Hypernym for bills, expenses, salaries, other incomes, etc





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I'm building a budgeting database application/program and I'm looking for two words as names of tables or variables in it. This question seeks one of them:



It encompasses the following: I have bills & expenses, and I have sources of income. I'm looking for a hypernym that encompasses all those.



To clarify, there are things I'm not looking for:



a. There are questions here already on english.stackexchange that ask for a hypernym for income/expense or debit/credit but the answers all seem to refer to the transaction (the event of transferring money). I'm distinctly not looking for a word for that (the word transaction covers that I believe).



b. One might think of a word like "entity" that might refer to the company AT&T that I pay the phone bill to, and Apple, that I pay my iCloud subscription to each month. But maybe I also pay Apple for my Apple Music subscription each month. Those last two are two different items. So I'm not looking for a name for the companies or other entities I'm making the payments to.



I get a monthly bill from AT&T for the phone. I get a monthly bill from Apple for Apple Music, and another monthly bill from Apple for my iCloud subscription. Those are three records in this table (even though two are from the same company). If I was only looking at outgoings I might call this table Bills, but I'm looking for a hypernym that would encompass those and incomes as well: eg. two other records in this table might be 'salary from my job', and 'rent paid to me for a property I rent out'.



Edit/update: As Roger Sinasohn pointed out in the comments: yes, I'm looking for a countable noun.



An example sentence could be where I click a button to delete a bunch of these records, and need to pop up a confirmation warning first:



"Do you really want to delete these whatevers?"



I'd really rather not have to say "Do you really want to delete these incomes and expenses?" or whatever.



It doesn't have to be one word. eg. another question asked for a hypernym for anywhere that serves food (restaurant, cafe, fast-food place, etc.). If that's what I was looking for here, then "eating establishment" might be ok. But if more than one word, it can't just be a string of all the words I'm trying to find the hypernym for (incomes, expenses, etc.).










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  • 1




    they are all ledger line-Items
    – Jim
    Oct 2 at 6:07










  • @Jim Thanks. So I read up on ledgers and what they are. From what I can tell, in accounting, isn't a ledger line-item simply an account? Or is there some difference? Might "account" be the word I'm looking for here?
    – DavidT
    yesterday

















up vote
2
down vote

favorite












I'm building a budgeting database application/program and I'm looking for two words as names of tables or variables in it. This question seeks one of them:



It encompasses the following: I have bills & expenses, and I have sources of income. I'm looking for a hypernym that encompasses all those.



To clarify, there are things I'm not looking for:



a. There are questions here already on english.stackexchange that ask for a hypernym for income/expense or debit/credit but the answers all seem to refer to the transaction (the event of transferring money). I'm distinctly not looking for a word for that (the word transaction covers that I believe).



b. One might think of a word like "entity" that might refer to the company AT&T that I pay the phone bill to, and Apple, that I pay my iCloud subscription to each month. But maybe I also pay Apple for my Apple Music subscription each month. Those last two are two different items. So I'm not looking for a name for the companies or other entities I'm making the payments to.



I get a monthly bill from AT&T for the phone. I get a monthly bill from Apple for Apple Music, and another monthly bill from Apple for my iCloud subscription. Those are three records in this table (even though two are from the same company). If I was only looking at outgoings I might call this table Bills, but I'm looking for a hypernym that would encompass those and incomes as well: eg. two other records in this table might be 'salary from my job', and 'rent paid to me for a property I rent out'.



Edit/update: As Roger Sinasohn pointed out in the comments: yes, I'm looking for a countable noun.



An example sentence could be where I click a button to delete a bunch of these records, and need to pop up a confirmation warning first:



"Do you really want to delete these whatevers?"



I'd really rather not have to say "Do you really want to delete these incomes and expenses?" or whatever.



It doesn't have to be one word. eg. another question asked for a hypernym for anywhere that serves food (restaurant, cafe, fast-food place, etc.). If that's what I was looking for here, then "eating establishment" might be ok. But if more than one word, it can't just be a string of all the words I'm trying to find the hypernym for (incomes, expenses, etc.).










share|improve this question




















  • 1




    they are all ledger line-Items
    – Jim
    Oct 2 at 6:07










  • @Jim Thanks. So I read up on ledgers and what they are. From what I can tell, in accounting, isn't a ledger line-item simply an account? Or is there some difference? Might "account" be the word I'm looking for here?
    – DavidT
    yesterday













up vote
2
down vote

favorite









up vote
2
down vote

favorite











I'm building a budgeting database application/program and I'm looking for two words as names of tables or variables in it. This question seeks one of them:



It encompasses the following: I have bills & expenses, and I have sources of income. I'm looking for a hypernym that encompasses all those.



