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Assets = Liabilities + Owners' Equity
This equation is also the framework for keeping track of money as it flows in and out of your company. Starting with the first penny you earn, you'll record in a general ledger each and every transaction using a double-entry system of debits and credits. Assets get recorded on the top or the left side of the balance sheet; liabilities and owners' equity are recorded on the bottom or the right side of the balance sheet.
The information on each company's general ledger is unique to that business; however, all companies classify their general ledger accounts as assets, liabilities or owners' equity. Businesses use more specific accounts within each classification, for example, "current assets" or "long-term liabilities," to organize and track their finances.
Assets
An asset is anything of value that your company owns — including cash. Assets get recorded on the balance sheet in terms of their dollar values. Remember, even if you used credit to purchase an asset, you still own it. Its full dollar value gets recorded on one side of the balance sheet as an asset, and the amount you owe gets recorded on the other side of the balance sheet as a liability. There are several types of assets:
Liabilities
Anything a company owes to people or businesses other than its owners is considered a liability. There are two types of liabilities:
Owners' Equity
Owners' equity, also called capital, is any debt owed to the business owners. For example, if you invested $50,000 of your savings to start a business, that amount is recorded in a capital account, also referred to as an owners'-equity account. In publicly traded companies, outstanding preferred and common stock also represents owners' equity.
Your business's revenues and expenses are also recorded in capital accounts because they relate to how much money your company makes over a period of time. At the end of each accounting cycle, a business' profits get transferred to a capital account.