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EDUCATION FOR PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANCY.

The Accounting Review 1936 11(2), 99-108
The article discusses various aspects of professional accountancy. The discipline means the vocation of accountancy, whether practiced in the private or the public field. Accountancy is said to take pride in calling itself a profession. The specific problem to which this article addresses itself is the organization of a curriculum or course of training for professional accountancy. It should be pointed out that in the first place, the building of a curriculum is essentially a scholastic undertaking, and in the second place, that a large part of the work of a professional man or of a business executive is of necessity pedagogical in character, in that he is always faced with the task of training staff men to a proper understanding and performance of their tasks. Thus, the practitioner, as well as the pedagog, should be interested in the development of curricula and courses of training. The article presents a curriculum to address different activities of the profession. It also says that in building a curriculum, some attention must always be given to the lines of probable future development of the profession.

VALUATION OF THE BUSINESS ENTERPRISE.

The Accounting Review 1936 11(1), 26-32
With the development of large-scale activity, elaborate technical processes, and the corporate form of organization the business enterprise has become in many cases a highly complex economic institution, and the valuation of the facilities and conditions of production in terms of the enterprise in its entirety is accordingly a bafflingly difficult problem, a problem which comprehends substantially all phases of accounting analysis and all types of value determinations. The business enterprise, it is scarcely going too far to say, is truly an organic entity, a something capable of being contemplated for its own sake and valued in its own right. The enterprise in other words, and as has often been pointed out in utility valuation cases, is an bite rated, functioning, continuing establishment, and not a mere bundle or aggregation of separate elements or parts. And the value of the enterprise, it follows, may be more or less than the sum of the values of the constituent factors, considered singly, in apparent violation of one of the more obvious mathematical axioms. Further, in view of the extent now-a-days to which both small and large blocks of securities evidencing enterprise ownership are transferred from one party to another, including the practices of acquiring whole businesses through merger and consolidation, to say nothing of the matter of proper periodic measurement in the interest of the various equities, it appears that there is some excuse for urging that more systematic and discriminating attention be given to the question of enterprise valuation as opposed to other forms of appraisals.

SHOULD A FEDERAL TAX BAR BE ORGANIZED?

The Accounting Review 1936 11(2), 179-182
The article discusses various issues related to the establishment of a federal tax bar in the U.S. Viewed from the narrow and introspective standpoint of the professions involved, there appear to he several avenues of utility. There is need for the better apprising taxpayers and the professions of the difference between the general practitioner and the tax practitioner. The field is also fertile for a more wholesome understanding all the way around of the separate boundaries and roles of the attorney and the accountant respectively. These functions may well be the province and product of an organization such as contemplated here. The organization may also take under its wing observations and recommendations on the rules of the game and having reached agreement from within, it could then present a coordinated viewpoint in the formulation or maintenance of correlative rules by external agencies, including the governmental departments and professional societies. Another possibility is the development of a central library for tax briefs akin to the libraries maintained in the general field by the larger bar associations, thereby affording practitioners the same advantage now enjoyed by the government staff in preliminary research for briefing on a particular tax subject.

THE SUPREME COURT ON PUBLIC-UTILITY DEPRECIATION.

The Accounting Review 1936 11(3), 234-270
The article focuses on opinions expressed by the justices of the Supreme Court of the United States on depreciation that had a marked influence upon the subsequent decisions of the state and the Federal public utility commissions. In no case prior to the Knoxville Water Company case in 1909 has there been more than an incidental reference to depreciation, or a brief discussion which indicates an entirely inadequate knowledge of its nature and problems. Definite recognition was given of the necessity of a utility keeping its property in good service condition, but little or no appreciation was evidenced of the function of depreciation accounting methods. A statement was made in the case of United States v. Kansas Pacific Railway that only such expenditures are actually made, can with any propriety be claimed as a deduction from earnings, and the creation of an unspent reserve through periodic charges to operations was prohibited.

C.P.A. COMMERCIAL LAW EXAMINATIONS.

The Accounting Review 1936 11(3), 229-233
The article focuses on the Certified Public Accountants (CPA) commercial law examinations. To find a place in their field and to achieve any degree of success therein, accountants find it necessary to become a CPA. The usual qualifications for candidacy for the CPA examination are that the examinee be 21 years of age, have had a high school education or the equivalent thereof, and a certain number of years of practical experience in accounting. The subjects in which the CPA candidate is examined are: theory of accounting, practical accounting, auditing and commercial law. The law examination, thus, forms 25% of the total examination. About ten other states use the examinations prepared by the American Society of Certified Public Accountants. The law divisions of these examinations contains about thirty-six questions, from which the states using them choose the number and kind they desire. Thus, these examinations play a vital role in the international accounting arena in the corporate world.

SOME PROBLEMS IN GOVERNMENT ACCOUNTING.

The Accounting Review 1936 11(2), 141-149
The National Housing Act provides for the insurance of mortgages. Section 205 of the act states that all mortgages accepted for insurance shall be so classified into groups and that the mortgages in any group shall involve substantially similar risk characteristics and have similar maturity dates. Premium charges received for the insurance of the mortgage and earnings from all properties taken over by the administrator shall be credited to the group account. However, there are several accounting problems raised by the act. There is room for considerable variation in the interpretation of the law that will have a bearing upon the accounting procedure to be established. There is little question that the accountant is required to classify the mortgages into groups of similar risk characteristics and similar maturity dates. When the groups have been established, they may be liquidated in two ways. First, when the balance in the group account exceeds the outstanding balance of the mortgages in the group by ten per cent of the total premiums paid and, second, when the balance in the account fails to reach the above figure one year before maturity of the mortgages, ten per cent of the premiums paid shall be transferred to the general reinsurance account and the balance, if any, transferred to the mortgages for the benefit of the mortgagors.

A TENTATIVE STATEMENT OF ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES AFFECTING CORPORATE REPORTS.

The Accounting Review 1936 11(2), 187-191
Following the publication of a statement of objectives of the American Accounting Association in the March 1936 issue of The Accounting Review, the Executive Committee, governing body of the Association, has authorized the publication of the appended tentative statement of accounting principle, relating primarily to corporate reports. The article presents some of the bases upon which accounting statements rest in the U.S. It includes an experimental formulation of principles having application to perhaps the most significant part of the accountant's field of endeavor. The article says that the most important applications of accounting principles lie in the field of corporate accounting, particularly in the preparation of published reports of profits and financial position. On the interpretation of such reports depend so many vital decisions of business and government that they have come to be of great economic and social significance. Every corporate report should be based on accounting principles that are sufficiently uniform and well understood to justify the forming of opinions as to the condition and progress of the business enterprise behind it.

The National Recovery Administration (Book).

The Accounting Review 1936 11(1), 83-84
Reviews the book "The National Recovery Administration. An Analysis and an Appraisal," by Leverett S. Lyon, Paul T. Homan, George Terborough, Lewis L. Lorwin, Charles L. Dearing and Leon C. Marshall.