To clarify, there are things I'm not looking for:



a. There are questions here already on english.stackexchange that ask for a hypernym for income/expense or debit/credit but the answers all seem to refer to the transaction (the event of transferring money). I'm distinctly not looking for a word for that (the word transaction covers that I believe).



b. One might think of a word like "entity" that might refer to the company AT&T that I pay the phone bill to, and Apple, that I pay my iCloud subscription to each month. But maybe I also pay Apple for my Apple Music subscription each month. Those last two are two different items. So I'm not looking for a name for the companies or other entities I'm making the payments to.



I get a monthly bill from AT&T for the phone. I get a monthly bill from Apple for Apple Music, and another monthly bill from Apple for my iCloud subscription. Those are three records in this table (even though two are from the same company). If I was only looking at outgoings I might call this table Bills, but I'm looking for a hypernym that would encompass those and incomes as well: eg. two other records in this table might be 'salary from my job', and 'rent paid to me for a property I rent out'.



Edit/update: As Roger Sinasohn pointed out in the comments: yes, I'm looking for a countable noun.



An example sentence could be where I click a button to delete a bunch of these records, and need to pop up a confirmation warning first:



"Do you really want to delete these whatevers?"



I'd really rather not have to say "Do you really want to delete these incomes and expenses?" or whatever.



It doesn't have to be one word. eg. another question asked for a hypernym for anywhere that serves food (restaurant, cafe, fast-food place, etc.). If that's what I was looking for here, then "eating establishment" might be ok. But if more than one word, it can't just be a string of all the words I'm trying to find the hypernym for (incomes, expenses, etc.).










share|improve this question















I'm building a budgeting database application/program and I'm looking for two words as names of tables or variables in it. This question seeks one of them:



It encompasses the following: I have bills & expenses, and I have sources of income. I'm looking for a hypernym that encompasses all those.



To clarify, there are things I'm not looking for:



a. There are questions here already on english.stackexchange that ask for a hypernym for income/expense or debit/credit but the answers all seem to refer to the transaction (the event of transferring money). I'm distinctly not looking for a word for that (the word transaction covers that I believe).



b. One might think of a word like "entity" that might refer to the company AT&T that I pay the phone bill to, and Apple, that I pay my iCloud subscription to each month. But maybe I also pay Apple for my Apple Music subscription each month. Those last two are two different items. So I'm not looking for a name for the companies or other entities I'm making the payments to.



I get a monthly bill from AT&T for the phone. I get a monthly bill from Apple for Apple Music, and another monthly bill from Apple for my iCloud subscription. Those are three records in this table (even though two are from the same company). If I was only looking at outgoings I might call this table Bills, but I'm looking for a hypernym that would encompass those and incomes as well: eg. two other records in this table might be 'salary from my job', and 'rent paid to me for a property I rent out'.



Edit/update: As Roger Sinasohn pointed out in the comments: yes, I'm looking for a countable noun.



An example sentence could be where I click a button to delete a bunch of these records, and need to pop up a confirmation warning first:



"Do you really want to delete these whatevers?"



I'd really rather not have to say "Do you really want to delete these incomes and expenses?" or whatever.



It doesn't have to be one word. eg. another question asked for a hypernym for anywhere that serves food (restaurant, cafe, fast-food place, etc.). If that's what I was looking for here, then "eating establishment" might be ok. But if more than one word, it can't just be a string of all the words I'm trying to find the hypernym for (incomes, expenses, etc.).







hypernyms






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edited yesterday

























asked Oct 2 at 3:22









DavidT

262




262








  • 1




    they are all ledger line-Items
    – Jim
    Oct 2 at 6:07










  • @Jim Thanks. So I read up on ledgers and what they are. From what I can tell, in accounting, isn't a ledger line-item simply an account? Or is there some difference? Might "account" be the word I'm looking for here?
    – DavidT
    yesterday














  • 1




    they are all ledger line-Items
    – Jim
    Oct 2 at 6:07










  • @Jim Thanks. So I read up on ledgers and what they are. From what I can tell, in accounting, isn't a ledger line-item simply an account? Or is there some difference? Might "account" be the word I'm looking for here?
    – DavidT
    yesterday








