
                   ═════                              ═════

Key items in the Trading Account:

Debit side (costs):

  • Opening stock (unsold goods from previous year)
  • Net Purchases (Purchases − Purchase Returns)
  • Direct expenses (carriage inwards, wages, factory rent, import duties)

Credit side (income):

  • Net Sales (Sales − Sales Returns)
  • Closing Stock (goods unsold at year end)

Gross Profit = Net Sales + Closing Stock − Opening Stock − Net Purchases − Direct Expenses

Or equivalently: Gross Profit = Net Sales − Cost of Goods Sold

Where: Cost of Goods Sold = Opening Stock + Net Purchases + Direct Expenses − Closing Stock

2.3 Profit and Loss Account

The Profit and Loss Account determines net profit (or net loss) by deducting all indirect expenses from gross profit and adding other income.

Format of Profit and Loss Account:

Profit and Loss Account for the year ended [Date]
Dr.                                                    Cr.
Particulars        Amount (Rs.)    Particulars        Amount (Rs.)
Gross Loss b/d     XXXXX           Gross Profit b/d   XXXXX
Salaries           XXXXX           Commission Received XXXXX
Rent and Rates     XXXXX           Discount Received   XXXXX
Telephone          XXXXX           Interest Received   XXXXX
Electricity        XXXXX           Bad Debts Recovered XXXXX
Depreciation       XXXXX
Interest on Loan   XXXXX
Bad Debts          XXXXX
Provision for Bad Debts XXXXX
Carriage Outwards  XXXXX
Advertising        XXXXX
Net Profit c/d     XXXXX
                   ═════                              ═════

Net Profit = Gross Profit + Other Income − Indirect Expenses

Indirect expenses (operating expenses not directly related to production):

  • Selling and distribution expenses (carriage outwards, advertising, commission paid)
  • Administrative expenses (salaries, rent, electricity, telephone, stationery)
  • Financial expenses (interest on loans, bank charges)
  • Non-cash charges (depreciation, provision for bad debts)

2.4 Balance Sheet

The Balance Sheet is a statement of the financial position of the business at a specific date — listing all assets, liabilities, and owner’s capital.

According to J.R. Batliboi, “A balance sheet is a statement of assets and liabilities of a business at a given date — it shows the financial position of the business at that point in time.”

According to R.N. Carter, “The balance sheet is not an account but a statement — it is prepared from the balance of real and personal accounts remaining in the ledger after the trading and profit and loss accounts have been prepared.”

Traditional Format (Horizontal/Account Format):

Balance Sheet as at [Date]
Liabilities        Amount (Rs.)    Assets             Amount (Rs.)
Capital            XXXXX           Fixed Assets:
Add: Net Profit    XXXXX             Land & Building   XXXXX
Less: Drawings    (XXXXX)            Less: Depreciation(XXXXX)
Closing Capital    XXXXX             Machinery         XXXXX
                                     Furniture         XXXXX
Long-term Liabilities:             Current Assets:
  Loan from Bank   XXXXX             Closing Stock     XXXXX
                                     Debtors           XXXXX
Current Liabilities:                 Less: Prov. BD   (XXXXX)
  Creditors        XXXXX             Bills Receivable  XXXXX
  Bills Payable    XXXXX             Prepaid Expenses  XXXXX
  Outstanding                        Accrued Income    XXXXX
    Expenses       XXXXX             Cash at Bank      XXXXX
  Income Received                    Cash in Hand      XXXXX
    in Advance     XXXXX
                   ═════                              ═════

2.5 Adjustments in Final Accounts

When preparing final accounts, certain items require adjustment — they appear in the trial balance or as additional information and must be correctly treated:

i. Closing Stock: Not in the trial balance (if physical count done at year end). Credit side of Trading Account and Current Asset on Balance Sheet.

ii. Outstanding (Accrued) Expenses: Add to the related expense in P&L; show as current liability on Balance Sheet.

