To make high-quality research more accessible and easier to explore.
Fields:
8 results
✕ Clear filters
Advanced Accounting (Book).
Reviews the book "Advanced Accounting," by Arthur W. Holmes and Robert A. Meier.
ACCOUNTING AND RISING PRICES IN A STUDENT CO--OPERATIVE.
Abstract All business firms have felt the impact of rising prices in one way or another. In many cases their financial statements have yielded peculiar results. On the balance sheet, the historical cost basis of valuation of plant and equipment, and the "lower of cost or market" method for the valuation of inventories have tended to undervalue assets grossly. Credit ratings, current ratios, and insurance coverage often cannot be determined adequately from these figures. On the income statement, reported earnings have often soared to unprecedented heights, due mainly to the matching of out of date inventory and depredation figures against current, higher selling prices. Accompanying this exaggeration of profits are the problems of higher replacement costs of inventories and plant, of sharing these illusory profits among the government taxing agencies, laborers, and stockholders, of the determination of future selling prices, etc. The accounting records become much less useful as aids in solving these perplexing problems, in as much as they have not been adapted to the changing price level.
THE PROBLEM OF FIXED CHARGES.
Abstract This article focuses on the problem of fixed charges in cost accounting. Fixed costs may be defined as those costs which remain practically unchanged in total amount when physical volume of output is varied. Such costs are not controllable by management, for their total amount is independent of circumstances which can be altered by executive decision. Most of these costs are fixed only within a certain range of output and become variable when greater ranges occur. To control costs, management needs information concerning controllable costs: which costs are controllable, what these costs should have been and what they actually were, as well as why the variances occurred. To determine the adequacy of selling prices, management needs to know total costs and product variable costs. Total costs will provide information as to the over-all adequacy of selling pikes. Variable product costs will provide information as to the adequacy of selling prices of individual products and, provide a guide for minimum selling prices. Thus management is concerned with both fixed and variable costs.
La Banque nationale de Belgique. P. Kauch
Crisis in Britain: A Note on the Stagnation Thesis
Monetary Policy for a Competitive Society/Federal--Reserve Policy Making (Book).
Reviews the books "Monetary Policy for a Competitive Society," by Lloyd W.Mints; "Federal Reserve Policy-Making: A Study in Government Economic Policy Formation," by G.L.Bach.
RESERVES AND RETAINED INCOME.
Abstract The article focuses on recommendations presented by the American Accounting Association's Committee on Concepts and Standards, regarding the use of term "reserve" in accounting. The committee recommended that the term reserve should not be employed in published financial statements of business corporations, appropriations of retained income should not be made or displayed in such a manner as to create misleading inferences, and the reserve section in corporate balance sheets should be eliminated and its elements exhibited as deduction-from-asset, or liability, or retained income amounts. In general usage, outside of accounting, a reserve is a fund of cash or other assets. In accounting the term has been used to caption a variety of balance sheet items including segregated retained income, segregated asset, asset valuation and asset amortization amounts, and liabilities. It has been recommended that the word reserve be restricted to captions describing appropriated retained income. The committee believes that the popular understanding of financial statements, and the thinking of the profession, would be promoted by abandoning the term.