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COMMENTS ON 'AN INTRODUCTION TO CORPORATE ACCOUNTING STANDARDS'

The Accounting Review 1941 16(1), 75-81
The article comments on the paper "An Introduction to Corporate Accounting Standards," by W.A. Paton and A.C. Littleton. The work attempts to build a coherent structure on a philosophical foundation, rather than to discover any coherence in the field of accounting as it is. This savors of thirteenth century science, when conclusions were derived from the application of logic to classical preconceptions, and when recourse to the laboratory was beneath the dignity of scientists. The predominantly deductive approach carries with it the temptation to leave out or deny what ever may conflict with conclusions. Not only does this monograph limit itself to corporation accounting of income but it seems to be mainly preoccupied with manufacturing concerns. Costs attach to products sold, of which more might be said. Contractual interest is relegated to the status of dividends, which statement is good for plenty of argument. And speaking of honest men, it seems that the authors of this monograph have a profound distrust of management, even though they emphasize that a chief purpose of accounting is to serve and represent corporate management.

DEPRECIATION POLICY: REPAIRS AND REPLACEMENTS.

The Accounting Review 1941 16(4), 385-391
The article focuses on repairs and replacements concerning depreciation policy. Accountants writing in the field of depreciation, particularly with regard to repairs, renewals, replacements, betterments, etc., have placed what seems to the author undue emphasis on the physical and productive aspects of the problem. Such criteria for accounting procedures do not offer a rational basis for the solution of many accounting difficulties which arise in this field. There are cases, no doubt, in which the replacing of a simple rivet or bolt will increase the productivity of a complicated machine from zero to one hundred per cent. Moreover, the fact that an "extraordinary" repair will probably increase the service life of the entire machine or make the unit perform more efficiently, while of critical importance in guiding the management in reaching the decision to make the change, ordinarily does not constitute a rational basis for determining whether the expenditure should be taken to operations in the period of incurrment or deferred to future operations.

TESTS OF INCOME REALIZATION.

The Accounting Review 1941 16(2), 139-155
The distinction between realized and unrealized income is a familiar one to accountants. The distinction in fact is such a vital one that income which is not realized is not generally considered to be income at all. At the present time the problem of income is more in the foreground of the accountant's horizon than ever before. In view of the immediate significance of income it seems strange that such a crucial question as the test of realization should so generally have escaped critical discussion. The test of realization most generally applied is that of sale. This is a convenient test which is readily understood in the great majority of cases by most people concerned. However in view of the great importance attached to the test and of the absurdities which it causes in a few cases, a study of the sale as the dominant criterion for income realization should prove fruitful. While the sale is a convenient rule-of-thumb test, in some ways it represents a rather low stage of development of a streamlined concept of income.

ACCOUNTING IN THE GRADUATE PROGRAM OF THE SOCIAL-SCIENCE STUDENT.

The Accounting Review 1941 16(2), 155-161
Research into many important problems requires an understanding of both economics and accounting. It cannot be supposed that a single course in accounting will provide an adequate background for all problems therefore accounting in the graduate program of the social science student may be made a part of the course. The function of such a course would be an exposition of the basic principles of accounting and as far as possible an attempt would be made to explore some of the similarities and differences between economics and accounting. Accounting has a limited appeal to students of history, sociology, and political science. Most of those enrolling in the course will be students of economics. Of these the greater part will already have had sufficient background to give them an insight and interest in the problems of economics and accounting not uniformly characteristic of sophomores and juniors. Most of them will already have had courses in money and banking, corporation finance investments, marketing, and statistics. In addition some understanding of theory may be expected.

ACCOUNTING PROBLEMS IN CORPORATE DISTRIBUTIONS.

The Accounting Review 1941 16(3), 244-261
Problems of corporate distributions to shareholders furnish the most fertile field for the study of relations between accounting and law. The paper represents an effort to explore some of these relations rather than to discuss for their own sake the accounting treatment of corporate distributions. No attempt is made to develop the subject comprehensively or systematically. Problems dealt with have been chosen because they afford the best illustrations of the evolution of corporate accounting principles and their influence on corporate financial practice. Much confusion in corporation law and accounting has resulted from an authority frequently granted to corporations issuing no par shares to allocate part of the consideration to paid-in surplus. These statutes have handicapped accountants in their efforts to develop and enforce standards of disclosure as to shareholders' investment and undistributed earnings. Until recently, furthermore, accountants have not generally been astute in marking out their own field of influence in the face of these liberal corporation laws.