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  2. Balance sheet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balance_sheet

    The balance of assets and liabilities (including shareholders' equity) is not a coincidence. Records of the values of each account in the balance sheet are maintained using a system of accounting known as double-entry bookkeeping. In this sense, shareholders' equity by construction must equal assets minus liabilities, and thus the shareholders ...

  3. Public sector balance sheet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_Sector_Balance_Sheet

    Willem Buiter and the IMF argued in 1983 for the use of public sector balance sheets to improve public financial management. [2]Following a financial crisis, the New Zealand government passed its Public Finance Act (PFA) in 1989, introducing accrual budgeting, appropriations and accounting, publishing the world's first public sector balance sheet based on audited accounting records rather than ...

  4. Financial accounting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Financial_accounting

    The balance sheet is the financial statement showing a firm's assets, liabilities and equity (capital) at a set point in time, usually the end of the fiscal year reported on the accompanying income statement. The total assets always equal the total combined liabilities and equity.

  5. Flow of funds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flow_of_funds

    What sectors issue and hold financial assets (instruments) of a given type. The sectors and instruments are listed below. These balance sheets measure levels of assets and liabilities. From each balance sheet a corresponding flows statement can be derived by subtracting the levels data for the preceding period from the data for the current period.

  6. Public commercial assets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_commercial_assets

    Public Commercial Assets are a sub-sector of the asset side of the Public Sector Balance Sheet, that reports the totals of assets and liabilities that the government controls. According to IMF research, total public sector assets have a value equivalent to 2×GDP globally. Net worth (assets minus liabilities) would be equivalent to some 21% of GDP.

  7. Accounting equation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accounting_equation

    Since the balance sheet is founded on the principles of the accounting equation, this equation can also be said to be responsible for estimating the net worth of an entire company. The fundamental components of the accounting equation include the calculation of both company holdings and company debts; thus, it allows owners to gauge the total ...

  8. Balance (accounting) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balance_(accounting)

    The first "balancing" of books, or the balance sheet financial statement in accounting is to check iterations (trial balance) to be sure the equation above applies, and where assets and liabilities are unequal, to equalize them by debiting or crediting owner's equity [2] (i.e. if assets exceed liabilities, equity is increased, if liabilities ...

  9. Liability (financial accounting) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liability_(financial...

    The accounting equation relates assets, liabilities, and owner's equity: Assets = Liabilities + Owner's Equity. The accounting equation is the mathematical structure of the balance sheet. Probably the most accepted accounting definition of liability is the one used by the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB). The following is a ...