26p Theories
26p Theories
c hap te r 1
Accounting Theory
I n its simplest form, theory may be just a belief, but for a theory to be useful, it must have wide
acceptance. Webster defined theory as:
Systematically organized knowledge, applicable in a relatively wide variety of circum-
stances; a system of assumptions, accepted principles and rules of procedure to analyze,
predict or otherwise explain the nature of behavior of a specified set of phenomena.1
AL
The objective of theory is to explain and predict. Consequently, a basic goal of the theory of a
particular discipline is to have a well‐defined body of knowledge that has been systematically
RI
accumulated, organized, and verified well enough to provide a frame of reference for future
actions.
TE
Theories may be described as either normative or positive. Normative theories explain
what should be, whereas positive theories explain what is. Ideally, there should be no such dis-
what is. MA
tinction because a well‐developed and complete theory encompasses both what should be and
The goal of accounting theory is to provide a set of principles and relationships that explain
observed practices and predict unobserved practices. That is, accounting theory should be able
D
to explain why companies elect to use certain accounting methods over others and should enable
users to predict the attributes of firms that elect to use various accounting methods. As in other
TE
by a self‐regulated market that operates through the forces of supply and demand. Goods and
services are available for purchase in markets, and individuals are free to enter or exit the market
to pursue their economic goals. All societies are constrained by scarce resources that limit the
RI
attainment of all individual or group economic goals. In our society, the role of accounting is to
report how organizations use scarce resources and to report on the status of resources and claims
PY
to resources.
As will be discussed in Chapter 4, there are various theories of accounting and the uses
of accounting information, including the fundamental analysis model, the efficient markets hy-
CO
pothesis, the behavioral finance model, the capital asset pricing model, the positive accounting
theory model, the human information processing model, and the critical perspective model.
These often competing theories exist because accounting theory has not yet developed into the
state described by Webster’s definition. Accounting research is needed to attain a more general
theory of accounting, and in this regard the various theories of accounting that have been posited
must be subjected to verification. A critical question concerns the usefulness of accounting data
to users. That is, does the use of a theory help individual decision makers make more correct
decisions? Various suggestions on the empirical testing of accounting theories have been offered.2
As theories are tested and are either confirmed or discarded, we move closer to a general theory
of accounting.
1
Webster’s 11th New Collegiate Dictionary (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1999).
2
See, for example, Robert Sterling, “On Theory Structure and Verification,” The Accounting Review (July 1970): 444–457.
1
2 CHAPTER 1 The Development of Accounting Theory
The goal of this text is to provide a user perspective on accounting theory. To this end, we
first review the development of accounting theory to illustrate how investors’ needs have been
perceived over time. Next we review the current status of accounting theory with an emphasis
on how investors and potential investors use accounting and other financial information. Finally,
we summarize current disclosure requirements for various financial statement items and provide
examples to show how companies comply with these disclosure requirements.
The Early The work of Denise Schmandt‐Besserat suggests that that the origins of writing are actually
History of found in counting. This assertion is based on the fact that at nearly every Middle Eastern archeo-
logical site the researchers have found little pieces of fired clay that they could not identify. Sub-
Accounting sequently, Schmandt‐Besserat’s research found that the tokens composed an elaborate system of
accounting that was used throughout the Middle East from approximately 8000 to 3000 BC. Each
token stood for a specific item, such as a sheep or a jar of oil, and it was used to take inventory
and keep accounts.3
Other accounting records dating back several thousand years have been found in var-
ious parts of the world. These records indicate that at all levels of development, people desire
information about their efforts and accomplishments. For example, the Zenon papyri,4 which
were discovered in 1915, contain information about the construction projects, agricultural activ-
ities, and business operations of the private estate of Apollonius for a period of about thirty years
during the third century BC.
According to Hain, “The Zenon papyri give evidence of a surprisingly elaborate accounting
system which had been used in Greece since the fifth century BC and which, in the wake of Greek
trade or conquest, gradually spread throughout the Eastern Mediterranean and Middle East.”5
Zenon’s accounting system contained provisions for responsibility accounting, a written record
of all transactions, a personal account for wages paid to employees, inventory records, and a
record of asset acquisitions and disposals. In addition, there is evidence that all the accounts were
audited.6
Later, the Romans kept elaborate records, but because they expressed numbers through
letters of the alphabet, they were not able to develop any structured system of accounting. It
was not until the Renaissance—approximately 1300–1500, when the Italians were vigorously
pursuing trade and commerce—that the need to keep accurate records arose. Italian merchants
borrowed the Arabic numeral system and the basis of arithmetic, and an evolving trend toward
the double‐entry bookkeeping system we now use developed.
