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On the Use of the Economic Concept of Human Capital in Financial Statements: A Comment.

Eric G. Flamholtz

Assistant Professor, Graduate School of Business, Columbia University. 1

The Accounting Review 1972

Abstract This article presents criticisms of aspects of the major concepts, methods, and implications of human capital measurement and reporting proposed by Baruch Lev and Ada Schwartz. Although Lev and Schwartz do not formally define the concept of human capital, they do state that it is a source of income embodied in a person. Neither the set of services an individual can potentially provide nor the value of those services to an organization are "embodied" or inherent in the person. Rather, an individual's service potential is a function of the interaction between the person's skills and the role or set of tasks he performs in a given situation. A major limitation of the valuation model proposed by Lev and Schwartz is that it ignores the possibility and probability that the individual will exit from the organization for reasons other than death or retirement. Thus the application of the model may very significantly overstate an individual's expected service life, and, in turn, overstate or inflate the value of human capital.

DOI
10.2308/tar-4487418
Volume
47 (1)
Pages
148-152
Language
en
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