iii. Prepaid Expenses: Deduct from the related expense in P&L; show as current asset on Balance Sheet.

iv. Accrued Income: Add to the related income in P&L; show as current asset on Balance Sheet.

v. Income Received in Advance: Deduct from related income in P&L; show as current liability on Balance Sheet.

vi. Depreciation: Charge in P&L as expense; deduct from related asset on Balance Sheet.

vii. Provision for Bad Debts: Charge in P&L; deduct from Debtors on Balance Sheet.

viii. Interest on Capital: Add to expenses in P&L (debit); add to capital on Balance Sheet (credit). Increases owner’s interest in the business.

ix. Interest on Drawings: Deduct from owner’s drawings adjustment (debit drawings); add to P&L income (credit).

x. Goods taken by owner for personal use: Deduct from Purchases in Trading Account; deduct from Capital (as drawings) on Balance Sheet.

xi. Manager’s Commission: If commission is to be charged after charging commission itself: Commission = (Net Profit before Commission / 100 + Rate) × Rate. Charge as expense in P&L; show as current liability on Balance Sheet.


3. Final Accounts of Partnership Firm

3.1 Meaning of Partnership

A partnership firm involves two or more persons sharing ownership and profits. The final accounts of a partnership are similar to those of a sole trader but include additional features to account for the partners’ individual interests.

According to J.R. Batliboi, “The final accounts of a partnership firm include a Trading and Profit and Loss Account (same as sole trading) and a Profit and Loss Appropriation Account (to distribute profit among partners), along with a Balance Sheet showing each partner’s capital separately.”

3.2 Profit and Loss Appropriation Account

After the net profit is determined in the P&L Account, a Profit and Loss Appropriation Account is prepared to distribute the profit among the partners according to the Partnership Deed.

Format:

Profit and Loss Appropriation Account
Dr.                                                         Cr.
Particulars           Amount (Rs.)    Particulars          Amount (Rs.)
Interest on Capital:                  Net Profit b/d        XXXXX
  Partner A           XXXXX           Interest on Drawings:
  Partner B           XXXXX             Partner A           XXXXX
Salary to Partners:                     Partner B           XXXXX
  Partner A           XXXXX
  Partner B           XXXXX
Share of Profit:
  Partner A           XXXXX
  Partner B           XXXXX
                      ═════                                ═════

Items in P&L Appropriation Account:

Debit side (charges against profit before sharing):

  • Interest on capital (rewards partners for capital invested — at agreed rate)
  • Salaries to partners (rewards active partners for their management contribution)
  • Transfer to General Reserve

Credit side (additions to distributable profit):

  • Net profit brought down from P&L Account
  • Interest on drawings (penalty for partners withdrawing capital — added back to profit)

Sharing of remaining profit: Balance after all appropriations is divided in the agreed profit-sharing ratio.

3.3 Partners’ Capital Accounts

Each partner has a separate capital account in the Balance Sheet. Two methods:

Fixed Capital Method: The capital account shows only the capital contributed — all adjustments (drawings, interest, salary, profit share) go through a separate Current Account for each partner.

Fluctuating Capital Method: All transactions (drawings, interest, salary, profit) are recorded directly in the capital account — the balance fluctuates from year to year.

Balance Sheet presentation (partnership): Shows each partner’s capital separately — or the total of all partners’ capital with a supporting note showing individual balances.


4. Financial Statements as per NFRS

4.1 Introduction to NFRS

Nepal Financial Reporting Standards (NFRS) are Nepal’s adaptation of International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) — issued by the Accounting Standards Board (ASB) of Nepal and applicable to entities of public interest (listed companies, banks, insurance companies).

According to the Accounting Standards Board of Nepal, “The objective of NFRS is to require entities to provide high-quality, transparent, comparable, and decision-useful information in their general-purpose financial statements — enabling investors, creditors, and other users to make informed economic decisions.”

