double-entry bookkeeping

double-entry bookkeeping definition - finance
An account-
ing system that requires two entries, a debit and a credit, for each transaction, so that they equal each other. It is the standard bookkeeping method today. Debit entries increase assets while they reduce liabilities and stockholdersÂ’ equity. Credit entries decrease assets while increasing liabilities and stockholdersÂ’ equity. Double-entry bookkeeping began during the Renais-sance: One of its first written descriptions appeared in 1494 in a math book written by Fra Luca Pacioli.

Webster's New World Finance and Investment Dictionary Copyright © 2003 by Wiley Publishing, Inc., Indianapolis, Indiana.
Used by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

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