Governmental Accounting Basics — CPA FAR Guide

by Vicky Sarin
CPA FAR · Concept Explainer

Governmental Accounting Basics for the CPA FAR Exam: Funds and Measurement Focus

Governmental accounting has no CA, ACCA or Ind AS equivalent, which is why candidates underestimate it and lose easy marks. Here is how fund accounting actually works, why governmental funds do not record fixed assets or depreciation, and the trap table that separates fund-level from government-wide reporting.

By CA Vicky Sarin (ICAI), founder of Eduyush · Last updated 2 July 2026 · Mapped to the AICPA 2026 FAR Blueprint

Area I
Blueprint area
State and Local Government Concepts
3
Fund categories
Governmental, proprietary, fiduciary
2
Measurement bases
Modified accrual vs full accrual
GASB
Standard-setter
Not the FASB — a separate framework
Quick answer

Governmental accounting uses fund accounting: resources are segregated into funds by purpose, each following one of two measurement bases. Governmental funds use modified accrual and the current financial resources focus — they do not record fixed assets, long-term debt or depreciation at the fund level. Proprietary and fiduciary funds use full accrual and the economic resources focus, just like a business. FAR tests only the foundational concepts here — full fund financial statements and government-wide reporting are tested in the BAR Discipline.

Key takeaways
  • Governmental funds (General, Special Revenue, Capital Projects, Debt Service, Permanent) use modified accrual accounting and the current financial resources measurement focus.
  • Proprietary funds (Enterprise, Internal Service) and fiduciary funds use full accrual accounting and the economic resources measurement focus — the same basis as commercial GAAP.
  • Fixed assets and long-term debt do not appear on a governmental fund's balance sheet. Capital outlay is an expenditure; debt proceeds are an other financing source.
  • Governmental funds record expenditures, not expenses, and never record depreciation at the fund level.
  • Revenue recognition under modified accrual requires resources to be measurable and available — available generally meaning collectible within a short period after year end, commonly 60 days.
  • This is foundational content only. Full fund statements, the government-wide reconciliation and budgetary accounting are tested in the BAR Discipline, Area III.

Why governmental accounting feels unfamiliar

Commercial accounting measures profit. Governmental accounting measures accountability — whether a government raised and spent public resources as budgeted and authorised. That different objective is why the mechanics look foreign even to candidates who are strong everywhere else in FAR: there is no profit motive to anchor the logic, and the same government uses two different accounting bases side by side, depending on which fund the transaction sits in.

The 2026 Blueprint places only the foundational layer in FAR — measurement focus, basis of accounting, and the purpose of each fund type. The deeper mechanics, including full fund financial statements, government-wide reporting and the reconciliation between the two, moved to BAR under CPA Evolution. Get the foundation right here and BAR's Area III becomes an extension, not a new subject.

The three fund categories

Every dollar a government accounts for sits in exactly one fund, and every fund belongs to one of three categories. The category determines the measurement basis automatically — there is no separate rule to memorise for each individual fund.

Fund category Examples Purpose
Governmental General, Special Revenue, Capital Projects, Debt Service, Permanent Core government services funded mainly by taxes — education, public safety, infrastructure
Proprietary Enterprise, Internal Service Business-type activities that charge fees — utilities, transit, an internal print shop
Fiduciary Pension trust, Investment trust, Private-purpose trust, Custodial Resources the government holds for others, not for its own programmes

Measurement focus and basis of accounting

This is the single distinction the FAR Blueprint names explicitly, and it is the one that decides most exam questions on this topic.

Governmental funds
  • Current financial resources measurement focus
  • Modified accrual basis of accounting
  • Revenue recognised when measurable and available
  • No fixed assets or long-term debt on the fund balance sheet
  • No depreciation expense recorded
  • Reports expenditures, not expenses
Proprietary & fiduciary funds
  • Economic resources measurement focus
  • Full accrual basis of accounting — the same as commercial GAAP
  • Revenue recognised when earned
  • Fixed assets and long-term debt fully reported
  • Depreciation expense recorded normally
  • Reports expenses, matching commercial terminology
🔑 Key insight

The same government can own a piece of equipment that is fully reported with depreciation in its Enterprise Fund (proprietary — full accrual) while an identical piece of equipment bought for the General Fund (governmental — modified accrual) never appears as an asset in that fund's own statements at all. The fund category, not the asset itself, decides the accounting.

Worked example: revenue recognition under modified accrual

A city levies property taxes of 100,000 for the current fiscal year. By year end it has collected 92,000 in cash. A further 5,000 is collected within 60 days after year end. The remaining 3,000 is not expected to be collected until much later in the following year.

