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WHAT IS PROPER TRAINING FOR ACCOUNTANTS?

The Accounting Review 1941 16(2), 183-188
Public accountancy is admittedly one of the newer professions. From time to time accountants have deemed it appropriate to remark the similarities existing between the accounting profession and the professions of medicine and law. There have been fewer likening of accounting to the still older professions of teaching and the ministry. Accounting has been accorded its place in the general educational program. At least one year of accounting, the elementary course, is available in almost every college in the U.S. Nearly all colleges and universities offer, in addition to this elementary course, some courses in "advanced accounting." These "advanced courses" usually include cost accounting and some auditing. Courses carrying the equivalent of from nine to fifteen semester hours of credit constitute a rather common accounting curriculum in even the very small schools. Unquestionably there has been a universal recognition of the demand for instruction in accounting. There are two schools in accounting instruction, that school which emphasizes primarily the philosophy of accounts, and that school which emphasizes primarily the mechanics of accounting.

THE INCOME TAX AND THE NATURAL PERSON.

The Accounting Review 1941 16(4), 358-373
The article presents information on the fact that the Sixteenth Amendment 1913 was formulated to delegate power to the U.S. federal government to levy a tax on the income of natural persons. An income tax on corporations had been effective four years before the amendment. It was decided as early as 1904 that an excise tax could be measured by gross income and a corporate income tax was construed to be an excise tax for the privilege of doing business as a corporate entity. Whatever might have been the intent of the amendment or the popular belief, the income tax has not developed into a personal tax in a strict sense either in law or in other respects. The present Federal income tax is unique in the sense that it cannot be classed with any other known form. From a legal standpoint the tax does not follow the person. From an economic standpoint it does not fall on persons in proportion to their respective economic circumstances. It is neither legally nor otherwise a personal tax based on ability to pay.

THE ACCOUNTING EXCHANGE.

The Accounting Review 1941 16(2), 207-212
It would be a strange business that could exist for any length of time without incurring risks, this essay will be confined to the audit of banks and similar financial institutions. Insofar as the ordinary commercial house is concerned it would not be unfair to state that contingent liabilities are comparatively unimportant the reason being, of course, that the direct liabilities that have definitely been incurred in the course of trading are usually much greater than the risks which may or may not arise as the result of some unforeseen contingency. A banking company that holds partly paid stock or shares in a Limited-Liability Company is liable in case of need to pay up the "calls" made upon shareholders, and it is therefore easy to assess the bank's risk under this heading. The audit should include an inspection of the stock and a careful examination of its wording. The current accounting practice is to mention the amount for which the bank stands liable if a call of all the unpaid capital is made.

A GENEALOGY FOR 'COST OR MARKET'

The Accounting Review 1941 16(2), 161-167
Several surveys of inventory practices have been made. The N.A.C.A. Bulletin of March, 1937, showed that 87% of 197 companies used the rule of cost or market whichever is lower for raw materials in their balance sheets. A report of February 1938 by the National Industrial Conference Board analyzed 916 companies. The rule was applied to raw materials in 63% of the cases, to goods in process in 38% and to furnished goods in 40% of the cases. The research department of the American Institute of Accountants examined 500 annual reports for 1939. The figures tabulated in The Journal of Accountancy for October 1940 show that 56% followed this rule "or variations thereof." These surveys as samples of practice show that the rule is in general use. But a rule may be widely useful in business without having the character necessary to make it a fundamental proposition of accounting. If we wish to search out the character of this rule, if we would like to determine whether it is a convenient and expedient rule of thumb or a basic accounting idea, we might begin by looking up its ancestry.

THE BASIS FOR ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES.

The Accounting Review 1941 16(4), 341-349
The article discusses the basis for accounting principles. The concept of a government of law as contrasted with a government of men is one of the best expressions of the role of principles in human affairs. However, this familiar legal dictum refers to a highly specialized application of principles. It assumes a systematized body of law which applies only to those relations between human beings which are regulated by the authority of a politically organized society. At the back of any such system of law lie general principles which were formulated so early in the evolution of human society that we cannot determine their origins. These general conceptions or principles serve as standards for the judgment of human conduct. Some of them are justice, fairness, truth, kindness, friendliness and beauty. There are many of them. They are so general in character that they defy exact definition. Systems of law and types of government come and go; the things which men believe to be just and beautiful change, but these general conceptions persist from age to age.