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An Evaluation of Mergers in Six Industries

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1965 47(2), 172
ECONOMISTS have long attacked horizontal merger for its role in increasing concentration and defended it as a relatively painless means of attaining economies of scale and/ or inter-regional entry. This paper attempts to evaluate these divergent views using the experience of six large industries. In part I, the data and definitions used are explained. In part II, an attempt is made to measure the role of merger and of various other factors in concentration change. Part III examines the proportion of acquired capacity that is sub-optimal in scale, and part IV, the proportion that is inter-regional. Part V contains some brief conclusions.

Prospective Unemployment and Interstate Population Movements: A Reply

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1965 47(4), 450
sion equation presented in the note, in which x appears as an independent variable. Therefore, the high correlation between migration and prospective unemployment may be misleading. It may be, in effect, merely a correlation of the dependent variable with itself. On the basis of the foregoing, it would appear that the problem of establishing a strong link between migration and job opportunities may not really have been solved by introducing the new concept of unemployment. Nevertheless, Dr. Blanco's ingenious approach to the problem will be of considerable interest to anyone concerned with the determinants of population movements.

Production Functions in which the Elasticities of Substitution Stand in Fixed Proportions to Each Other

Review of Economic Studies 1965 32(3), 217
Journal Article Production Functions in which the Elasticities of Substitution stand in Fixed Proportions to each other Get access W. M. Gorman W. M. Gorman Nuffield College, Oxford Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The Review of Economic Studies, Volume 32, Issue 3, July 1965, Pages 217–224, https://doi.org/10.2307/2295825 Published: 01 July 1965

COMPARATIVE PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANCY-AUSTRALIA .

The Accounting Review 1965 40(1), 196-203
Abstract The purpose of this article is to outline some significant changes which have occurred during this period with particular reference to the accountant's duties arising from the Companies Acts in Australia. A recent survey of members indicated that about 21 per cent of the society members are in public practice or employees in public practice, while 3,300 of the members of the Institute of Chartered Accountants are in practice. So there would be approximately 8,500 members of the various professional bodies engaged in public practice. While the majority of accountants are affiliated with one or more of these bodies there remain a number outside. In the public practice area these persons are pre-dominantly involved in certain classes of taxation return preparation, the uniform companies acts. Under the Australian Constitution the Commonwealth Parliament can legislate only on matters expressly delegated in the Constitution. The powers of the Commonwealth with respect to companies are incomplete and the framing of companies legislation has remained a matter for the States.

Financial Reporting of Antitrust Actions .

The Accounting Review 1965 40(4), 805-811
Abstract The article examines the way in which antitrust matters are handled in financial reporting. The reports of two major companies, General Electric Co. and Westinghouse Corp., are chosen. Examination is limited to the published annual reports of the companies. Since disclosures were similar up until the time that losses were actually recorded, both companies are treated together in 1939, 1960, and 1961. After that, reporting diverged so both companies are dealt with separately in 1962, 1963, and 1964. In 1960 both companies had already pleaded guilty on the various actions in the antitrust suits. The record of their approach to the problem should lead one to certain conclusions as to the adequacy of their response to this reporting challenge. The differences in treatment are considerable and indicate clearly the possible diversity in present accounting practice. The way in which the reporting challenge was met by these two companies indicates a wide diversity in accounting practice and suggests a lack of imagination in dealing with a problem that involves some complex questions of disclosure and reporting.

A Different Approach to Fund-Flow Problems.

The Accounting Review 1965 40(4), 880-882
Abstract The article focuses on the fund-flow problems which cause the student to think about the interrelationships existing between balance-sheet accounts and income-statement accounts. As a result of this thinking, the student develops a workable understanding of the whole process of accrual accounting. Problems requiring a statement of working-capital flow or a statement of cash flow are excellent devices for teaching accounting. There is a method applicable to solving fund-flow problems which provides some of the advantages of both the worksheet approach and the T-account approach. This method requires the construction of a form which may be thought of as a quasi worksheet or working paper. Through the use of this form the student can see the intermediate steps necessary to solve the whole problem, and he can sense the advantages of a well-organized solution. A completed working paper includes a well-designed working copy of the fund-flow statement. A formal fund-flow statement can be copied directly from the working paper without extensive interpretation of the data.

Defining Objectivity in Accounting .

The Accounting Review 1965 40(3), 599-605
Abstract The purpose of this article is (1) to propose a point of view for defining and applying objectivity and (2) to demonstrate the acceptability of the view and the definition when related to the needs of the profession. If researchers really wish to obtain greater objectivity in accounting, they will not do so either by eliminating the use of judgment or by permitting each individual to exercise his judgment freely. Instead, what researchers must have are (1) standards of competence and ethics, many of which they already do have, to assure that individual practitioners are capable of exercising professional judgment in an objective manner, and (2) reference points such as generally accepted objectives and principles, most of which researchers do not have in really explicit form. Even when researchers do finally develop these standards and reference points in a more adequate manner, researchers will not be eliminating the use of judgment. Instead, researchers will be making judgment more effective, more controllable, in attaining a desirable state of objectivity. It seems clear, therefore, that their task is to enhance the prestige and effectiveness of professional judgment in order to achieve greater objectivity, rather than to eliminate judgment in the mistaken notion that it is necessarily in conflict with the goal of objectivity.