Now we begin to look at the "accounting cycle", culminates in closing the books and producing financial statements. While expanding the picture to take in the full accounting cycle and culminates in closing the books and producing financial statements, balances of some accounts are carried forward from period to period, some were not. To understand why, we need to know the differences between these two types of account, which are "nominal" and "real" accounts.
The Nominal Accounts
The nominal accounts are revenue, expense, and dividend accounts, these accounts must be reset to begin the next accounting period.
The Real Accounts
The real accounts are asset, liabilities, and equity accounts, these accounts must be carried forward from period to period.
What Are The Differences?
1.Reset or not
The balance of the real accounts, asset, liabilities, and equity accounts, be carried forward from period to period. In contrast, the nominal accounts are revenue, expense, and dividend accounts, these accounts must be reset to begin the next accounting period. For instance, It's just like your bank accounts, the balance of the account(Real account) is carried forward while you deposit or withdraw. The nominal accounts, on the other hand, reflect the amounts of your deposit and withdraw.
2.The Results or Happening
The amounts of revenues, expenses, and dividend accounts during a particular period, depending on how much you earned or paid. In short, it's the happening events of the period. In contrast, the amounts of assets, liabilities, and equity depend on the results of the prior, it's the achievements that you have already done before measuring the revenues, expenses, and dividends. Recall the example of your bank account, your balance reflects the result of your deposits and withdraw. Your deposits and withdraw are printed on the record of transactions, they are events and activities of your account, reflect the happening nominal events.
Why are they so-called?
The reason why they are so-called "nominal" and "real" accounts, is actually achieved or not. As we know that the net income equals revenues minus expenses, so we have the actual increase or decrease on the balance sheet after the result of the net income. If you have $1,000,000 in revenue, but you also have $1,000,000 in expense, you will end up with zero increase in the assets. Moreover, if the expense is $2,000,000 , you will end up with $1,000,000 in liabilities. The result will finanlly accumulate to the real accounts, the balance sheet, assets, liabilities, and equity.
What type of information is contained in nominal accounts?
Since the nominal accounts are the revenues, expenses, and dividend accounts, so they contain the information to record revenues, expenses, and dividend accounts. The information contained in nominal accounts is usually income statement accounts such as revenue data, expense data, and gain or lose data.
What types in real accounts?
The real accounts are also known as capital accounts, which contain balance sheet accounts, asset data, liability data, and equity data.
Which financial statement contains the information from nominal accounts?
Obviously, the income statement contains the information from nominal accounts, since it has the amounts of revenues and expenses.
Which contains the information from real accounts?
Clearly, the balance sheet involved assets, liabilities, and equity, which contains the information for real accounts.
References
Walther, L. M. (2012). Principles of accounting. Logan, UT: Utah State University. Retrieved from https://www.principlesofaccounting.com/chapter-4/
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