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Accruals |
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Accruals Accounts on a balance sheet that represent liabilities and non-cash-based assets used in accrual-based accounting. These accounts include, among many others, accounts payable, accounts receivable, goodwill, future tax liability and future interest expense. Notes: The use of accrual accounts has greatly increased the amount of information on accounting statements. Before the use of accruals only cash transactions were recorded on these statements. But cash transactions don't give information about other important business activities, such as revenue based on credit and future liabilities. By using accruals, a company can measure what it owes looking forward and what cash revenue it expects to receive. It also allows a company to show assets that do not have a cash value, such as goodwill. How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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? Mentioned in | ? References in periodicals archive | |
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And the company works on
a revenue basis, not an accural basis. It had appeared from the proposed regulations that cash-basis S
corporations might have to recalculate incomes on an accural basis if
they would be required to use that method as C corporations. At any point
in time, the balance in the accured postretirement benefits account
represents a temporary difference between financial and tax accounting,
which requires accural of a deferred tax asset. |
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