The
accounts payable ledger, also called the creditors ledger, is a subsidiary
ledger that lists all of the vendors and suppliers that a company owes along
with their account balances and details. In other words, the A/P ledger is a
summary of all the current and outstanding accounts payable. This is a list
that is not detailed in the general ledger of all the vendors and other
companies that are owed money.
In
a typical accounting system, there is only on main accounts payable account in
the general ledger. This keeps the ledger clean and organized without being
cluttered with multiple accounts. The only problem is that companies rarely buy
goods on account from a single vendor. Thus, they need to record multiple
accounts to keep track of the money owed to each vendor.
That’s
where the subsidiary ledger system comes into play. A separate subsidiary
ledger is set up to track the details of each vendor account, so the general
ledger doesn’t have to make tens or even hundreds of accounts payable accounts.
The
accounts payable ledger does just this. It tracks the amounts owed to different
vendors along with the dates, order quantities, and other purchase information
without cluttering up the general ledger with all of this detail. The general
ledger simply pulls total balances from the accounts payable ledger and reports
it in one accounts payable account.
The
A/P ledger can be used to provide current information about vendor balances. It
also acts as an internal control. Bookkeepers and managers can compare the
subsidiary balance with the general ledger balance to help prevention errors.
It also acts as an internal control by segregating they duties of employees.
The employee who records the transactions on a daily basis is not the person
who checks for errors.
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