When actuaries say that pension benefits, actuarial costs and actuarial liabilities have accrued, they ordinarily mean that the amounts are associated, either specifically or by a process of allocation, with years of employee service before the date of a particular valuation of a pension plan
To record an item in the accounting books when using the accrual method of accounting For example, you accrue income when the customer signs a contract, even though you won't receive any cash at that time When you accrue an item of income or expense can depend on a number of factors including the entity's procedures IRS requirements here frequently diverge from accounting rules
Refers to non-MIQ affiliates accruing SVP That is, the SFI system allows you to accumulate SVP each month until you reach 10 SVP, at which point you become MIQ (Multi-Income Qualified)
To record revenues when earned and to record expenditures as soon as they result in liabilities for benefits received, notwithstanding that the receipt of cash or payment of cash may take place, in whole or in part, in another accounting period
To come to by way of increase; to arise or spring as a growth or result; to be added as increase, profit, or damage, especially as the produce of money lent
If money or interest accrues or if you accrue it, it gradually increases in amount over a period of time. I owed £5,000 -- part of this was accrued interest If you do not pay within 28 days, interest will accrue Officials say the options will offer investors a longer time in which to accrue profits. = accumulate
To increase, to augment; to come to by way of increase; to arise or spring as a growth or result; to be added as increase, profit, or damage, especially as the produce of money lent
If things such as profits or benefits accrue to someone, they are added to over a period of time. the expectation that profits will accrue. a project from which considerable benefit will accrue to the community
accruement
Hyphenation
ac·crue·ment
Pronunciation
Etymology
[ &-'krü ] (verb.) 15th century. Middle English acreuen, probably from Middle French acreue increase, from acreistre to increase, from Latin accrescere, from ad- + crescere to grow; more at CRESCENT.