1




1




they are all ledger line-Items
– Jim
Oct 2 at 6:07




they are all ledger line-Items
– Jim
Oct 2 at 6:07












@Jim Thanks. So I read up on ledgers and what they are. From what I can tell, in accounting, isn't a ledger line-item simply an account? Or is there some difference? Might "account" be the word I'm looking for here?
– DavidT
yesterday




@Jim Thanks. So I read up on ledgers and what they are. From what I can tell, in accounting, isn't a ledger line-item simply an account? Or is there some difference? Might "account" be the word I'm looking for here?
– DavidT
yesterday










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
2
down vote













I would call these things your finances. Consider definition 1.2 from the Oxford Dictionaries:




finance



noun



[mass noun]





  1. The management of large amounts of money, especially by governments or large companies.



    [as modifier] ‘the firm's finance department’



    1.1 Monetary support for an enterprise.



    ‘the clearing banks are important sources of finance’



    1.2 finances The monetary resources and affairs of a state, organization, or person.



    ‘the club's finances are stretched to the limit’






So all of your expenses and income comprise your finances.






share|improve this answer





















  • Hmm... interesting, but I think "finance" is too generic a term here. Almost everything in the entire application could be referred to as finances. I'd prefer something a little more specific. One other point too: Ideally I need a countable noun. a bill, an expense, a salary. Since there's no such thing as "a finance" it's not a good choice here. Still, thanks!
    – DavidT
    Oct 3 at 16:50










  • I understand... but I'm not sure there's a single word that encompasses expense items and revenue items. I think the closest you'll likely get is, as @Jim suggested, general ledger line items.
    – Roger Sinasohn
    Oct 3 at 17:32










  • Also, you might want to edit your question to note that you're looking for a countable noun and add a sample sentence (such as you might write for documentation) showing how the word you're looking for would be used. Lastly, are you looking for something simply for internal use as a table/variable name or something that users would see (on screen and in documentation)? If the former, as long as you have adequate technical documentation for future developers/support staff, you could call it anything you like.
    – Roger Sinasohn
    Oct 3 at 17:37


















up vote
0
down vote













Use the following to summarise “bills & expenses, and sources of income.”: revenue and expenditure




revenue

Revenue is money that a company, organization, or government receives from people.



expenditure

Expenditure is the spending of money on something, or the money that is spent on something.




The compound term, revenue expenditure, is used in businesses




revenue expenditure



the amount of money spent by a business or organization on general operating costs such as rent, insurance, heating, maintenance etc







share|improve this answer





















  • Hmm... Thanks, but it seems by that definition "revenue expenditure" refers to the amount of money, as opposed to the item (the bill, expense, source of salary, etc.) itself...?
    – DavidT
    Oct 3 at 16:51


















up vote
0
down vote













Well, what type of report(s) do you want to generate? Generally, in the context of a personal (or home) budget, I assume discretionary income is the bottom line, that is, if "expenses" means living expenses and does not include discretionary spending (like Apple Music probably, unless you're in the music business...or can't 'live' without it).



So, in this case, maybe these three variables are grouped in order to determine...net discretionary income? Ha-ha, nah, I would say they're cash flows, inflows and outflows (DPI, bills, expenses, and the like).



BTW, I realize this is personal income, but some businesses utilize cash flow statements for budgeting, in addition to their main purposes.






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    3 Answers
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    3 Answers
    3






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    active

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    active

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    up vote
    2
    down vote













    I would call these things your finances. Consider definition 1.2 from the Oxford Dictionaries:




    finance



    noun



    [mass noun]





    1. The management of large amounts of money, especially by governments or large companies.



      [as modifier] ‘the firm's finance department’



      1.1 Monetary support for an enterprise.



      ‘the clearing banks are important sources of finance’



      1.2 finances The monetary resources and affairs of a state, organization, or person.



