GOODWILL ON FINANCIAL STATEMENTS.
Abstract Not much has been said about goodwill upon financial statements. Of three books on goodwill and its treatment in the accounts no mention was made of goodwill upon the balance sheet or profit-and-loss statement. A few writers have given their views as to its position in the balance sheet or have stated its proper position without giving reasons for their point of view. Again, but few writers have considered the question of whether amortized goodwill should be charged to current profit and loss or to surplus directly. In this paper, an attempt has been made to give a fairly complete discussion of these theoretical questions. In addition, the practical side of these questions is considered through the introduction and analysis of a number of recent financial statements of outstanding industrial concerns. The first question discussed in this article, and probably the most important, regards the placement of goodwill on the balance sheet. The Federal Reserve Board bulletin of 1917 recommended that the amount of goodwill be shown as a subtraction from the surplus and capital stock of the corporation.