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THE VALUATION OF INTANGIBLES (Book).

The Accounting Review 1927 2(3), 223-231
Abstract The article focuses on the valuation of intangibles in business practices for the purpose of purchase and sale. There have been a large number of variable factors that have to be taken into account in the process. However, there are several general considerations which are to a greater or less extent taken into account in all case of valuation of intangibles. In buying a business with an established earning power in excess of what is considered ordinary in the particular line of industry, the purchaser expects to pay for the capitalized value of the estimated excess earnings which may be judged to continue for a fairly definite number of years. In computing this value, a number of factors have to be considered, like, the earnings of the concern; the value of investment or which a normal rate of income is to be allowed; normal rate of earnings for the industry concerned; the amount of the excess earnings that can be transferred; the number of years during which the transferable excess earnings may be expected to accrue; and the rate for capitalizing the excess earnings thus determined.

THE ANTECEDENTS OF DOUBLE-ENTRY.

The Accounting Review 1927 2(2), 140-149
Abstract The article focuses on antecedents of double-entry in bookkeeping. It is proposed in this paper to follow the genealogy of bookkeeping back beyond those parental ancestors whose respectability was so ably proved at the time. The purpose here will be to trace out those blood-lines of preparental inheritance which finally converged at a certain time and place, there to confer certain characteristics upon the offspring. In trying to perceive the forces which produced double-entry, two questions, must be answered in the process. First, what were the antecedent elements out of which double-entry finally evolved. An answer is needed to this question, so that one may better appreciate how closely accounting has been, and still is, related to several collateral fields. Second, what surrounding conditions were necessary to give vitality to these antecedent elements? The antecedents of double-entry, those factors which in time became so interwoven as to render double-entry inevitable, are all familiar quantities; some of them are very old and some are very obvious, but all of them are, in the writer's opinion, indispensable. The art of writing is an indispensable antecedent, since bookkeeping is before all else a record; arithmetic is essential also, since bookkeeping is a sequence of simple computations, even though they are cast into certain forms; private property, since bookkeeping is concerned only with recording the facts about property and property rights.