      ‘the club's finances are stretched to the limit’






    So all of your expenses and income comprise your finances.






    share|improve this answer





















    • Hmm... interesting, but I think "finance" is too generic a term here. Almost everything in the entire application could be referred to as finances. I'd prefer something a little more specific. One other point too: Ideally I need a countable noun. a bill, an expense, a salary. Since there's no such thing as "a finance" it's not a good choice here. Still, thanks!
      – DavidT
      Oct 3 at 16:50










    • I understand... but I'm not sure there's a single word that encompasses expense items and revenue items. I think the closest you'll likely get is, as @Jim suggested, general ledger line items.
      – Roger Sinasohn
      Oct 3 at 17:32










    • Also, you might want to edit your question to note that you're looking for a countable noun and add a sample sentence (such as you might write for documentation) showing how the word you're looking for would be used. Lastly, are you looking for something simply for internal use as a table/variable name or something that users would see (on screen and in documentation)? If the former, as long as you have adequate technical documentation for future developers/support staff, you could call it anything you like.
      – Roger Sinasohn
      Oct 3 at 17:37















    up vote
    2
    down vote













    I would call these things your finances. Consider definition 1.2 from the Oxford Dictionaries:




    finance



    noun



    [mass noun]





    1. The management of large amounts of money, especially by governments or large companies.



      [as modifier] ‘the firm's finance department’



      1.1 Monetary support for an enterprise.



      ‘the clearing banks are important sources of finance’



      1.2 finances The monetary resources and affairs of a state, organization, or person.



      ‘the club's finances are stretched to the limit’






    So all of your expenses and income comprise your finances.






    share|improve this answer





















    • Hmm... interesting, but I think "finance" is too generic a term here. Almost everything in the entire application could be referred to as finances. I'd prefer something a little more specific. One other point too: Ideally I need a countable noun. a bill, an expense, a salary. Since there's no such thing as "a finance" it's not a good choice here. Still, thanks!
      – DavidT
      Oct 3 at 16:50










    • I understand... but I'm not sure there's a single word that encompasses expense items and revenue items. I think the closest you'll likely get is, as @Jim suggested, general ledger line items.
      – Roger Sinasohn
      Oct 3 at 17:32










    • Also, you might want to edit your question to note that you're looking for a countable noun and add a sample sentence (such as you might write for documentation) showing how the word you're looking for would be used. Lastly, are you looking for something simply for internal use as a table/variable name or something that users would see (on screen and in documentation)? If the former, as long as you have adequate technical documentation for future developers/support staff, you could call it anything you like.
      – Roger Sinasohn
      Oct 3 at 17:37













    up vote
    2
    down vote










    up vote
    2
    down vote









    I would call these things your finances. Consider definition 1.2 from the Oxford Dictionaries:




    finance



    noun



    [mass noun]





    1. The management of large amounts of money, especially by governments or large companies.



      [as modifier] ‘the firm's finance department’



      1.1 Monetary support for an enterprise.



      ‘the clearing banks are important sources of finance’



      1.2 finances The monetary resources and affairs of a state, organization, or person.



      ‘the club's finances are stretched to the limit’






    So all of your expenses and income comprise your finances.






    share|improve this answer












    I would call these things your finances. Consider definition 1.2 from the Oxford Dictionaries:




    finance



    noun



    [mass noun]





    1. The management of large amounts of money, especially by governments or large companies.



      [as modifier] ‘the firm's finance department’



      1.1 Monetary support for an enterprise.



      ‘the clearing banks are important sources of finance’



      1.2 finances The monetary resources and affairs of a state, organization, or person.



      ‘the club's finances are stretched to the limit’






    So all of your expenses and income comprise your finances.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Oct 2 at 4:51









    Roger Sinasohn

    9,73611949




    9,73611949












    • Hmm... interesting, but I think "finance" is too generic a term here. Almost everything in the entire application could be referred to as finances. I'd prefer something a little more specific. One other point too: Ideally I need a countable noun. a bill, an expense, a salary. Since there's no such thing as "a finance" it's not a good choice here. Still, thanks!
      – DavidT
      Oct 3 at 16:50










    • I understand... but I'm not sure there's a single word that encompasses expense items and revenue items. I think the closest you'll likely get is, as @Jim suggested, general ledger line items.
      – Roger Sinasohn
      Oct 3 at 17:32










    • Also, you might want to edit your question to note that you're looking for a countable noun and add a sample sentence (such as you might write for documentation) showing how the word you're looking for would be used. Lastly, are you looking for something simply for internal use as a table/variable name or something that users would see (on screen and in documentation)? If the former, as long as you have adequate technical documentation for future developers/support staff, you could call it anything you like.
      – Roger Sinasohn
      Oct 3 at 17:37


