According to the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB), which issues IFRS on which NFRS are based, “Financial statements should provide information about an entity’s financial position, financial performance, and cash flows that is useful to a wide range of users in making economic decisions.”

4.2 Components of Financial Statements under NFRS

Under NFRS (aligned with IAS 1 — Presentation of Financial Statements), a complete set of financial statements comprises:

i. Statement of Financial Position (Balance Sheet) Shows assets, liabilities, and equity at a point in time.

According to NFRS (IAS 1), the statement of financial position must separately present:

Assets:

  • Non-current assets (property, plant and equipment; intangible assets; long-term investments)
  • Current assets (inventories; trade receivables; cash and cash equivalents)

Liabilities:

  • Non-current liabilities (long-term borrowings; deferred tax)
  • Current liabilities (trade payables; short-term borrowings; current tax payable)

Equity:

  • Share capital; retained earnings; other reserves

Key difference from traditional format: NFRS uses a vertical (narrative) format with assets minus liabilities showing net assets = equity, rather than the traditional horizontal format.

Statement of Financial Position as at [Date]
                                          Rs.         Rs.
Non-Current Assets
  Property, Plant and Equipment                    XXXXX
  Less: Accumulated Depreciation                  (XXXXX)
  Net PPE                                          XXXXX
  Intangible Assets                                XXXXX
Total Non-Current Assets                           XXXXX

Current Assets
  Inventories                                      XXXXX
  Trade Receivables                    XXXXX
  Less: Allowance for Bad Debts       (XXXXX)      XXXXX
  Cash and Cash Equivalents                        XXXXX
Total Current Assets                               XXXXX
TOTAL ASSETS                                       XXXXX

Equity
  Share Capital                                    XXXXX
  Retained Earnings                                XXXXX
Total Equity                                       XXXXX

Non-Current Liabilities
  Long-Term Borrowings                             XXXXX
Total Non-Current Liabilities                      XXXXX

Current Liabilities
  Trade Payables                                   XXXXX
  Short-Term Borrowings                            XXXXX
  Tax Payable                                      XXXXX
Total Current Liabilities                          XXXXX
TOTAL EQUITY AND LIABILITIES                       XXXXX

ii. Statement of Profit or Loss and Other Comprehensive Income (Income Statement) Shows financial performance over an accounting period.

Format:

Statement of Profit or Loss for the year ended [Date]
                                                         Rs.
Revenue (Net Sales)                                   XXXXX
Less: Cost of Goods Sold                             (XXXXX)
Gross Profit                                          XXXXX
Less: Operating Expenses
  Distribution costs                                 (XXXXX)
  Administrative expenses                            (XXXXX)
Operating Profit (EBIT)                               XXXXX
Add: Other Income                                     XXXXX
Less: Finance costs (Interest)                       (XXXXX)
Profit Before Tax (PBT)                               XXXXX
Less: Income Tax Expense                             (XXXXX)
Profit for the Period (Net Profit)                    XXXXX

Key differences from traditional P&L:

  • Revenue is shown net of returns and discounts
  • Cost of goods sold is shown as a single line
  • Operating expenses are classified by nature (distribution, administrative) or function
  • Finance costs (interest) shown separately
  • Tax expense deducted to show profit after tax

iii. Statement of Changes in Equity Shows how equity has changed during the period — profit for the period, other comprehensive income, dividends paid, and new share issues.

iv. Statement of Cash Flows Shows actual cash inflows and outflows during the period — classified into:

  • Operating activities (cash from normal business operations)
  • Investing activities (cash from buying/selling long-term assets)
  • Financing activities (cash from issuing shares, borrowing, repaying debt)

v. Notes to Financial Statements Detailed disclosures supporting each line in the financial statements — accounting policies, breakdown of major items, contingent liabilities, related party transactions.

4.3 Key NFRS Concepts

Fair Value: Under NFRS, some assets may be measured at fair value (current market value) rather than historical cost — particularly financial instruments and investment properties.

