Balance Sheet
Question/Statement: Select either the balance sheet or income statement and explain how the use of it may be applied to your everyday life.
The balance sheet may be applied to everyday life in that it can be used to assess past performance, as well as to plan for future undertakings. If, for example, an individual used one's birthday as the balance sheet statement date, then the balance sheet would show assets accumulated up to that point, such as one's bank accounts, furniture, computers, 401K, equity in one's house and/or car and so forth. The individual's liabilities would include one's mortgage and car payments, credit card balances, student loans. The difference between total assets and total liabilities equals the individual's net worth.
The balance sheet may be used to evaluate an individual's performance in everyday life, for example, to see how well certain goals have been met. If, for example, an individual planned to save $25,000 by his or her thirtieth birthday, then the balance sheets shows how close he or she has come to that goal; or, if the goal has been met, or turns out to be unrealistic, the balance sheet can indicate that it is appropriate to pursue another goal. Similarly, if someone chose to use the balance sheet as a planning tool, for example, deciding to pay off one's student loans in a specified time period, then the balance sheet can be used to decide what strategy one uses to achieve that goal. The balance sheet can indicate the need to cut back on other expenses, like entertainment, or to increase his or her income by...
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