Quantcast

Accounting Equation (Capital)

Last modified by
on
Sep 26, 2023, 3:38:45 PM
Created by
on
Oct 20, 2014, 4:42:26 AM
`C = A - L `
`(A)"Assets"`
`(L)"Liabilities"`
Tags
UUID
7bbe0bd3-5813-11e4-a9fb-bc764e2038f2

The Capital Accounting Equation calculator computes capital based on assets and liabilities.

INSTRUCTIONS: Choose units and enter the following:

  • (A) This is the total assets
  • (L) This is the total liabilities

Capital (C): The calculator returns the capital in U.S. dollars.  However, this can be automatically converted to compatible units via the pull-down menu.

The Math / Science

The Capital Accounting Equation computes the total of a company's Capital.  The Capital Accounting Equation is:

         C = A - L

where:

  • C = Capital
  • A = Assets
  • L = Liabilities

Capital is any economic resource measured in terms of money used by a business to buy what they need to make their products or to provide their services

The Accounting Equation represents the relationship between the assets, liabilities, and the capital of a business.  This is a version of the foundational Accounting Equation solving for total capital, a bottom line metric for financial stability.

APPLICATIONS

The Accounting Equation is the foundation for a double-entry bookkeeping system. In this approach transactions are recorded based on the accounting equation, which is a statement of equality between the company's debits and the credits. In this approach, all accounts are classified into the following five types: assets, liabilities, income/revenues, expenses, or capital gains/losses.  These five types of accounts are then combined into either liabilities or assets, thus feeding more detailed information into the Accounting Equation.

In double-entry bookkeeping, when there is an increase or decrease in one account, there will be corresponding equal decrease or increase in another account. The rules summarizing the relationships between the five types of accounts are:

  1. Assets Accounts - a debit transaction increases assets and a credit transaction decreases assets
  2. Capital Account -  a credit transaction increases capital and a debit transaction decreases capital
  3. Liabilities Accounts: a credit transaction increases liabilities and a debit transaction decreases liabilities
  4. Revenues or Incomes Accounts: a credit transaction increases incomes and gains, and a debit transaction decreases incomes and gains
  5. Expenses or Losses Accounts: a debit transaction increases expenses and losses, and a credit transaction decreases expenses and losses

REFERENCE

[1] Accounting Equation
Source: Wikipedia
URL: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accounting_equation
 License: CC Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International 

[2] Double-entry bookkeeping system
Source: Wikipedia
URL:
 License: CC Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International 

LICENSE

vCalc content is available under the Creative Common Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply.  vCalc also provides terms of use and a privacy policy.

vCalc - Create, Collaborate, Calculate


  • Comments
  • Attachments
  • Stats
No comments
This site uses cookies to give you the best, most relevant experience. By continuing to browse the site you are agreeing to our use of cookies.