    • Hmm... interesting, but I think "finance" is too generic a term here. Almost everything in the entire application could be referred to as finances. I'd prefer something a little more specific. One other point too: Ideally I need a countable noun. a bill, an expense, a salary. Since there's no such thing as "a finance" it's not a good choice here. Still, thanks!
      – DavidT
      Oct 3 at 16:50










    • I understand... but I'm not sure there's a single word that encompasses expense items and revenue items. I think the closest you'll likely get is, as @Jim suggested, general ledger line items.
      – Roger Sinasohn
      Oct 3 at 17:32










    • Also, you might want to edit your question to note that you're looking for a countable noun and add a sample sentence (such as you might write for documentation) showing how the word you're looking for would be used. Lastly, are you looking for something simply for internal use as a table/variable name or something that users would see (on screen and in documentation)? If the former, as long as you have adequate technical documentation for future developers/support staff, you could call it anything you like.
      – Roger Sinasohn
      Oct 3 at 17:37
















    Hmm... interesting, but I think "finance" is too generic a term here. Almost everything in the entire application could be referred to as finances. I'd prefer something a little more specific. One other point too: Ideally I need a countable noun. a bill, an expense, a salary. Since there's no such thing as "a finance" it's not a good choice here. Still, thanks!
    – DavidT
    Oct 3 at 16:50




    Hmm... interesting, but I think "finance" is too generic a term here. Almost everything in the entire application could be referred to as finances. I'd prefer something a little more specific. One other point too: Ideally I need a countable noun. a bill, an expense, a salary. Since there's no such thing as "a finance" it's not a good choice here. Still, thanks!
    – DavidT
    Oct 3 at 16:50












    I understand... but I'm not sure there's a single word that encompasses expense items and revenue items. I think the closest you'll likely get is, as @Jim suggested, general ledger line items.
    – Roger Sinasohn
    Oct 3 at 17:32




    I understand... but I'm not sure there's a single word that encompasses expense items and revenue items. I think the closest you'll likely get is, as @Jim suggested, general ledger line items.
    – Roger Sinasohn
    Oct 3 at 17:32












    Also, you might want to edit your question to note that you're looking for a countable noun and add a sample sentence (such as you might write for documentation) showing how the word you're looking for would be used. Lastly, are you looking for something simply for internal use as a table/variable name or something that users would see (on screen and in documentation)? If the former, as long as you have adequate technical documentation for future developers/support staff, you could call it anything you like.
    – Roger Sinasohn
    Oct 3 at 17:37




    Also, you might want to edit your question to note that you're looking for a countable noun and add a sample sentence (such as you might write for documentation) showing how the word you're looking for would be used. Lastly, are you looking for something simply for internal use as a table/variable name or something that users would see (on screen and in documentation)? If the former, as long as you have adequate technical documentation for future developers/support staff, you could call it anything you like.
    – Roger Sinasohn
    Oct 3 at 17:37












    up vote
    0
    down vote













    Use the following to summarise “bills & expenses, and sources of income.”: revenue and expenditure




    revenue

    Revenue is money that a company, organization, or government receives from people.



    expenditure

    Expenditure is the spending of money on something, or the money that is spent on something.




    The compound term, revenue expenditure, is used in businesses




    revenue expenditure



    the amount of money spent by a business or organization on general operating costs such as rent, insurance, heating, maintenance etc







    share|improve this answer





















    • Hmm... Thanks, but it seems by that definition "revenue expenditure" refers to the amount of money, as opposed to the item (the bill, expense, source of salary, etc.) itself...?
      – DavidT
      Oct 3 at 16:51















    up vote
    0
    down vote













    Use the following to summarise “bills & expenses, and sources of income.”: revenue and expenditure




    revenue

    Revenue is money that a company, organization, or government receives from people.



    expenditure

    Expenditure is the spending of money on something, or the money that is spent on something.




    The compound term, revenue expenditure, is used in businesses




    revenue expenditure



    the amount of money spent by a business or organization on general operating costs such as rent, insurance, heating, maintenance etc







    share|improve this answer





















    • Hmm... Thanks, but it seems by that definition "revenue expenditure" refers to the amount of money, as opposed to the item (the bill, expense, source of salary, etc.) itself...?
      – DavidT
      Oct 3 at 16:51













    up vote
    0
    down vote










    up vote
    0
    down vote









    Use the following to summarise “bills & expenses, and sources of income.”: revenue and expenditure




    revenue

    Revenue is money that a company, organization, or government receives from people.



    expenditure

    Expenditure is the spending of money on something, or the money that is spent on something.




