Double-entry book-keepingDouble-entry book-keeping is the standard accounting practice for recording financial transactions. It was "invented" by the merchant venturers of Venice and codified for the first time by Luca Pacioli, a close friend of Leonardo da Vinci, in a 1494 footnote to a scientific paper. The system is based on the concept that a business can be described by a number of different variables or accounts, each describing an aspect of the business in monetary terms. Every transaction has a 'dual effect'—increasing one aspect and decreasing another, in such a way that all of the different variables always sum to zero. This is illustrated below. ExamplesBuying an asset:
Selling merchandise on credit:
Paying a trade creditor:
Debits and creditsFor each transaction there will be a debit and a credit. An increase in any of the following will result in a debit:
An increase in any of the following will result in a credit:
An increase in a debit item must be accompanied by either an increase in a credit item or a decrease in another debit item. An increase in a credit item must be accompanied by either an increase in a debit item or a decrease in another credit item. Credit and debit items are later summarised in a trial balance which is a list of all the debit and credit balances. The trial balance acts as a self checking mechanism for the correctness of entries in the individual accounts and also as a starting point for the preparation of the balance sheet and a profit and loss account. External links
de:Doppelte Buchführung fr:Principe comptable de la partie double ja:複式簿記 |
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