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current liability

   Also found in: Financial, Wikipedia 0.02 sec.

current liability

Amount a business owes currently to its creditors and suppliers that falls due within one year from the balance sheet date. They are disclosed in a company's accounts on the balance sheet. Current liabilities are short-term business commitments such as creditors (including employees), bank overdrafts, dividends, tax, and interest, and they normally require a company to convert some its current assets into cash to pay them off.

The five main categories of current liabilities are: accounts payable, (money owed to suppliers or employees); accrued expenses (debts accrued but not yet payable); income tax payable (a specific type of accrued expense, tax owed but not yet due); short-term notes payable (the amount drawn from an arranged line of credit that falls due in the following 12 month period); and long-term debt (the element of long-term debt which falls due in the near term, that is within the following 12 month period). Current liabilities are not to be confused with long-term liabilities such as debt that is not due for over a year.



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This legislation increases the deductibility limit to 140% of current liability, allowing plans to save more for future retirees and avoid future funding shortfalls.
412 (1)(7)(C)(ii) (and parallel Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 Section 302(d)(7)(C)(ii)) to determine current liability for participants and beneficiaries (other than disabled participants) of defined-benefit plans for plan years beginning in 2007.
Unfortunately, the current liability system has failed patients.
 
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