Three-pillar accounting system

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The three-pillar accounting system,[a] also known as three-pillar balancing method, was a single-entry accounting system used in China during the Zhou dynasty and in the centuries that followed. It was named after its method of closing the accounting books, which relied on a basic equation: income − expenditure = balance.

At the turn of the 9th and 10th centuries, toward the end of the Tang dynasty, it was refined into the four-pillar balancing method. This new method became widespread in the economic environment of Song dynasty and gradually replaced the three-pillar method.

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