For the first entry, yes, pretty much. If a company receives money from Income that is recorded as income and cash, cash being the asset account. If the company records the income as a recievable, meaning the customer hasn't paid yet, then the account would be an Accounts Receivable, also an asset account.
Though income is recorded on the Income Statement and not the Balance Sheet, the revenue from said income becomes an asset, adjusting entries later on the books will take care of anything else, such as merchandise, inventory, cost of goods sold (if a merchandising company) or other expenses related to said income.
No depreciation expense is recorded in the income statement. As you know though every debit needs a corresponding credit so for the amount of the debit to depreciation expense in the income statement there is a corresponding credit to accumulated depreciation in the balance sheet. Which is a reduction of a fixed asset or more of a contra account to the fixed asset account. So you'd have the fixed asset cost, a debit balance, and an accumulated depreciation account, a credit balance. These two accounts when combined represent your net book balance of your fixed assets.
No! the asset revaluation reserve equal to the amount of depreciation charged during the year on the revalued asset should to be transaferred to the Retained Earning.
no
The rules of the double entry state that " For every dr there must be a corresponding cr and for every cr there must be a corresponding dr "
if software is purchased and price is paid at once and used for many years then it is fixed asset but if you purchase a software and after that every year you need to renew the license of using that software then this lisence cost is current asset and price paid for purchasing software is fixed asset. For Example: software purchased for $1000 and lisence renew fee for every year is $100 then $1000 is fixed asset and $100 is current asset or revenue asset.
No depreciation expense is recorded in the income statement. As you know though every debit needs a corresponding credit so for the amount of the debit to depreciation expense in the income statement there is a corresponding credit to accumulated depreciation in the balance sheet. Which is a reduction of a fixed asset or more of a contra account to the fixed asset account. So you'd have the fixed asset cost, a debit balance, and an accumulated depreciation account, a credit balance. These two accounts when combined represent your net book balance of your fixed assets.
In the balance sheet net income is not treated as an asset, it is added to capital, however if one is to look a bit deeper into the the entire cycle net income would make up part of the current asset. Income from sales would increase your cash, bank of accounts receivables. Remember accounting is double entry and for every debit there must be a corresponding credit.
No! the asset revaluation reserve equal to the amount of depreciation charged during the year on the revalued asset should to be transaferred to the Retained Earning.
no
No it will not.
The rules of the double entry state that " For every dr there must be a corresponding cr and for every cr there must be a corresponding dr "
Yes
there is a corresponding responsibility (A+)
For almost every right a citizen has, there is a corresponding responsibility.
if software is purchased and price is paid at once and used for many years then it is fixed asset but if you purchase a software and after that every year you need to renew the license of using that software then this lisence cost is current asset and price paid for purchasing software is fixed asset. For Example: software purchased for $1000 and lisence renew fee for every year is $100 then $1000 is fixed asset and $100 is current asset or revenue asset.
definitely the worth of a fixed asset decreases after charging depreciation on it, because the efficiency of the fixed asset decreases with the every next financial year.
what is the income for a hairdresser every year