In 1494 an Italian monk, Fra Luca Pacioli, wrote a book on arithmetic that included a
description of double‐entry bookkeeping. Pacioli’s work, Summa de Arithmetica Geometria Pro-
portioniet Proportionalita, did not fully describe double‐entry bookkeeping; rather, it formalized
the practices and ideas that had been evolving over the years. Double‐entry bookkeeping enabled
business organizations to keep complete records of transactions and ultimately resulted in the
ability to prepare financial statements.
Statements of profit and loss and statements of balances emerged in about 1600.7 Initially,
the primary motive for separate financial statements was to obtain information regarding capital.
3
Denise Schmandt-Besserat, Before Writing: From Counting to Cuneiform Vols. I and II (Austin, TX: University of Texas
Press, 1992).
4
Zenon worked as a private secretary for Apollonius in Egypt in approximately 260 BC.
5
H. P. Hain, “Accounting Control in the Zenon Papyri,” The Accounting Review (October 1966): 699.
6
Ibid., 700–701.
7
A. C. Littleton, Accounting Evolution to 1900 (New York: AICPA, 1933).
The Early History of Accounting 3
Consequently, balance sheet data were stressed and refined in various ways, and expense and
income data were viewed as incidental.8
As ongoing business organizations replaced isolated ventures, it became necessary to develop
accounting records and reports that reflected a continuing investment of capital employed in various
ways and to periodically summarize the results of activities. By the nineteenth century, bookkeep-
ing had expanded into accounting, and the concept that the owner’s original contribution, plus or
minus profits or losses, indicated net worth emerged. However, profit was considered an increase
in assets from any source because the concepts of cost and income were yet to be fully developed.
Another factor that influenced the development of accounting during the nineteenth century
was the evolution in England of joint ventures into business corporations. Under the corporate
form of business, owners (stockholders) are not necessarily the company’s managers. Thus many
people external to the business itself needed information about the corporation’s activities. More-
over, owners and prospective owners wanted to evaluate whether stockholder investments had
yielded a return. As a consequence, the emerging existence of corporations created a need for
periodic reporting as well as a need to distinguish between capital and income.
The statutory establishment of corporations in England in 1845 stimulated the development
of accounting standards, and laws were subsequently designed to safeguard shareholders against
improper actions by corporate officers. Dividends were required to be paid from profits, and
accounts were required to be kept and audited by persons other than the directors. The Industrial
Revolution and the succession of the Companies Acts in England9 also increased the need for
professional standards and accountants.
During this period commerce was expanding in the United States and by the later part of
the nineteenth century, the Industrial Revolution had arrived, bringing the need for more formal
accounting procedures and standards. Railroads became a major economic influence that created
the need for supporting industries. This led to increases in the market for corporate securities and
an increased need for trained accountants as the separation of the management and ownership
functions became more distinct.
At the end of the nineteenth century, widespread speculation in the securities markets,
watered stocks, and large monopolies that controlled segments of the U.S. economy resulted in
the establishment of the progressive movement. In 1898 the Industrial Commission was formed
to investigate questions relating to immigration, labor, agriculture, manufacturing, and business.
Although no accountants were either on the commission or used by the commission, a prelimi-
nary report issued in 1900 suggested that an independent public accounting profession should be
established to curtail observed corporate abuses.
Although most accountants did not necessarily subscribe to the desirability of the progres-
sive reforms, the progressive movement conferred specific social obligations on accountants.10
As a result, accountants generally came to accept three general levels of progressiveness: (1) a
fundamental faith in democracy, a concern for morality and justice, and a broad acceptance of
the efficiency of education as a major tool in social amelioration; (2) an increased awareness of
the social obligation of all segments of society and introduction of the idea of the public account-
ability of business and political leaders; and (3) an acceptance of pragmatism as the most relevant
operative philosophy of the day.11
The major concern of accounting during the early 1900s was the development of a theory
that could cope with corporate abuses that were occurring at that time, and capital mainte-
nance emerged as a concept. This concept evolved from maintaining invested capital intact to
8
John L. Carey, The Rise of the Accounting Profession (New York: AICPA, 1969), 5.
9
Companies Act is a short title used for legislation in the United Kingdom relating to company law.
10
Gary John Previts and Barbara Dubis Merino, A History of Accounting in America (Columbus: Ohio State University Press,
1979), 177.
11
Richard Hofstadter, Social Darwinism in American Thought (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1944).
4 CHAPTER 1 The Development of Accounting Theory
maintaining the physical productive capacity of the firm to maintaining real capital. In essence,
this last view of capital maintenance was an extension of the economic concept of income (see
Chapter 5) that there could be no increase in wealth unless the stockholder or the firm were better
off at the end of the period than at the beginning.
