Double Entry Bookkeeping Vs Single Entry
Bookkeeping
Bookkeeping stems from the recording of
financial transactions and the accounting term for a business accounts as
books. In effect the accounting function prepares a record of the monetary
affairs of a business and stores the information in files called books. Hence
the term bookkeeping often misspelled as book keeping which is the function of
a librarian not that of a bookkeeper.
The difference between bookkeeping
services and accounting may be unclear to the uninitiated while both are of
vital importance to financial success. Bookkeeping is an important part of the
accounting function and is essentially the record keeping of the financial
transactions. Accounting is while incorporating the record keeping also
includes the presentation, interpretation and financial control functions
including interpretation of the numbers for the financial health of a business
of which taxation can play a major part.
The financial affairs of a business
involve many aspects and start with the recording of what is termed the prime
documents. The task of a bookkeeping service is to record the prime documents,
those prime documents being the sales, purchases and cash/bank transactions.
All small businesses do bookkeeping and the most successful use the bookkeeping
records as a basis for an accounting function to generate a more efficient
financial service.
All business involves buying or selling
something and the consequent function of receiving or paying money to the value
of those transactions. Recording these transactions in larger business
organisations is done by accounts clerk who works under the supervision of the
accountant.
Invariably medium and larger businesses
use a double entry system for recording transactions. Double entry accounting
evolves from the fact that every transaction as a double effect on the business
of which these are prime examples.
A sale is made creating a record of
income for the business on which the business is taxed and the other side of the
financial transaction, the double entry, is the organisation who was sold the
goods now owes the value of that sales invoice to the business. That is the
double entry, record the sales income and also record the debt due from the
customer.
Someone who owes the business a debt is
called a debtor.
A purchase is made creating a record of
expense for the business which can be deducted from income and lowers taxes and
the other side of the financial transaction, the double entry, is the
organisation who supplied the purchase on credit is now owed the money. That is
the double entry, record the purchase and also record the credit due to the
supplier.
Someone who has supplied goods on
credit is called a creditor.
The third type of prime transaction is
the transfer of money between the debtors and creditors and the business.
When a debtor pays his sales invoice
the double entry is to add that amount of money to the business financial
records and the opposite double entry goes to the debtor account to reduce the
amount owed to the business since it has now received the cash.
When a creditor is paid the amount owed
the money is recorded as reducing the cash resources of the business. For example deducting the money from the bank
balance and the double entry reduces the amount the business now owes to the
creditor account since it has reduced the credit received.
The bookkeeping function is to record
these prime transactions. Since every financial transaction has an equal and
opposite entry in the books there has to be a mathematical check that both
sides of the transactions add up to zero. This check process is called a trial
balance where both sides of the entries should be in agreement and normally the
point at which the bookkeeping service is deemed to be complete.
Double entry bookkeeping is required
for all businesses that require to produce a statement of its assets and
liabilities. This statement of assets and liabilities is the total of all the
balances from the trial balance and is called a balance sheet.
Many small businesses do not require a
balance sheet. In the UK
the production of a balance sheet is optional for every self-employed business,
as it is not an obligatory requirement of the self-assessment tax return form.
A self-employed bookkeeping system is not required to produce a balance sheet
because the business effectively belongs to the owner and is that owners
personal business.
Limited companies must produce a
balance sheet under various financial acts and submit the balance sheet to both
Companies House and the tax authority each year. The different rules applying
to a limited company is because the accounts including the balance sheet are
public records available to the members of that company and not necessarily the
property of a single individual or partnership.
The self-employed bookkeeping system
can be simpler being produced from a single entry style of bookkeeping rather
than double entry. Single entry bookkeeping makes a single entry for each
financial transaction, which is sufficient to produce an income and expenditure
account, a profit and loss account, but does not make the reciprocal entry that
establishes the value of the assets and liabilities.
Single entry can be as simple as making
a list of the sales income and the purchase expenses. Such a bookkeeping system
is valuable to the smaller business, as it requires little or no bookkeeping or
accounting knowledge. A smaller business can produce its own accounts without
the need for a bookkeeper or accountant particularly if it has access to
bookkeeping templates through bookkeeping software to produce the accounts in
the accounting format required.
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