table-allowance - significado y definición. Qué es table-allowance
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Qué (quién) es table-allowance - definición

ACCOUNTING TERM FOR DEPRECIATION OF FIXED ASSETS
Capital Consumption Allowance; Capital consumption allowance; Capital Consumption Allowance (CCA)
  • Ameco]] data base.

Table Alphabeticall         
  • The title page of the third edition of ''Table Alphabeticall''.
ENGLISH DICTIONARY PUBLISHED IN 1604
A Table Alphabeticall; Table alphabeticall; Table Alphabetical
A Table Alphabeticall is the abbreviated title of the first monolingual dictionary in the English language, created by Robert Cawdrey and first published in London in 1604.
Table (database)         
SET OF DATA ELEMENTS ARRANGED IN ROWS AND COLUMNS AS PART OF A DATABASE
Database table; Database Tables; Cell (database); Table (SQL); SQL table; Base table
A table is a collection of related data held in a table format within a database. It consists of columns and rows.
allowance         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Allowances; Allowance (disambiguation)
I. n.
1.
Permission, leave, license, permit, authorization, connivance, sanction, authority, approval, approbation, sufferance.
2.
Admission, acknowledgment, concession, assent.
3.
Grant for support, stated maintenance, commission.
4.
Qualification, modification, extenuation, limitation, exception.
5.
Ration, stated quantity (of food or drink).
II. v. a.
Put upon allowance, limit in the supply of food.

Wikipedia

Consumption of fixed capital

Consumption of fixed capital (CFC) is a term used in business accounts, tax assessments and national accounts for depreciation of fixed assets. CFC is used in preference to "depreciation" to emphasize that fixed capital is used up in the process of generating new output, and because unlike depreciation it is not valued at historic cost but at current market value (so-called "economic depreciation"); CFC may also include other expenses incurred in using or installing fixed assets beyond actual depreciation charges. Normally the term applies only to producing enterprises, but sometimes it applies also to real estate assets.

CFC refers to a depreciation charge (or "write-off") against the gross income of a producing enterprise, which reflects the decline in value of fixed capital being operated with. Fixed assets will decline in value after they are purchased for use in production, due to wear and tear, changed market valuation and possibly market obsolescence. Thus, CFC represents a compensation for the loss of value of fixed assets to an enterprise.

According to the 2008 manual of the United Nations System of National Accounts,

"Consumption of fixed capital is the decline, during the course of the accounting period, in the current value of the stock of fixed assets owned and used by a producer as a result of physical deterioration, normal obsolescence or normal accidental damage. The term depreciation is often used in place of consumption of fixed capital but it is avoided in the SNA because in commercial accounting the term depreciation is often used in the context of writing off historic costs whereas in the SNA consumption of fixed capital is dependent on the current value of the asset." — UNSNA 2008, section H., p. 123 [1])

CFC tends to increase as the asset gets older, even if the efficiency and rental remain constant to the end. The larger the depreciation write-off, the larger the gross income of a business. Consequently, business owners consider this accounting entry as very important; after all, it affects both their income, and their ability to invest.