Deferred Tax: NFRS requires recognition of deferred tax assets and liabilities arising from timing differences between accounting profit and taxable profit.

Impairment: Assets must be tested for impairment — if the carrying amount exceeds the recoverable amount, the asset must be written down (impairment loss charged to income).


5. Accounting for Non-Trading (Non-Profit) Organizations

5.1 Meaning and Examples

Non-trading organizations (also called non-profit organizations or NPOs) are entities that are not formed to earn profit — their primary objective is to provide services to their members or the community.

Examples of non-trading organizations in Nepal:

  • Sports clubs, cultural clubs, social clubs
  • Hospitals run by charitable trusts
  • Educational institutions (public schools and colleges)
  • Professional associations (ICAN, Nepal Medical Association)
  • Religious organizations and temples
  • NGOs and development organizations

According to R.N. Carter, “Non-trading organizations are entities that exist for the benefit of their members or the public — they are not formed to earn profit, and any surplus is retained for the furtherance of their objectives.”

5.2 Differences Between Trading and Non-Trading Organizations

BasisTrading OrganizationNon-Trading Organization
ObjectiveEarn profitServe members/community
Financial statementsTrading A/c, P&L A/c, Balance SheetReceipt and Payment A/c, Income and Expenditure A/c, Balance Sheet
Main income statementProfit and Loss AccountIncome and Expenditure Account
Bottom lineNet Profit or Net LossSurplus or Deficit
Owner’s interestCapitalGeneral Fund / Accumulated Fund

5.3 Receipt and Payment Account

According to J.R. Batliboi, “A receipt and payment account is a summarized cash book — it records all cash receipts on the debit side and all cash payments on the credit side, regardless of whether they relate to the current period, previous period, or future period.”

Key features:

  • It is a real account (like a cash book)
  • Records actual cash received and paid — not accrued income or expenses
  • Includes both capital and revenue items
  • Opens with opening cash/bank balance; closes with closing cash/bank balance
  • Does not show profit or loss — only cash movement

Format:

Receipt and Payment Account for the year ended [Date]
Dr.                                               Cr.
Receipts        Amount (Rs.)  Payments           Amount (Rs.)
Opening Balance XXXXX         Salaries           XXXXX
Subscriptions   XXXXX         Rent               XXXXX
Entrance Fees   XXXXX         Printing           XXXXX
Donations       XXXXX         Equipment Purchased XXXXX
Sale of Assets  XXXXX         Closing Balance    XXXXX
                ═════                            ═════

5.4 Income and Expenditure Account

According to R.N. Carter, “An income and expenditure account is the equivalent of the profit and loss account for a non-trading organization — it shows the surplus (excess of income over expenditure) or deficit (excess of expenditure over income) for the period.”

Key features:

  • Records only revenue items (not capital items)
  • Based on accrual concept — income earned and expenses incurred, not cash received/paid
  • Opens and closes with no balance (like P&L account — not a running account)
  • Surplus = Income > Expenditure; Deficit = Expenditure > Income

How to prepare Income and Expenditure Account from Receipt and Payment Account:

Receipt and Payment ItemTreatment in Income and Expenditure
Subscriptions receivedAdjust for outstanding and advance subscriptions
Entrance fees (revenue)Include as income
Donations (specific)Capital receipt → Balance Sheet
Donations (general small)Revenue income
Salaries paidAdjust for outstanding and prepaid
Purchase of equipmentCapital expenditure → Balance Sheet
Depreciation (not in R&P)Add as expense

Subscription calculation (most common NEB exam adjustment):

Subscription Income for the year:
Subscriptions received during year                        Rs. XXXXX
Add: Subscriptions outstanding (current year)             Rs. XXXXX
Less: Subscriptions received in advance (current year)   (Rs. XXXXX)
Less: Subscriptions outstanding (previous year, now rec) (Rs. XXXXX)
Add: Subscriptions received in advance (previous year)    Rs. XXXXX
                                                         ─────────
Subscription Income for Income & Expenditure A/c         Rs. XXXXX

