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A ledger is a book or collection of accounts in which account transactions are recorded. Each account has an opening or carry-forward balance, and would record each transaction as either a debit or credit in separate columns, and the ending or closing balance.


Overview

The ledger is a permanent summary of all amounts entered in supporting journals which list individual transactions by date. Every transaction flows from a journal, to one or more ledgers. A company's financial statements are generated from summary totals in the ledgers. Ledgers include: *
Sales ledger A sales journal is a specialized accounting journal and it is also a prime entry book used in an accounting system to keep track of the sales of items that customers(debtors) have purchased on account by charging a receivable on the debit side of ...
, records accounts receivable. This ledger consists of the financial transactions made by customers to the company. * Purchase ledger records money spent for purchasing by the company. * General ledger representing the five main account types: assets, liabilities, income, expenses, and
capital Capital may refer to: Common uses * Capital city, a municipality of primary status ** List of national capital cities * Capital letter, an upper-case letter Economics and social sciences * Capital (economics), the durable produced goods used f ...
. For every debit recorded in a ledger, there must be a corresponding credit, so that the debits equal the credits in the grand totals.


Types on the basis of purpose

The three types of ledgers are the general, debtors, and creditors. The general ledger accumulates information from journals. Each month all journals are totaled and posted to the General Ledger. The purpose of the General Ledger is therefore to organize and summarize the individual transactions listed in all the journals. The Debtors Ledger accumulates information from the sales journal. The purpose of the Debtors Ledger is to provide knowledge about which customers owe money to the business, and how much. The Creditors Ledger accumulates information from the purchases journal. The purpose of the Creditors Ledger is to provide knowledge about which suppliers the business owes money to, and how much.


Etymology

The term ''ledger'' stems from the English dialect forms ''liggen'' or ''leggen'', meaning "to lie or lay" (Dutch: ''liggen'' or ''leggen'', German: ''liegen'' or ''legen''); in sense it is adapted from the Dutch substantive ''legger'', properly "a book lying or remaining regularly in one place". Originally, a ledger was a large volume of scripture or service book kept in one place in church and openly accessible. According to Charles Wriothesley's ''
Chronicle A chronicle ( la, chronica, from Greek ''chroniká'', from , ''chrónos'' – "time") is a historical account of events arranged in chronological order, as in a timeline. Typically, equal weight is given for historically important events and lo ...
'' (1538), "The curates should provide a booke of the bible in Englishe, of the largest volume, to be a ledger in the same church for the parishioners to read on." In application of this original meaning the commercial usage of the term is for the "principal book of account" in a business house.


See also

*
Bookkeeping Bookkeeping is the recording of financial transactions, and is part of the process of accounting in business and other organizations. It involves preparing source documents for all transactions, operations, and other events of a business. Tr ...
* Debits and credits * Specialized journals * Final accounts * Distributed ledger, sometimes called a shared ledger, is a consensus of replicated, shared, and synchronized
digital data Digital data, in information theory and information systems, is information represented as a string of discrete symbols each of which can take on one of only a finite number of values from some alphabet, such as letters or digits. An example i ...
geographically spread across multiple sites, countries, and/or institutions.


Notes


References

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Further reading


Business Owner's Toolkit: General Ledger
from Wolters Kluwer
General Ledger Entries
from NetMBA Business Knowledge Center Accounting journals and ledgers {{accounting-stub