This document discusses the five major accounting elements: assets, liabilities, equity, income, and expenses. It defines a chart of accounts as a list of account titles used to record business transactions. Examples are given for common account titles within each accounting element, such as cash and accounts receivable for assets, and cost of goods sold and salaries for expenses. The document also distinguishes between current and non-current assets/liabilities, with current items expected to be realized within one year.
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Types of Major Accounts
This document discusses the five major accounting elements: assets, liabilities, equity, income, and expenses. It defines a chart of accounts as a list of account titles used to record business transactions. Examples are given for common account titles within each accounting element, such as cash and accounts receivable for assets, and cost of goods sold and salaries for expenses. The document also distinguishes between current and non-current assets/liabilities, with current items expected to be realized within one year.
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TYPES OF MAJOR
ACCOUNTS/ACCOUNTING ELEMENTS 1. What are the Five major accounts or five accounting elements? - Assets - Liabilities - Equity (Owner’s Equity or Capital) - Income - Expenses
2. What is Chart of Accounts?
- This list of accounts is a record of account titles and control numbers used in the bookkeeper as a guide in recording business transactions. Assets, liability, owner’s equity, income, and expenses are listed down to help the bookkeeper in recording a particular transaction. No other account titles can be used other than those found in the chart of accounts.
3. Give examples of assets, liabilities, equity, income and expenses account
titles? - Examples for assets: cash, account receivables, inventories and buildings. - Examples for liability: bank overdrafts, accounts payables, tax, loan, mortgage, rent payables. - Examples for equity: capital account, withdrawal account, common stocks, retained earnings. - Examples for income: sales of goods, sales of other assets, payment for services, rent for use of property. - Examples for expenses: cost of goods sold, utilities expense, insurance expense, salaries and wages.
4. What is the difference between current and non-current assets/liabilities?
- Current assets it is considered current if they are held for the purpose of being traded, expected to be realized or consumed within twelve months after the end of the period or its normal operating cycle or if it is cash while Non-current assets that do not meet the criteria to be classified as current. They are long term in nature and are useful for a period longer than 12 months or the company’s normal operation cycle. - Current liabilities are obligations or debts of the business expected to be within 1 year/12 months which will be paid during the accounting cycle by means of payment of current assets or a creation of another current liability while Non-current liabilities are obligations or debts of the business that will be due and payable beyond one year.