1.4. Focusing on Transactions

NOTE

Accounting focuses on transactions. A good bookkeeping system captures and records every transaction that takes place without missing a beat. Transactions are economic exchanges between a business or other entity and the parties with which the entity interacts and makes deals. Transactions are the lifeblood of every business, the heartbeat of activity that keeps it going. Understanding accounting, to a large extent, means understanding how accountants record the financial effects of transactions. The immediate and future financial effects of some transactions can be difficult to determine.

A business carries on economic exchanges with six basic types of persons or entities:

  • Its customers, who buy the products and services that the business sells.

  • Its employees, who provide services to the business and are paid wages and salaries and provided with benefits, such as a retirement plan, medical insurance, workers' compensation, and unemployment insurance.

  • Its suppliers and vendors, who sell a wide range of things to the business, such as legal advice, products for resale, electricity and gas, telephone service, computers, vehicles, tools and equipment, furniture, and even audits.

  • Its debt sources of capital who loan money to the business, charge interest on the amount loaned, and are due to be repaid at definite dates in the future.

  • Its equity sources of capital, the individuals and financial institutions that invest money in the business and expect ...

Get Accounting For Dummies®, 4th Edition now with the O’Reilly learning platform.

O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.