| Hmm... well, this question is quite old now. But since it got posted to and thrown back to the top of the list, I'll go ahead and post on it. (Sorry, chink, I meant to come back and check your attempt, but I just got really busy trying to finish up my taxes, and then catching up other stuff that got behind while doing taxes.)
Assets are the resources of the company, the stuff the company uses in order to run their business. (Even if indirectly.) It's the stuff they own.
Liabilities and Equity are how they financed everything. They either financed it with ownership (equity) or with borrowing (debt). Since everything that is owned must have been financed in some way, the two sides have to equal.
Another way to look at it is that "equity" means a right or claim to something. Someone has a claim to everything the company owns. Some of them are creditors. And whatever is leftover belongs to the owners. That whole right side is actually equity by that definition. Creditor equity and owner's equity. So what is owned must equal the amount that has a claim on it. |