The accounting profession also evolved over time. Initially anyone could claim to be an
accountant, for there were no organized standards of qualifications, and accountants were trained
through an apprenticeship system. Later, private commercial colleges began to emerge as the
training grounds for accountants.
The last quarter of the nineteenth century was a period of economic change that provided
the impetus for the establishment of the accounting profession in the United States. The Institute
of Accountants of New York, formed in 1882, was the first professional accounting organization.
In 1887, a national organization, the American Association of Public Accountants (AAPA) was
formed. The goal of these two organizations was to obtain legal recognition for the public prac-
tice of accounting.12 In 1902, the Federation of Societies of Public Accountants in the United
States was organized. Subsequently, in 1904 the United States International Congress of Accoun-
tants was convened and resulted in the merger of the AAPA and the Federation into the American
Association of Public Accountants. In 1916, after a decade of bitter interfactional disputes, this
group was reorganized into the American Institute of Accountants (AIA).
In the early 1900s, many universities began offering accounting courses. At this time no
standard accounting curriculum existed.13 In an attempt to alleviate this problem, in 1916 the
American Association of the University Instructors in Accounting (AAUIA) was also formed.
Because curriculum development was the major focus at this time, it was not until much later that
the AAUIA attempted to become involved in the development of accounting theory.
World War I changed the public’s attitude toward the business sector. Many people believed
that the successful completion of the war could at least partially be attributed to the ingenuity of
American business. As a consequence, the public perceived that business had reformed and that
external regulation was no longer necessary. The accountant’s role changed from protector of
third parties to protector of business interests. This change in emphasis probably contributed to
the events that followed in the 1920s.
Critics of accounting practice during the 1920s suggested that accountants abdicated the stew-
ardship role, placed too much emphasis on the needs of management, and permitted too much
flexibility in financial reporting. During this time financial statements were viewed as the repre-
sentations of management, and accountants did not have the ability to require businesses to use
accounting principles they did not wish to employ. The result of this attitude is well known. In
1929 the stock market crashed, and as a result, the Great Depression ensued. Although accoun-
tants were not initially blamed for these events, the possibility of government intervention in the
corporate sector loomed.
Accounting The Great Depression caused business interests to become increasingly concerned about
in the United government intervention, and they looked for ways to self‐reform. One of the first attempts to
improve accounting began shortly after the inception of the Great Depression with a series of
States since meetings between representatives of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) and the American
1930 Institute of Accountants. The purpose of these meetings was to discuss problems pertaining to
12
Previts and Marino, op cit, 135.
13
For example, students now taking such accounting courses as intermediate, cost, or auditing are exposed to essentially the
same material in all academic institutions, and textbooks offering the standard material for these classes are available from
several publishers.
Accounting in the United States since 1930 5
the interests of investors, the NYSE, and accountants in the preparation of external financial
statements.
Similarly, in 1935 the American Association of University Instructors in Accounting
changed its name to the American Accounting Association (AAA) and announced its intention to
expand its activities in the research and development of accounting principles and standards. The
first result of these expanded activities was the publication, in 1936, of a brief report cautiously
titled, “A Tentative Statement of Accounting Principles Underlying Corporate Financial State-
ments.” The four‐and‐one‐half‐page document summarized the significant concepts underlying
financial statements at that time.
The cooperative efforts between the members of the NYSE and the AIA were well received.
However, the post‐Depression atmosphere in the United States was characterized by regula-
tion. There was even legislation introduced in Congress that would have required auditors to be
licensed by the federal government after passing a civil service examination.
Two of the most important pieces of congressional legislation passed at this time were the
Securities Act of 1933 and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, which established the Securities
and Exchange Commission (SEC). The SEC was created to administer various securities acts.
Under powers provided by Congress, the SEC was given the authority to prescribe accounting
principles and reporting practices. Nevertheless, because the SEC has generally acted as an over-
seer and allowed the private sector to develop accounting principles, this authority has seldom
been used. However, the SEC has exerted pressure on the accounting profession and has been
especially interested in narrowing areas of difference in accounting practice. (The role of the SEC
is discussed in more detail in Chapter 17.)