    The compound term, revenue expenditure, is used in businesses




    revenue expenditure



    the amount of money spent by a business or organization on general operating costs such as rent, insurance, heating, maintenance etc







    share|improve this answer












    Use the following to summarise “bills & expenses, and sources of income.”: revenue and expenditure




    revenue

    Revenue is money that a company, organization, or government receives from people.



    expenditure

    Expenditure is the spending of money on something, or the money that is spent on something.




    The compound term, revenue expenditure, is used in businesses




    revenue expenditure



    the amount of money spent by a business or organization on general operating costs such as rent, insurance, heating, maintenance etc








    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Oct 2 at 5:10









    Mari-Lou A

    61k54213445




    61k54213445












    • Hmm... Thanks, but it seems by that definition "revenue expenditure" refers to the amount of money, as opposed to the item (the bill, expense, source of salary, etc.) itself...?
      – DavidT
      Oct 3 at 16:51


















    • Hmm... Thanks, but it seems by that definition "revenue expenditure" refers to the amount of money, as opposed to the item (the bill, expense, source of salary, etc.) itself...?
      – DavidT
      Oct 3 at 16:51
















    Hmm... Thanks, but it seems by that definition "revenue expenditure" refers to the amount of money, as opposed to the item (the bill, expense, source of salary, etc.) itself...?
    – DavidT
    Oct 3 at 16:51




    Hmm... Thanks, but it seems by that definition "revenue expenditure" refers to the amount of money, as opposed to the item (the bill, expense, source of salary, etc.) itself...?
    – DavidT
    Oct 3 at 16:51










    up vote
    0
    down vote













    Well, what type of report(s) do you want to generate? Generally, in the context of a personal (or home) budget, I assume discretionary income is the bottom line, that is, if "expenses" means living expenses and does not include discretionary spending (like Apple Music probably, unless you're in the music business...or can't 'live' without it).



    So, in this case, maybe these three variables are grouped in order to determine...net discretionary income? Ha-ha, nah, I would say they're cash flows, inflows and outflows (DPI, bills, expenses, and the like).



    BTW, I realize this is personal income, but some businesses utilize cash flow statements for budgeting, in addition to their main purposes.






    share|improve this answer



























      up vote
      0
      down vote













      Well, what type of report(s) do you want to generate? Generally, in the context of a personal (or home) budget, I assume discretionary income is the bottom line, that is, if "expenses" means living expenses and does not include discretionary spending (like Apple Music probably, unless you're in the music business...or can't 'live' without it).



      So, in this case, maybe these three variables are grouped in order to determine...net discretionary income? Ha-ha, nah, I would say they're cash flows, inflows and outflows (DPI, bills, expenses, and the like).



      BTW, I realize this is personal income, but some businesses utilize cash flow statements for budgeting, in addition to their main purposes.






      share|improve this answer

























        up vote
        0
        down vote










        up vote
        0
        down vote









        Well, what type of report(s) do you want to generate? Generally, in the context of a personal (or home) budget, I assume discretionary income is the bottom line, that is, if "expenses" means living expenses and does not include discretionary spending (like Apple Music probably, unless you're in the music business...or can't 'live' without it).



        So, in this case, maybe these three variables are grouped in order to determine...net discretionary income? Ha-ha, nah, I would say they're cash flows, inflows and outflows (DPI, bills, expenses, and the like).



        BTW, I realize this is personal income, but some businesses utilize cash flow statements for budgeting, in addition to their main purposes.






        share|improve this answer














        Well, what type of report(s) do you want to generate? Generally, in the context of a personal (or home) budget, I assume discretionary income is the bottom line, that is, if "expenses" means living expenses and does not include discretionary spending (like Apple Music probably, unless you're in the music business...or can't 'live' without it).



        So, in this case, maybe these three variables are grouped in order to determine...net discretionary income? Ha-ha, nah, I would say they're cash flows, inflows and outflows (DPI, bills, expenses, and the like).



        BTW, I realize this is personal income, but some businesses utilize cash flow statements for budgeting, in addition to their main purposes.







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited 9 hours ago

























        answered 10 hours ago









        KannE

        804114




        804114






























             

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