Component Measurable? Available? Recognised as revenue?
Collected in cash (92,000) Yes Yes — already collected Yes
Collected within 60 days (5,000) Yes Yes — within the availability window Yes
Collected later (3,000) Yes No — outside the availability window No — deferred inflow of resources
Total revenue recognised 97,000
🎯 Exam pattern

"Measurable" and "available" are two separate tests, and both must be met. Property tax revenue is almost always measurable — the levy is a known amount. The exam question is nearly always about availability: is the cash expected soon enough after year end to pay current-period bills with it? Amounts that fail the availability test become a deferred inflow of resources, not revenue, no matter how certain the amount is.

Fixed assets and long-term debt: the fund-level trap

This is the single most common source of lost marks in governmental accounting, because it directly contradicts the instinct built from every other FAR topic.

1
A governmental fund buys equipment for cash. The fund records a capital outlay expenditure for the full purchase price in that period — not an asset.
2
No asset appears on the fund's balance sheet. The current financial resources focus only tracks resources available to spend now — a fixed asset is not a current financial resource.
3
No depreciation is ever recorded at the fund level. Depreciation spreads a cost over future periods; modified accrual does not carry costs forward that way.
4
The asset only surfaces at the government-wide level. Government-wide statements — tested in BAR — use full accrual and capitalise and depreciate the asset like a commercial entity would.

The governmental accounting trap table

These are the instincts from commercial GAAP that actively mislead candidates on this topic. Bookmark this table.

Trap Wrong instinct (commercial GAAP habit) Correct governmental fund treatment
Buying equipment Capitalise as a fixed asset Record as a capital outlay expenditure in full
Depreciation Record annual depreciation expense No depreciation at the governmental fund level — ever
Issuing long-term debt Record a long-term liability Record proceeds as an other financing source, not a liability, in the fund
Revenue recognition Recognise when earned (accrual) Recognise when measurable and available (modified accrual)
Statement terminology Use "expenses" throughout Governmental funds report "expenditures" — a different concept, not a synonym
Which basis applies Assume one basis for the whole government Basis depends on the fund category — governmental differs from proprietary and fiduciary
💡 Study tip

Before answering any governmental accounting question, identify the fund category first. Once you know it is a governmental fund, the modified accrual rules apply automatically — no fixed assets, no long-term debt, no depreciation, revenue only when measurable and available. Skipping this identification step is where most wrong answers start.

How Indian candidates should approach this topic

There is no direct parallel to fund accounting in CA, ACCA or Ind AS training, so treat this as genuinely new material rather than something to skim. The good news is that FAR's coverage is narrow — measurement focus, basis of accounting, and fund purpose — not the full statement preparation tested in BAR. A contained, deliberate study block here, rather than passive reading, converts an unfamiliar topic into a reliable source of marks.

🤖 Study workflow

Surgent's simulation bank isolates governmental accounting as its own drill set rather than folding it into general FAR practice, which matters for a topic candidates otherwise postpone until the final week. Its ReadySCORE flags governmental accounting specifically if it is a masked weak area before exam day. See the platform in our Surgent CPA Review India guide, or start with the Surgent CPA course.

The bottom line

Governmental accounting only feels hard because it contradicts habits built everywhere else in FAR. Identify the fund category first, and the modified-versus-full-accrual rules follow automatically — this is one of the most learnable topics in the section once the fund-first habit is in place.

Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between governmental and proprietary funds?
Governmental funds account for core, tax-funded government services using modified accrual and the current financial resources focus. Proprietary funds account for business-type activities that charge fees — like a utility — using full accrual and the economic resources focus, the same basis as commercial GAAP.
Why don't governmental funds record depreciation?
Governmental funds use the current financial resources measurement focus, which tracks only resources available to spend in the near term. A fixed asset and its depreciation over future periods fall outside that focus entirely — the full purchase is instead recorded as an expenditure when acquired, and the asset only appears at the government-wide reporting level.
What does "measurable and available" mean under modified accrual?
Measurable means the amount can be reasonably estimated. Available means the resources are collectible within a short period after year end — commonly interpreted as 60 days — soon enough to pay obligations of the current period. Revenue must satisfy both tests to be recognised; failing the availability test defers recognition even when the amount is certain.
What are the main types of governmental funds?
General Fund (day-to-day operations not accounted for elsewhere), Special Revenue Funds (resources restricted to specific purposes), Capital Projects Funds (major capital acquisitions), Debt Service Funds (repayment of general long-term debt), and Permanent Funds (resources whose principal must remain intact).
Does FAR test full governmental fund financial statements?
No. FAR tests only the foundational concepts — measurement focus, basis of accounting and the purpose of each fund type. Full fund financial statements, the government-wide statements, and the reconciliation between fund-level and government-wide reporting are tested in the BAR Discipline, Area III.
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