statement of assets, liabilities and net worth
Current Liabilities to Total Liabilities Ratio = Current Liabilities / Total Liabilities Current Liabilities to Total Liabilities Ratio = 7714 / 18187 Current Liabilities to Total Liabilities Ratio = 0.42 or 42%
Remember the basic accounting equations Assets = Liabilities + Owners Equity (Stockholders Equity) Assets increase with a debit Liabilities as well as Equity increase with a credit Liabilities have a credit balance (meaning you must credit the account to "increase" it and debit the account to "decrease" it) this makes liabilities a credit.
liabilities can be classified as short term liabilities and long term liabilities
I have to say that this question doesn't seem plausible. The reason being,Current Liabilities are liabilities that are short-termed, meaning they will be paid in a very short time. Usually one year or less.Long-Term Liabilities are liabilities that are much longer and will be paid out during a long period of time, more than a year.There should be no current liabilities in long-term liabilities unless an error was made during the accounting process and an current liability was recorded as an long-term, in which case, an adjusting entry must be made to show this error.Other than an accounting error, there are not current liabilities in long-term to "take out".
With Limited Liabilities.
statement of assets, liabilities and net worth
Current Liabilities to Total Liabilities Ratio = Current Liabilities / Total Liabilities Current Liabilities to Total Liabilities Ratio = 7714 / 18187 Current Liabilities to Total Liabilities Ratio = 0.42 or 42%
Remember the basic accounting equations Assets = Liabilities + Owners Equity (Stockholders Equity) Assets increase with a debit Liabilities as well as Equity increase with a credit Liabilities have a credit balance (meaning you must credit the account to "increase" it and debit the account to "decrease" it) this makes liabilities a credit.
liabilities can be classified as short term liabilities and long term liabilities
I have to say that this question doesn't seem plausible. The reason being,Current Liabilities are liabilities that are short-termed, meaning they will be paid in a very short time. Usually one year or less.Long-Term Liabilities are liabilities that are much longer and will be paid out during a long period of time, more than a year.There should be no current liabilities in long-term liabilities unless an error was made during the accounting process and an current liability was recorded as an long-term, in which case, an adjusting entry must be made to show this error.Other than an accounting error, there are not current liabilities in long-term to "take out".
The basic elements of accounting are assets liabilities and capital and they all have meaning. Assets are the resources that a company owns and utilizes for the business. Liabilities are simply obligations or debts that the company owes. Capital on the other hand is the money that is invested in the business in order to generate revenue.
current liabilities and long term liabilities
Liabilities Liabilities
Liabilities
Assets - Capital = Liabilities
Current Liabilities in accounting are amounts that are owed by a business. The two types of current liabilities are short-term and long-term liabilities.