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by zie
805 days ago
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I agree generally speaking, but what does that have to do with your local books? Nothing. You almost certainly don't have access to your employer's books. Also, the ledger entries for "bregma, services rendered" i.e. payroll will be much more complicated than that, there will be taxes, deductions, etc they have to account for as well. |
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It's how double-entry bookkeeping works. Money can neither be created nor destroyed. On your local books you have an account where money goes and appears to be destroyed, but in reality there is a doubled entry in someone else's books. Just because you're unaware of it does not mean it does not exist.
And it's true that bookkeepers will have splits in their ledger in which one transaction consists of multiple entries, but that's a convenient shortcut for consolidating multiple items each of which is one half of a double entry. It has no bearing on how double-entry bookkeeping works and just needlessly complicates a description of the fundamentals. It has only to do with conventions for recording double-entry bookkeeping, just like using DB and CR to indicate whether entry is moving money into or out of an account.