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The Accelerator in Income Analysis: Reply

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1952 66(4), 596
Journal Article The Accelerator in Income Analysis: Reply Get access S. C. Tsiang S. C. Tsiang International Monetary Fund Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The Quarterly Journal of Economics, Volume 66, Issue 4, November 1952, Pages 596–599, https://doi.org/10.2307/1882109 Published: 01 November 1952

'WHAT'S WRONG WITH FINANCIAL REPORTING?'

The Accounting Review 1952 27(1), 57-62
Abstract In a world torn apart by two conflicting concepts-capitalism vs. communism, one should place the economic facts before one's own people so clearly and concisely that they may understand them without question. Only then can they determine of their own free will that the enterprise system – however imperfect – still operates to create more human satisfaction than any other system yet devised. The United States has become a nation of capitalists in the broadest sense of the word in that all Americans are generally possessors of property, no matter how small, with which they can do as they see fit. It is clear that financial reporting must be done in such a manner that the vast majority of stockholders will want to read and fully digest the financial statements sent to them annually, or on rare occasions, quarterly. True, not all owners will study the report with the dose attention of a security analyst. Nor can we ever expect to prepare reports so simplified that they will be understood fully by every stockholder in a corporation that has many thousands of owners. But it is one of our first responsibilities to create as many informed stockholders as possible.

Foreign Investments of American Coporations

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1952 34(1), 67
to encourage international commerce make it important to have such knowledge currently. The writer, in Novemnber i95o, requested information on their foreign holdings from more than a hundred American manufacturing corporations.2 Seventy-two companies supplied the data which are summarized in Table i. As of May I943, the Treasury study showed the foreign assets of American corporations and individuals with a 25 per cent interest or more in companies abroad, as amounting to $7,365,000,ooo. About 6,ooo corporations and indi-