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accounting identity : ウィキペディア英語版
accounting identity
In accounting, finance and economics, an accounting identity is an equality that must be true regardless of the value of its variables, or a statement that by definition (or construction) must be true.〔"Principles of Macroeconomics", Mankiw et al., pp. 211-212, 2002〕〔"Macroeconomics (Edition )", Mankiw & Scarth, p. 25, 2004〕 Where an accounting identity applies, any deviation from numerical equality signifies an error in formulation, calculation or measurement.〔(Suranovic, "International Finance Theory and Policy" ): "It is important to note that this relationship is an accounting identity. This means that the relationship must be true as long as all variables are measured properly."〕
The term ''accounting identity'' may be used to distinguish between propositions that are theories (which may or may not be true, or relationships that may or may not always hold) and statements that are by definition true. Despite the fact that the statements are by definition true, the underlying figures as measured or estimated may not ''add up'' due to measurement error, particularly for certain identities in macroeconomics.〔See, for example, (Suranovic, "International Finance Theory and Policy" ): "In practice, this identity rarely adds up, however, because the variables are not typically measured accurately."〕
==Description==
The most basic identity in accounting is that the balance sheet must balance, that is, that assets must equal the sum of liabilities (debts) and equity (the value of the firm to the owner). In its most common formulation it is known as the accounting equation:
:''Assets = Liabilities + Equity''
where debt includes non-financial liabilities. Balance sheets are commonly presented as two parallel columns, each summing to the same total, with the assets on the left, and liabilities and owners' equity on the right. The parallel columns of Assets and Equities are, in effect, two views of the same set of business facts.
The balance of the balance sheet reflects the conventions of double-entry bookkeeping, by which business transactions are recorded. In double-entry bookkeeping, every transaction is recorded by paired entries, and typically a transaction will result in two or more pairs of entries. The sale of product, for example, would record both a receipt of cash (or the creation of a trade receivable in the case of an extension of credit to the buyer) and a reduction in the inventory of goods for sale; the receipt of cash or a trade receivable is an addition to revenue, and the reduction in goods inventory is an addition to expense (an "expense" is the "expending" of an asset, in this case, the inventory). Thus, there are two pairs of entries: an addition to revenue balanced by an addition to cash; a subtraction from inventory balanced by an addition to expense. The cash and inventory accounts are asset accounts; the revenue and expense accounts will close at the end of the accounting period to affect equity.
Double-entry bookkeeping conventions are employed as well for the National Accounts, so the definition and measurement of important economic concepts, such as national product, aggregate income, investment and savings, as well as the balance of payments and balance of trade, involve accounting identities. At base, the application of double-entry bookkeeping conventions to the problems of measuring aggregate economic activity derives from the recognition that every purchase is also a sale, every payment made is also income received, and every act of lending also an act of borrowing.
Here the term ''identity'' refers to the concept of a mathematical identity or a logical tautology, since it defines an equivalence which does not depend on the particular values of the variables.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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