Bakhmet A.
Kovalyuk A.
PhD Zhukova O.S.
PhD Petrachkova O.L.
Donetsk State University of Management
Assets = Liabilities + Equity
The
term “asset” means anything of value that is owned by a company and can be
expressed in terms of money. Economic resources that provide a potential future
service to the organization are called assets in accounting. A company’s total
assets include such items as cash, buildings, equipment, any other property and
accounts receivable, that is, money owned by its customers.
Assets
are usually classified as current and long-term, both types consisting of
tangible as well as of intangible items. Current tangible assets including
cash, accounts receivable, stock-in-trade are usually converted into cash
within one year and sometimes can be used as a means of payment. On the other
hand, current intangible assets consist of short-term investments in stocks and
bonds.
Long-term
intangible assets are not really visible and include such items as goodwill,
patents, trademarks, copyrights, these assets often being the most important
factor for obtaining future incomes. For example, goodwill means an intangible
asset which takes into account the value added to a business as a result of its
reputation which cannot be really calculated. In contrast, the real estate
(such as farm land, machinery, buildings and other physical objects) belongs to
long-term tangible assets.
Liabilities
are obligations that a company owes to another organization, to an individual
(such as creditors and employees) or to the government. Like assets,
liabilities are divided into current and long-term ones. Current liabilities
are usually amounts that are paid within one year, including accounts payable,
taxes on income and property, short-term loans, salaries and wages, and amounts
of money owed to suppliers of goods and services. Noncurrent liabilities often
called long-term are loans.
The
amount by which the total assets exceed total liabilities is known as the net
worth which is usually called the equity for companies. When the company is a
corporation, the equity means the investment interest of the owners (that is,
the stockholders) in the organization’s assets. The owners’ equity can be
increased either by investing more money in the company or by earning a profit and
can be decreased because of the
company’s losses.
All
companies keep proper accounting system in order to know whether or not they
are operating profitably, each of the assets and the liabilities and the equity
being shown in a company’s accounts separately. The balance sheet prepared by
the company’s accountant is one of the important financial reports showing the
value of the total assets, total liabilities and equity on a given date. The
relationship of these main categories
is represented by the fundamental accounting equation: assets (everything that
is owned) are equal to liabilities (owed) plus equity (clear of debt).
ASSETS = LIABILITIES + EQUITY
As all three factors are expressed in term of money, they are limited to
items taht can be given a monetary value. The accounting equation should always
be in balance, so that one side must equal the other.
Literature
1. Kieso and Weygandt.
Intermediate Accounting. John Wiley &Sons, 1989. ISBN: 0-471-63098-5
2. L. Chasteen, R.
Flaherty, M. O’Connor. Intermediate Accounting. McGraw-Hill, 1989. ISBN:
0-07-557638-4
3. Comparative
international accounting/ edited by Nobes C. and Parker R. Prentice Hall, 1995.
ISBN: 0-13-328733-5
4. Arrapan J.,
Radebaugh L. „International Accounting and multinational enterprises“. John Wiley
& Sons, 1985. ISBN 0-471-88231-3