General reserves are part of profit of the company for usable in future so it is the liability of company and shown in liability side of balance sheet.
Basically it is a reserve however it should be carried as a liability on the books until paid then espense it however if the Co is for Sale You may show it as a reserve asset due to the fact that the full liability may never be incurred
current liability
For general purposes, accrued interest payable is generally a current liability, however that depends on one major factor. When will the liability be paid? Any liability that a company can reasonably expect to pay off in 12 months (or less) or one accounting period is a "current liability" any liability that will be paid off at a longer time is a "long term liability" So if the accrued interest will be paid in 12 months or less, then it is a current liability.
Non-current liability, all provisions are non current.
a current liability
It is assets
It's an asset.
Payment On Current Liability Debit The Current Liability (say Sundry Creditor) (Liability Decreases) Credit Cash Or Bank (Current Asset Decreases)
Yes, it is a current liability.
Current Liability: Current liability is a specific liability and it is short term and mostly it is paid within the year. Total Liability: Total liability is the sum of all liabilities like current liabilities, outstanding liabilities etc.
General liability covers Public and Producs Liability, therefore by having General Liability cover, public liability is covered also.