mostraligabue
» » Accounting, Volume 7: How to Meet the Challenges of Relevance and Regulation (Studies in the Development of Accounting Thought)

ePub Accounting, Volume 7: How to Meet the Challenges of Relevance and Regulation (Studies in the Development of Accounting Thought) download

by Robert Bricker,Flegm,Eugene H. Flegm

ePub Accounting, Volume 7: How to Meet the Challenges of Relevance and Regulation (Studies in the Development of Accounting Thought) download
Author:
Robert Bricker,Flegm,Eugene H. Flegm
ISBN13:
978-0762310784
ISBN:
0762310782
Language:
Publisher:
Emerald Group Publishing Limited (November 1, 2004)
Category:
Subcategory:
Business & Finance
ePub file:
1143 kb
Fb2 file:
1438 kb
Other formats:
mbr doc lrf lrf
Rating:
4.4
Votes:
440

1915, 11) described how practitioners acknowledged the need for students to think.

The practitioners who pioneered the establishment of the first university. 1915, 11) described how practitioners acknowledged the need for students to think.

In 1984, when this book was first published, it was a challenge to the new .

Its republication in 2004 with a new foreword comes at a particularly auspicious time, because FASB and IASB are embarking on revisions to their conceptual frameworks and considering whether their standards adequately address all entities to which they currently apply.

Founded in 1997, BookFinder.

M. Palacios Manzano). The Effect of Mandatory Audit-Firm Rotation: A Monitoring Perspective.

The author presents his basic belief that only a historical cost based system can be used to establish the reliability in financial data.

Is the average accountant being strangled by overregulation? Have traditional accounting and auditing practices been misunderstood and unfairly maligned? Can anything be done to reverse these damaging trends? In the 1984 edition of this book, Eugene H. Flegm gave an emphatic yes to all three questions. However, none of his suggestions were followed and today the condition of the accounting profession (defined as to include those in business as well as public accounting) is in dire straits. The regulators - FASB, SEC and the AICPA - have continued to overwhelm practicing accountants with a continuation of detailed rules making. In this updated version of his book, Mr. Flegm explains the causes of the current crisis, how the accounting profession and the FASB failed to deal with the developing problems 20 years ago, and how there is still some hope that the integrity of the profession can be restored. He reiterates his basic belief that only an historical cost based system can be used to establish the badly needed reliability in financial data which after all is why financial statements are relevant at all. He also brings to question whether or not the AICPA and the public auditing firms have not forfeited their self regulation franchise.