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Sunday, May 13, 2012

characteristics of Asset

Other than software companies and the like - employees are not considered as assets, like machinery is, even though they are capable of producing value.

• The probable present benefit involves a capacity, singly or in combination with other assets, in the case of profit oriented enterprises, to contribute directly or indirectly to future net cash flows, and, in the case of not-for-profit organizations, to provide services;

• The entity can control access to the benefit;

 • The transaction or event giving rise to the entity's right to, or control of, the benefit has already occurred.

In the financial accounting sense of the term, it is not necessary to be able to legally enforce the asset's benefit for qualifying a resource as being an asset, provided the entity can control its use by other means.
 The accounting equation relates assets, liabilities, and owner's equity:
 Assets = Liabilities + Stockholder's Equity (Owner's Equity) 

That is, the total value of a firms Assets are always equal to the combined value of its "equity" and "liabilities."
 The accounting equation is the mathematical structure of the balance sheet.
 Assets are listed on the balance sheet. Similarly, in economics an asset is any form in which wealth can be held.
Probably the most accepted accounting definition of asset is the one used by the International Accounting Standards Board. The following is a quotation from the IFRS Framework: "An asset is a resource controlled by the enterprise as a result of past events and from which future economic benefits are expected to flow to the enterprise."
 Assets are formally controlled and managed within larger organizations via the use of asset tracking tools. These monitor the purchasing, upgrading, servicing, licensing, disposal etc., of both physical and non-physical assets.
 In a company's balance sheet certain divisions are required by generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), which vary from country to country.[

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