To make high-quality research more accessible and easier to explore.

Fields:
21 results ✕ Clear filters

ACCOUNTING AND THE COURTS.

The Accounting Review 1931 6(3), 184-191
Abstract Owing to the comparative youth of the accounting profession, court decisions affecting its members are few and scattering. However, the importance of these adjudications to the profession in inverse proportion to their number. An attempt is made in this article to state the significant parts of the American and English cases which have been decided during the past half century. Since accounting has attained the dignity of a profession, its members are subject to the same rules in their practice as are the members of other skilled professions. The damages claimed on account of the losses from the defalcations of the clerk and the insolvency of his surety are too remote to recovered, without showing the existence of special circumstances, known to defendants from which they ought to have known that much losses were likely to result from failure to disclose the true condition of affairs. Such losses are neither the natural nor the proximate consequences of the failure of defendants to make a proper audit.

Economic Aspects of Adulteration and Imitation

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1931 46(1), 1
Introduction, 1. — I. Definition of terms, 2. — II. Reactions to a falsified good: (1) the genuine is displaced, 8; (2) both remain in use, 11; (3) the falsified disappears, 13; (4) the demand for both falls, 13; (5) the demand for both increases, 16. — Importance of knowledge, 17. — III. Effect of conditions of production, 20; of elasticity of supply, 21. — IV. Effect of legal enactments: labelling, 23; grading, 25. — V. Effect upon the national economy and the final user, 26. — Waste, 27. — Introduction of novelties, 30. — Expense for protection, 31.

International and Domestic Commodities and the Theory of Prices

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1931 45(3), 409
The assumption of independent national price systems, in theory and in treatment of current problems, 409. — I. No domestic and no international prices; only local prices, more or less sensitive to external conditions, 410; merchandise and services, wholesale and retail prices, not differentiated in the terms "international" and "domestic" commodities, 413. — II. Parallelism in movement of wholesale price indices, 413; Internationalization of the commodity price structure, 414. — III. Illusion of domestic price structure for wholesale merchandise: large or sustained movement not essential to price interdependence, 422; defective market data and apparent price deviations, 432; limitations upon actual deviation; a priori indications of high correlation, 433. — IV. Reformulation: the local category consists mainly of services and retail prices, 436; merchandise at wholesale is international, 437; regional prices structurally related, 442. — V. Practical applications: farm relief, 452; export combinations, 453; tariff and monetary problems, 455. — VI. Regional prices of international goods: as affected by foreign exchange, 456; by movement of specie or changes in purchasing power, 457; a possible reconciliation with orthodox theory, 458; price stabilization through credit policies of central banks, 459.

International Control of Price Levels

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1931 45(2), 357
Journal Article International Control of Price Levels Get access Harold L. Reed Harold L. Reed Cornell University Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The Quarterly Journal of Economics, Volume 45, Issue 2, February 1931, Pages 357–364, https://doi.org/10.2307/1885480 Published: 01 February 1931

OVERBURDENED TERMS.

The Accounting Review 1931 6(2), 142-143
Abstract Anyone who indulges in a mental résumé of major topics of accounting discussion for recent years would probably emerge with one or the other of two convictions, either one is rapidly drifting away from moorings of older conceptions of basic elements of accountancy, or that one is growing with considerable rapidity in new directions. The word capital for example, has long been used as a term to indicate the investment brought into a business by proprietory interests. It was distinctly associated with contribution. Statutory regulations concerning limited liability corporations further emphasized this concept by requiring that the proposed sum of capital be definitely stated from the very inception of the organization, that it be fully paid in and that it be maintained intact against the encroachment of dividends. Capital stock was considered by legislatures and courts as representing owners' contribution, the amount dedicated to purposes of the business by those controlling the concern's affairs and enjoying residual profits, if any. Is accounting thought drifting away from this and other basic conceptions, or is it is merely growing out of garments in which it has for so long been clothed? No-par stock has brought occasional presentations of financial structures in which original contribution was divided between capital stock and initial surplus.

THE CONCEPT OF EARNED SURPLUS.

The Accounting Review 1931 6(3), 206-217
Abstract This article focuses on the author's view about earned surplus. The author says that the general course of the reasoning which led to the final definition will prove to be of even greater interest than the expected applications of the definition. The Committee on the Definition of Earned Surplus, reappointed hopefully each year by the president of the organization American Institute of Accountants, faced a task of no mean proportions. First was the obstacle that many common terms in use in the world of business, especially terms appearing on financial statements, have no fixed meaning, and can be made intelligible only through the aid of explanatory phrases. Second was the apathy, if not the actual resistance of business itself, toward more exact usages. The astonishing growth of interrelations between business enterprises has prevented the precise formulation of the scientific truths that are presumed to underlie the various manifestations of economic endeavor. Third was the multiplicity of state laws and court decisions bearing on the questions of dividends and maintenance of capital.

LABOR TURNOVER RATE AND COST.

The Accounting Review 1931 6(4), 261-276
Abstract The problem of labor turnover remains unsolved. This problem is not a new one, but over the year. has taken on varied aspects and has attained a significance which now calls for universal serious attention. The scope of the problem places it beyond the limits of comprehensive treatment in a single paper or by one individual. Of world-wide, international application, it knows no political boundaries, nor territorial prohibitions. Labor turnover is not only an industrial problem, it is a vast social problem. With some what cyclical regularity, it assumes the nature of an epidemic, under the diagnosed name of unemployment. For a single company, labor turnover has not been considered as fatal, but the effects upon business of the malady in virulent form and epidemic proportions, are paralysis or death. In 1921, consequences were serious enough to warrant coordinated and determined effort. Instead of that, only here and there was any constructive work done. No real lesson was learned. In 1929 and 1980, business suffered losses which justify the expenditure of a large sum to prevent the recurrence of such a situation or at least to insure distinct progress in that direction.