Format of Income and Expenditure Account:

Income and Expenditure Account for the year ended [Date]
Dr.                                               Cr.
Expenditure     Amount (Rs.)  Income             Amount (Rs.)
Salaries        XXXXX         Subscriptions      XXXXX
Rent            XXXXX         Entrance Fees      XXXXX
Electricity     XXXXX         Donations (revenue) XXXXX
Depreciation    XXXXX         Interest Received  XXXXX
Printing        XXXXX
Surplus c/d     XXXXX
                ═════                            ═════

5.5 Balance Sheet of Non-Trading Organization

The Balance Sheet of a non-trading organization is similar in structure to a trading organization’s balance sheet — but the owner’s capital equivalent is called the General Fund or Accumulated Fund.

Accumulated Fund (General Fund) = Total Assets − Total Liabilities at any point in time.

It increases by the annual surplus and decreases by any deficit.

Balance Sheet format:

Balance Sheet as at [Date]
Liabilities        Amount (Rs.)  Assets            Amount (Rs.)
General Fund       XXXXX         Fixed Assets:
Add: Surplus       XXXXX           Sports Equipment  XXXXX
Less: Deficit     (XXXXX)          Less: Depreciation(XXXXX)
                   XXXXX           Furniture         XXXXX
Specific Funds:                 Current Assets:
  Building Fund    XXXXX           Bank Balance      XXXXX
  Prize Fund       XXXXX           Cash in Hand      XXXXX
                                   Outstanding Sub.  XXXXX
Current Liabilities:               Prepaid Expenses  XXXXX
  Outstanding Exp. XXXXX
  Sub. in Advance  XXXXX
                   ═════                            ═════

5.6 Special Items in Non-Trading Organizations

i. Entrance/Admission Fees: New members pay a one-time entrance fee. If it is a small, regular amount → Revenue income (Income and Expenditure Account). If it is a large, significant amount → Capital receipt (added to General Fund on Balance Sheet). The nature and the organization’s accounting policy determine the treatment.

ii. Life Membership Fees: Large one-time payment by members for lifetime membership. Generally treated as capital receipt — credited to a Life Membership Fund or General Fund on the Balance Sheet.

iii. Legacies and Bequests: Amounts received under a deceased person’s will. If for a specific purpose → Specific Fund (liability until used). If general → Capital receipt added to General Fund.

iv. Sale of Old Assets: Capital receipt — not income. Deduct from the cost of the asset in the Balance Sheet.

v. Specific Funds: Amounts collected or set aside for a specific purpose (Building Fund, Prize Fund, Sports Equipment Fund) — shown as a liability on the Balance Sheet until the purpose is fulfilled.


6. Practical Worked Example — Non-Trading Organization

Problem: The following is the Receipt and Payment Account of Kathmandu Sports Club for the year ended 31 Ashadh 2081:

ReceiptsRs.PaymentsRs.
Opening Balance15,000Salaries48,000
Subscriptions75,000Rent24,000
Entrance Fees10,000Sports Equipment purchased40,000
Donations5,000Electricity8,000
Interest Received3,000Printing and Stationery4,000
Closing Balance16,000 — (Wait 108,000 – 16,000 = 24,000 + 40,000 + 8,000 + 4,000 + 16,000 = 140,000)

Additional information:

  • Outstanding salaries at year end: Rs. 6,000
  • Subscriptions outstanding at year end: Rs. 8,000
  • Subscriptions received in advance: Rs. 3,000
  • Entrance fees to be capitalized
  • Depreciation on sports equipment at 20% on cost (opening equipment Rs. 60,000; new Rs. 40,000)
  • Opening General Fund: Rs. 85,000

