| surplus | amount in excess of what is needed; excess of assets over liabilities (Accounting) | en | (isim) | en |
| surplus | more than is needed, extra, excess, superfluous | en | (sıfat) | en |
| surplus | Specifically, an amount in the public treasury at any time greater than is required for the ordinary purposes of the government | en | en |
| surplus | Being or constituting a surplus; more than sufficient; as, surplus revenues; surplus population; surplus words | en | en |
| surplus | That which remains when use or need is satisfied, or when a limit is reached; excess; overplus | en | en |
| surplus | If there is a surplus of something, there is more than is needed. Germany suffers from a surplus of teachers | en | en |
| surplus | Surplus is used to describe something that is extra or that is more than is needed. Few people have large sums of surplus cash The houses are being sold because they are surplus to requirements | en | en |
| surplus | If a country has a trade surplus, it exports more than it imports. Japan's annual trade surplus is in the region of 100 billion dollars | en | en |
| surplus | If a government has a budget surplus, it has spent less than it received in taxes. Norway's budget surplus has fallen from 5.9% in 1986 to an expected 0.1% this year | en | en |
| surplus | The amount by which an insurerÃs assets exceed its liabilities | en | en |
| surplus | a quantity much larger than is needed | en | en |
| surplus | more than is needed, desired, or required; "trying to lose excess weight"; "found some extra change lying on the dresser"; "yet another book on heraldry might be thought redundant"; "skills made redundant by technological advance"; "sleeping in the spare room"; "supernumerary ornamentation"; "it was supererogatory of her to gloat"; "delete superfluous (or unnecessary) words"; "extra ribs as well as other supernumerary internal parts"; "surplus cheese distributed to the needy" | en | en |
| surplus | The amount by which an insurer's assets exceed its liabilities | en | en |
| surplus | The amount by which assets exceed liabilities (G) | en | en |
| surplus | Excess also called overage The extent to which assets exceed liabilities Profits remaining after subtracting for operating expenses, taxes, interest and insurance | en | en |
| surplus | The amount by which the government's budget receipts exceed its outlays for a given fiscal year | en | en |
| surplus | The amount that remains when an insurer subtracts its liabilities and capital from its assets | en | en |
| surplus | The amount by which an insurance company's assets exceed its liabilities and capital | en | en |
| surplus | The amount by which receipts exceed expenditures in a given fiscal period | en | en |
| surplus | if a pension plan's assets exceed the plan's liabilities, the difference is called a surplus | en | en |
| surplus | The excess of assets over liabilities Statutory surplus is an insurer’s or reinsurer’s capital as determined under statutory accounting rules Surplus determines an insurer’s or reinsurer’s capacity to write business | en | en |
| surplus | A term used when the quantity of a good supplied exceeds the quantity demanded at the existing price | en | en |
| surplus | A stock company's surplus is the amount by which its admitted assets exceed its liabilities and capital stock In both stock and mutual companies, the term surplus to policyholders means the excess of admitted assets over liabilities | en | en |
| surplus | Votes that a candidate receives in excess of the quota They are distributed to other candidates according to the further preferences indicated on the ballot papers by those voters | en | en |
| surplus | A generic term referring to anything dealing with equity It is a term that is often misunderstood and misused Basically it is the same as the undesignated fund balance It is primarily used for emergencies The rule of thumb is to make sure that surplus contains at least eight percent of the total budget or the amount equal to one months operating expenses or one-twelfth The optimum is ten percent Surplus revenues generally build up as result of unexpected balances and the excess of receipts from sources other than taxation | en | en |
| surplus | The dollar amount remaining after company operation expenses Surplus typically grows from underwriting gain and investment income Surplus is diminished if payout on claims (insured losses) exceeds premiums collected A favorable surplus ratio, excess assets over liabilities, guarantees available funds for solvency and the ability to pay claims It allows an insurer to grow and offer more products, as well as helps maintain a favorable rating within the insurance industry | en | en |
| surplus | Contributed surplus is a balance sheet figure which originates from sources other than earnings, such as the initial sale of stock above par value Earned surplus, or retained earnings, is the amount of accumulated earnings retained in the business after the payment of all expenses and dividends | en | en |
| surplus | Revenues exceed expenses | en | en |
| surplus | The amount by which revenues exceed expenditures | en | en |
| surplus | the magnitude of the gain from trade, the difference between what an individual would have been willing to pay for a good and what she has to pay | en | en |
| surplus | a surplus is an excess of quantity supplied over quantity demanded When there is a surplus, sellers cannot sell the quantities they desire to supply | en | en |
| surplus | Occurs when there are more assets in the pension fund than liabilities | en | en |
| surplus | A fiscal condition which may occur at the end of a fiscal year, whereby expenditures are less than the actual intake of revenues during the same period The surplus funds become available for appropriation for the following year | en | en |
| surplus | A condition that occurs when the supply of a good or service exceeds its demand Surpluses occur when the price for a good or service is higher than its equilibrium price | en | en |
| surplus | may designate an accumulation of receipts over expenses during a specific period The term is usually avoided because of its ambiguity | en | en |
| surplus | The amount by which revenues, as from taxes, exceed outlays for government programs | en | en |