Dementeev M.
Shupenko V.
PhD Zhukova O.S.
PhD Petrachkova O.L.
Donetsk State University of Management
bookkeeping and accounts
For management of any company to be efficient, extensive and accurate
information concerning receipts and payments, assets and liabilities,
depreciation of assets and other data about company status are required. Such
information being obtained mainly from different records, additional funds and
time should be invested in bookkeeping and accounting system.
In general, accounting and bookkeeping mean
identifying, measuring, recording economic information about any business,
bookkeeping being considered the preliminary stage and part of the larger field
of accounting.
The task of a bookkeeper is to ensure the record-keeping aspect of accounting
and therefore to provide the data to which accounting principles are applied in
the preparation of financial statements. Bookkeeping provides the basic
accounting data by systematical recording such day-to-day financial information
as income from the sale of products or services, expenses of business
operations such as the cost of goods sold and overheard expenses such as a
rent, wages, salaries.
Accounting principles determine which financial events and transactions
should be recorded in the bookkeeper’s books. The analysis and interpretation
of these records is the primary function of accounting. The various financial
statements produced by accountants then provide managers with the basis for
future financial planning and control, and provide other interested parties
with useful information about the company.
Modern accounting system is considered to be a seven-step cycle. The
first three steps fall under the bookkeeping function, such us : 1) the
systematic recording of financial transactions; 2) the transferring of the
amounts from various journals to general ledger; 3) the drawing up of the trial
balance.
Record keeping of companies is based on a double-entry system, due to
which each transaction is recorded on the basis of its dual impact on the
company’s financial position. To make a completebookkeeping record of every
transaction in a journal, one should consider interrelated aspects of every
transaction, and entries must be in different accounts to keep the ins and outs
balanced.
A typical account is known to have two sides: the items on the left side
are called debits, while the items on the right side are credits.
Thus, double-entry bookkeeping doesn’t mean that the same transaction is
entered twice, it means that the same amount of money is always debited to one
account and credited to another account, each record having its own effect on
the whole financial structure of the company. Certain accounts are increased
with debits and decreased with credits, while other accounts are increased with
credits and decreased with debits.
In the second step in the accounting cycle, the amounts from the various
journals are usually monthly transferred to the company’s general ledger – a
procedure called posting. Posting data to the ledgers is followed by listing
the balances of all the accounts and calculating whether the sum of all the
debit balances agrees with the sum of all the credit balances. This procedure
known as the drawing up of a trial balance and those that follow is usually
take place at the end of the fiscal year. By making a trial balance, the
record-keeping accuracy can be checked. The trial balance having been
successfully prepared, the bookkeeping portion of the accounting cycle is
completed.
The double-entry system of bookkeeping enables every company to
determine at any time the value of each item that is owned, how much of this
value belongs to creditors, the total profit and how much belongs to the
business clear of debt. Thus, one advantage of the double-entry system is that
its information is complete enough to byused as the basis for making business
decisions. Another advantage is that errors are readily detected, since the
system is based on equations that must always be in balance.