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Feasibility Criteria for Accounting Measures.

Daniel L. McDonald

Assistant Professor, University of Washington. 1

The Accounting Review 1967

Abstract The achievement of accounting objectives is predicated upon successive means-ends combinations accommodated by and implicit in this environment. A singularly important accounting goal is the measurement of periodic income of a business enterprise. This action, measurement, should begin with the measurer's understanding of a conceptual definition of income-one which clearly identifies those qualitative attributes of which income consists. The conversion of this type of conceptual formulation into an operational proposition presupposes the existence of broad purposes that underlie the general process of accounting measurement as well as the specific purposes which more uniquely condition income measurements; these purposes manifest themselves in the form of reactor elements (operators) that facilitate the systematic translation of conceptual expressions into operational definitions. It is assumed that the structure of the process by which the accountant is able to resolve each of these specific income determination problems is not unlike the structure of any other human problem-solving activity, and that examination of this applied problem-solving in appropriately general form may illumine, at least partially, the relevant metatheoretical structure elements and relationships.

DOI
10.2308/tar-4511758
Volume
42 (4)
Pages
662-679
Language
en
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