A Conversation for The Basics of Double Entry Book-keeping

A667794 - the Basics of Double Entry Book-keeping

Post 1

Geoff Taylor - Gullible Chump

http://www.bbc.co.uk/h2g2/guide/A667794

I understand this, 'coz I wrote it and I'm an accountant.

Does it make sense to anyone else? smiley - erm

Comments please.

Geoff


A667794 - the Basics of Double Entry Book-keeping

Post 2

Whisky

Yup, it actually made sense to me, but I must admit, I'm still confused as to just how and why accountants ended up using debit and credit for the opposite meaning as the general public.


A667794 - the Basics of Double Entry Book-keeping

Post 3

Geoff Taylor - Gullible Chump

I touched on this in the footnotes...

Most people get their definition of Debit & Credit from their bank statement.

The key thing to understand is that the bank's account with you is a mirror image of your account with the bank. Your statement shows the bank's account with you. It shows how much money the bank owes you (assuming no overdraft). When you write a cheque, you are reducing their debt to you. This is as good as money coming in, so it's a debit entry.

Clearer? smiley - erm

Maybe I should expand on this in the article......


A667794 - the Basics of Double Entry Book-keeping

Post 4

Whisky

Your last comment was perfect, the first time I've actually clearly understood the principle (ok so I'm stoopid), but if it could be worked into the article, it would be great
smiley - cheers
whisky


A667794 - the Basics of Double Entry Book-keeping

Post 5

Geoff Taylor - Gullible Chump

I've added that explanation into the article.

Geoff


A667794 - the Basics of Double Entry Book-keeping

Post 6

Zarquon's Singing Fish!

Hmm! In my experience loan sharks require interest on their loans, even if the're repaid the same day. You might want to change this to his mother, or some other such altruistic person. (Of course mother's aren't always altruistic, but generally ...)

smiley - fishsmiley - musicalnote


A667794 - the Basics of Double Entry Book-keeping

Post 7

Tube - the being being back for the time being

Good entry! I think it should make it into the guide. smiley - smiley
One nitpick: You might want to explain what CR and DR stand for.
Other than that it's fine and it does make sense. smiley - ok

Tube


A667794 - the Basics of Double Entry Book-keeping

Post 8

Tube - the being being back for the time being

Ah, and one other thing came to mind: Why?
I mean, why have this difficult system when a simple debit/credit record would seem enough? what are the advantages of Double Entry Book-Keeping? Just to make accountancy well-paid? smiley - winkeye


A667794 - the Basics of Double Entry Book-keeping

Post 9

Geoff Taylor - Life's Liver

A sale is a sale is a sale, but the method of payment might differ. You might get paid in full , or by instalments. If you simply had one entry that said "Sales - £100", how would you know how much money was owed to you at any one time?

Instead, we have double entries.. credit Sales & debit Debtors.
Each time an instalment is paid.. debit Cash & credit Debtors.

er....has that answered the question?

And anyway, not all accountants get paid fortunes. This one doesn't, for starters! smiley - smiley

Geoff smiley - cheers

PS I'll define CR & DR when I get back to the office on Monday and login as my BLACK side. smiley - blackcat


A667794 - the Basics of Double Entry Book-keeping

Post 10

Tube - the being being back for the time being

Ah, fine, that makes sense. How would you deal with goods the title to which does not pass until the last rate is paid? .... no,you don't have to answer that one smiley - winkeye


A667794 - the Basics of Double Entry Book-keeping

Post 11

Geoff Taylor - Life's Liver

You normally don't make any accounting entries for title of goods.In the UK, you're more likely to sue for damages than forcibly reclaim the goods.

I know I didn't have to, but... smiley - smiley

Geoff
smiley - cheers


A667794 - the Basics of Double Entry Book-keeping

Post 12

Dancer (put your advert here)

Great Entry. A bit biased toward UK people, but so is most everything else here.

smiley - hsif
Dancer


A667794 - the Basics of Double Entry Book-keeping

Post 13

Geoff Taylor - Gullible Chump

OK....I've changed the DR & CR abbreviations to avoid any potential confusion.

Dancer, what's UK biased about the article? AFAIK, Double entry is the accepted standard in most nations. There are differences, but the basics are the same wherever you go.


Thread Moved

Post 14

h2g2 auto-messages

Editorial Note: This conversation has been moved from 'Peer Review' to 'The Basics of Double Entry Book-keeping'.

This thread has been moved out of the Peer Review Forum because your entry has now been recommended for the Edited Guide.

You can find out what will happen to your entry here: http://www.h2g2.com/SubEditors-Process

Congratulations!


Thread Moved

Post 15

Tube - the being being back for the time being

smiley - cheers
Congratulations! smiley - bubbly


Thread Moved

Post 16

Geoff Taylor - Life's Liver

Yippee !!

smiley - bubbly
smiley - cheers


Thread Moved

Post 17

Whisky

This deserved to get into the guide, anything that could make something so completely incomprehensible so comprehensible gets my vote (does this sentence make sense?)

smiley - cheers
whisky


Thread Moved

Post 18

Tube - the being being back for the time being

smiley - winkeye

smiley - bubbly


Thread Moved

Post 19

Geoff Taylor - Gullible Chump

smiley - laugh

smiley - cheers


Thread Moved

Post 20

Dancer (put your advert here)

Congradulations, a nice and straight forward entry, practical and well written. smiley - bubbly

smiley - hsif
Dancer


Key: Complain about this post