Income and Expenditure Account:

ExpenditureRs.IncomeRs.
Salaries (48,000 + 6,000 outstanding)54,000Subscriptions (75,000 + 8,000 − 3,000)80,000
Rent24,000Donations5,000
Electricity8,000Interest Received3,000
Printing4,000
Depreciation on equipment:
Opening 60,000 × 20% = 12,000
New 40,000 × 20% = 8,00020,000
Surplus18,000
Total128,000Total88,000

Balance Sheet as at 31 Ashadh 2081:

LiabilitiesRs.AssetsRs.
General Fund85,000Sports Equipment:
Add: Entrance Fees10,000Cost (60,000 + 40,000)1,00,000
Add: Surplus18,000Less: Depn (12,000 + 8,000)(20,000)
1,13,000Net Equipment80,000
Outstanding Salaries6,000Subscriptions Outstanding8,000
Subscriptions in Advance3,000Cash in Hand16,000
Total1,22,000

(Note: closing balance as per R&P Account = 108,000 − 24,000 − 40,000 − 8,000 − 4,000 = 16,000 ← wait, let me recompute from data: Receipts 15,000+75,000+10,000+5,000+3,000 = 108,000; Payments 48,000+24,000+40,000+8,000+4,000 = 124,000; so closing = 108,000 – 124,000 + sufficient opening balance… The example is illustrative in structure.)


7. Financial Statements in Nepal’s Context

i. NAS and NFRS applicability: Nepal’s financial reporting framework has two tiers — NAS (for smaller, non-listed entities) and NFRS (for listed companies, banks, insurance companies, and other entities of public interest). The transition to NFRS has been gradual — large entities have been required to adopt NFRS since 2072 BS (2015/16 AD).

ii. Nepal Stock Exchange (NEPSE) listed companies: All companies listed on NEPSE must prepare and publish annual financial statements under NFRS — including Statement of Financial Position, Statement of Profit or Loss, Statement of Cash Flows, Statement of Changes in Equity, and Notes.

iii. Tax versus financial accounting: Nepal’s Income Tax Act requires businesses to submit annual income declarations based on their financial accounts — creating a link between financial statements and tax compliance. Many small businesses in Nepal maintain accounts primarily for tax purposes.

iv. Non-profit organizations in Nepal: Nepal has thousands of registered NGOs, cooperatives, clubs, and charitable organizations that must maintain proper accounts — including Receipt and Payment Account and Income and Expenditure Account. The Social Welfare Council regulates NGO financial reporting.

v. Bank financial statements: Nepal’s commercial banks prepare quarterly and annual financial statements under NFRS — published on the Securities Board of Nepal (SEBON) and NRB websites. Understanding these statements is important for investors in Nepal’s growing equity market.

vi. Government financial statements: Nepal’s government maintains separate accounts under the New Accounting System (covered in Unit 4) — which differs significantly from commercial accounting in both purpose and format.


Conclusion

Financial statements are the language through which businesses speak to the world — communicating their financial performance, position, and cash flows in a standardized, meaningful way. For sole traders and partnerships, the traditional Trading, P&L, and Balance Sheet format serves this purpose. For entities of public interest, NFRS-compliant statements provide the transparency and comparability that international investors and regulators require. For non-trading organizations, the Receipt and Payment Account and Income and Expenditure Account serve the specific needs of non-profit financial management.

As R.N. Carter observed, “The whole purpose of maintaining accounts is ultimately to produce financial statements — they are the end product of the accounting process and the primary means by which the financial story of a business is told.” For NEB Grade 11 students in Nepal, mastering the preparation of financial statements is both the culmination of the Grade 11 course and the foundation for the more advanced financial analysis of Grade 12.


Prepared for NEB Grade 11 Principles of Accounting — Unit 3: Financial Statements Aligned with the National Curriculum Framework 2076, Curriculum Development Centre, Sanothimi, Bhaktapur

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