General Ledger
The general ledger is the core of your company’s financial records. These
constitute the central “books” of your system, and every transaction flows
through the general ledger. These records remain as a permanent track of the
history of all financial transactions since day one of the life of your company.
Subledgers and the General Ledger
Your accounting system will have a number of subsidiary ledgers (called
subledgers) for items such as cash, accounts receivable, and accounts payable.
All the entries that are entered (called posted) to these subledgers will
transact through the general ledger account. For example, when a credit sale
posted in the account receivable subledger turns into cash due to a payment, the
transaction will be posted to the general ledger and the two (cash and accounts
receivable) subledgers as well.
There are times when items will go directly to the general ledger without any
subledger posting. These are primarily capital financial transactions that have
no operational subledgers. These may include items such as capital
contributions, loan proceeds, loan repayments (principal), and proceeds from
sale of assets. These items will be linked to your balance sheet but not to your
profit and loss statement.
Setting up the General Ledger
There are two main issues to understand when setting up the general ledger. One
is their linkage to your financial reports, and the other is the establishment
of opening balances.
The two primary financial documents of any company are their balance sheet
and the profit and loss statement, and both of these are drawn directly from the
company’s general ledger. The order of how the numerical balances appear is
determined by the chart of accounts , but all entries that are entered will
appear. The general ledger accrues the balances that make up the line items on
these reports, and the changes are reflected in the profit and loss statement as
well.
The opening balances that are established on your general ledgers may not
always be zero as you might assume. On the asset side, you will have all
tangible assets (the value of all machinery, equipment, and inventory) that is
available as well as any cash that has been invested as working capital. On the
liability side, you will have any bank (or stockholder) loans that were used, as
well as trade credit or lease payments that you may have secured in order to
start the company. You will also increase your stockholder equity in the amount
you have invested, but not loaned to, the business.
The General Ledger Creates an Audit Trail
Don’t let the word audit strike fear in your heart; I am not talking about a tax
audit. Although, if you are called to respond to an outside audit for any
reason, a well-maintained general ledger is essential.
But you will also want an internal trail of transaction so that you can trace
any discrepancy (such as double billing or an unrecorded payment) through your
own system. You must be able to find the origin of any transaction in order to
verify its accuracy, and the general ledger is where you will do this.