Understanding Debits and Credits – part 1


You’ll find in subsequent chapters that the accounting function has many steps and components. Although they may vary in complexity, all bookkeeping and accounting systems are essentially the same.

The concept behind accounting, what makes it more than merely adding and subtracting, revolves around a basic core consisting of debits and credits. This is an accounting system’s soul, and understanding it will help managers better handle their share of responsibility for the firm’s finances.

In some ways, debits and credits are more complex in theory than in practice. Debits and credits form the basis of all accounting functions, including the company’s balance sheet. They are the two types of activity that can affect any financial account of any type— assets, liabilities, equity, income, or expenses.

The balance sheet is one of the primary accounting statements for any company. It’s a list of assets, liabilities, and owners’ equity—ownership value, if you will—in the business as of a specific date, usually the end of the financial month or fiscal year. Its ultimate goal is to keep all accounts in balance.

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