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  2. Duty drawback - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duty_drawback

    Drawback is the refund of duties, certain taxes, and certain fees collected upon the importation of merchandise into the United States. Drawback refunds are only allowed upon the export/destruction of the imported merchandise or a valid substitute, or the export/destruction of a certain article manufactured from the imported merchandise or a ...

  3. Credit note - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Credit_note

    A credit note or credit memo is a commercial document, utilized in business transactions to indicate a reduction in the amount owed by a customer or owed to a supplier. If the customer returns goods to the seller, the invoice previously issued is cancelled, in part or as a whole, with a credit note.

  4. Accounts payable - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accounts_payable

    A variety of checks against abuse are usually present to prevent embezzlement by accounts payable personnel. Separation of duties is a common control. In countries where cheques payment are common nearly all companies have a junior employee process and print a cheque and a senior employee review and sign the cheque.

  5. Invoice processing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Invoice_processing

    Rather the system learns by reviewing a relatively small number of invoice samples. This helps the system scale to large invoice volumes and widely varying document layouts without requiring a human operator to specify a template for each one, or explicitly create and tune an extensive library of keywords.

  6. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (United States)

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generally_Accepted...

    Usually solve some very specific accounting issue that will not have a significant, lasting effect or respond to questions from practitioners. Accounting Standards Updates (ASU), where the FASB issues an ASU to communicate changes to the FASB Codification, including changes to non-authoritative SEC content.

  7. Purchase ledger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Purchase_ledger

    A bought ledger differs from a puchase ledger, which is a subledger account that contains the goods and services a business has purchased from a supplier on credit. Information on invoices and credit notes received, and payments made, are recorded in the supplier's account using the debits and credits system, with the balance of each account at ...

  8. Management accounting in supply chains - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Management_accounting_in...

    Management accounting in supply chains (or supply chain controlling, SCC) is part of the supply chain management concept. This necessitates planning, monitoring, management and information about logistics and manufacturing processes throughout the value chain. The goal of management accounting in supply chains is to optimise these processes.

  9. Double-entry bookkeeping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double-entry_bookkeeping

    The double-entry system has two equal and corresponding sides, known as debit and credit; this is based on the fundamental accounting principle that for every debit, there must be an equal and opposite credit. A transaction in double-entry bookkeeping always affects at least two accounts, always includes at least one debit and one credit, and ...