From 1936 to 1938 the SEC was engaged in an internal debate over whether it should
develop accounting standards. Even though William O. Douglas (then the SEC chairman, and
later a Supreme Court justice) disagreed, in 1938 the SEC decided in Accounting Series Release
(ASR No. 4) to allow accounting principles to be set in the private sector. ASR No. 4 indicated that
reports filed with the SEC must be prepared in accordance with accounting principles that have
“substantial authoritative support.”14
The profession was convinced that it did not have the time needed to develop a theoretical
framework of accounting. As a result, the AIA agreed to publish a study by Sanders, Hatfield,
and Moore titled A Statement of Accounting Principles.15 The publication of this work was quite
controversial in that it was simply a survey of existing practice that was seen as telling practicing
accountants “do what you think is best.” Some accountants also used the study as an authoritative
source that justified current practice.
Earlier in 1936, the AIA had merged with the American Society of Certified Public Accoun-
tants, forming a larger organization later named the American Institute of Certified Public Accoun-
tants (AICPA). This organization has had increasing influence on the development of accounting
theory. For example, over the years, the AICPA established several committees and boards to
deal with the need to further develop accounting principles. The first was the Committee on
Accounting Procedure. It was followed by the Accounting Principles Board, which was replaced
by the Financial Accounting Standards Board. Each of these bodies has issued pronouncements
on accounting issues, which have become the primary source of generally accepted accounting
principles that guide accounting practice today.
14
This term, initially proposed by Carman Blough, the first chief accountant of the SEC, is meant to mean authority of
“substantial weight” or importance, and not necessarily a majority view. Thus there might be three authoritative positions, all
of which are appropriate at a point in time before some standard is established. The majority might have gone in one direction,
but the minority were also considered “authoritative” and could be used. See William D. Cooper, “Carman G. Blough’s
Contributions to Accounting: An Overview,” Accounting Historians Journal 9, no. 2 (Fall 1982): 61–67.
15
Thomas H. Sanders, Henry Rand Hatfield and William Underhill Moore, A Statement of Accounting Principles (New York:
AICPA, 1938).
6 CHAPTER 1 The Development of Accounting Theory
16
Lynn E. Turner, The Future is Now, Keynote Address, Accounting Hall of Fame-Association of Accounting Historians, Ohio
State University, Columbus, Ohio, November 10, 2000.
17
Earnings management is a strategy used by the management of a company to deliberately manipulate the company’s earnings
so that the figures match a predetermined target. See Chapter 5 for a detailed discussion.
Accounting in the United States since 1930 7
issues. However the expectation of a change in the method of establishing accounting princi-
ples was quickly squelched when the first APB chairman, Weldon Powell, voiced his belief that
accounting research was more applied than pure and that the usefulness of the end product was
a major concern.18
The APB was comprised of from seventeen to twenty‐one members, who were selected pri-
marily from the accounting profession but also included individuals from industry, government,
and academia. Initially, the pronouncements of the APB, termed “Opinions,” were not mandatory
practice; however, the issuance of APB Opinion No. 2 (see FASB ASC 740‐10‐25 and 45) and a
subsequent partial retraction contained in APB Opinion No. 4 (see FASB ASC 740‐10‐50) high-
lighted the need for standard‐setting groups to have more authority.
This controversy was over the proper method to use in accounting for the investment tax
credit. In the early 1960s the country was suffering from the effects of a recession. After President
John F. Kennedy took office, his advisors suggested an innovative fiscal economic policy that
involved a direct income tax credit (as opposed to a tax deduction) based on a percentage of the cost
of a qualified investment. Congress passed legislation creating the investment tax credit in 1961.
The APB was then faced with deciding how companies should record and report the effects
of the investment tax credit. It considered two alternative approaches:
1. The flow‐through method, which treated the tax credit as a decrease in income tax expense
in the year it occurred.
2. The deferred method, which treated the tax credit as a reduction in the cost of the asset and
therefore was reflected over the life of the asset through reduced depreciation charges.
The APB decided that the tax credit should be accounted for by the deferred method
and issued APB Opinion No. 2. This pronouncement stated that the tax reduction amounted
to a cost reduction, the effects of which should be amortized over the useful life of the asset
acquired. The reaction to this decision was quite negative on several fronts. Members of the
Kennedy administration considered the flow‐through method more consistent with the goals
of the legislation, and three of the then–Big Eight accounting firms advised their clients not
to follow the recommendations of APB Opinion No. 2. In 1963, the SEC issued Accounting
Series Release No. 96, allowing firms to use either the flow‐through or deferred method in their
SEC filings.
The fact that the SEC had the authority to issue accounting pronouncements, and the
lack of general acceptance of APB Opinion No. 2, resulted in the APB partially retreating
from its previous position. Though reaffirming the previous decision as being the proper
and most appropriate treatment, APB Opinion No. 4 approved the use of either of the
two methods.
