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by kgwgk
2148 days ago
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Yes, balancing is important. That’s why I’d prefer to end with assets that make sense in the balance sheet (or maybe you're happy to ignore balance sheets and don't want meaningful numbers?). I don’t see what do you gain by making the assets negative. Believe it or not, I’ve seen financial accounts quite more complex than two lines (and they never included those CR/DB annotations in the balance sheets or income statements). |
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> I’ve seen financial accounts quite more complex than two lines
Definitely.
For hundreds of years the convention has been columns. Credit values in the right-hand column, debit values in a left-hand column. The column is the label of which type of money it is. Most accountancy software (other than very simple personal tracking apps) use this when displaying.
Your printed bank statement probably does (and it may label the columns credit and debit as well, though never line by line, iirc). Mine did back when paper was the thing.
Digital bank statements usually do use negative numbers (DB being negative, as I've been saying). You are used to seeing this, but not used to thinking in your own accounting terms rather than theres. Which is fine. But there is a reason that accountancy education has to undo that assumption.