The lack of support for some of the APB’s pronouncements and concern over the for-
mulation and acceptance of GAAP caused the Council of the AICPA to adopt Rule 203 of the
Code of Professional Ethics.19 This rule requires departures from accounting principles pub-
lished in APB Opinions or Accounting Research Bulletins (or subsequently FASB Statements
and now the FASB ASC) to be disclosed in footnotes to financial statements or in independent
auditors’ reports when the effects of such departures are material. This action has had the effect
of requiring companies and public accountants who deviate from authoritative pronouncements
to justify such departures.
In addition to the difficulties associated with passage of APB Opinions No. 2 and No. 4,
the APB encountered other problems. The members of the APB were, in effect, volunteers.
18
Weldon Powell, “Report on the Accounting Research Activities of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants,”
The Accounting Review (January 1961): 26–31.
19
The AICPA’s Professional Code of Ethics is discussed in more detail in Chapter 17.
8 CHAPTER 1 The Development of Accounting Theory
These individuals had full‐time responsibilities to their employers; therefore, the performance
of their duties on the APB became secondary. By the late 1960s, criticism of the development of
accounting principles again arose. This criticism centered on the following factors:
1. The independence of the members of the APB. The individuals serving on the Board had
full‐time responsibilities elsewhere that might influence their views of certain issues.
2. The structure of the Board. The largest eight public accounting firms (at that time) were
automatically awarded one member, and there were usually five or six other public accoun-
tants on the APB.
3. Response time. The emerging accounting problems were not being investigated and solved
quickly enough by the part‐time members.
$23 million a year to support the activities of the FASB. Figure 1.1 illustrates the current struc-
ture of the FASB.
Both the FAF and the FASB have a broader representation of the total profession than did
the APB; however, most of the members are usually CPAs from public practice. The structure of
the FAF has also come under scrutiny by the SEC. In 1996, Arthur Levitt, chairman of the SEC,
voiced concern that the FAF’s public interest objectives were at risk. He suggested that the FAF
be reorganized so that most of its members would be individuals with strong public service back-
grounds who are better able to represent the public free of any conflict of interest. He suggested
that the SEC should approve the appointments to the FAF.20 To date there has been no substan-
tial change in the method of appointing FAF members, although in 2002 the FAF amended the
trustee appointment process. It now requires the trustees to consider up to two nominees from
the constituent organizations for each seat and for the appointment to be made by the trustees.
Under the new system, if the trustees do not find the nominees acceptable, they may consult with
that particular organization and appoint a person of their own choosing as long as the individual’s
background matches the requirements for that particular seat. Additional changes in the structure
of either the FAF or the FASB are likely to be evolutionary.
Section 108 of Sarbanes–Oxley established criteria that must be met for the work prod-
uct of an accounting standard‐setting body to be recognized as “generally accepted.” The SEC
responded by issuing a policy statement stating that the FASB and its parent organization, the
FAF, satisfy the criteria in Section 108 of the Sarbanes–Oxley Act, and accordingly, the FASB’s
financial accounting and reporting standards are recognized as “generally accepted” for pur-
poses of the federal securities laws.21 Consequently, the FASB is the organization having the
authority to issue standards for financial accounting. Thus, throughout this book, pronounce-
ments of the FASB and those of its predecessor organizations not superseded or amended are
presented as GAAP.
20
R. Abelson, “Accounting Group to Meet with SEC in Rules Debate,” New York Times, 5 May 1996, D5.
21
The AICPA’s Professional Code of Ethics is discussed in more detail in Chapter 17.
10 C H A P T E R 1 The Development of Accounting Theory
Types of Pronouncements
Originally, the FASB issued two types of pronouncements, Statements of Financial Accounting
Standards (SFASs) and Interpretations. Subsequently, the FASB established two new series
of releases: Statements of Financial Accounting Concepts (SFACs) and Technical Bulletins.
SFASs conveyed required accounting methods and procedures for specific accounting issues
and officially created GAAP. Interpretations were modifications or extensions of issues pro-
nouncements. SFACs are intended to establish the objectives and concepts that the FASB
will use in developing standards of financial accounting and reporting. To date, the FASB
has issued eight SFACs, which are discussed in depth in Chapters 2, 6, and 7. SFACs differ
from SFASs in that they do not establish GAAP. Similarly, they are not intended to invoke
Rule 203 of the Rules of Conduct of the Code of Professional Ethics. It is anticipated that
the major beneficiary of these SFACs will be the FASB itself. However, knowledge of the
objectives and concepts the Board uses should enable users of financial statements to better
understand the content and limitations of financial accounting information. Technical Bulle-
tins were strictly interpretive in nature and did not establish new standards or amend existing
standards. They were intended to provide guidance on financial accounting and reporting
problems on a timely basis.
Emerging Issues
One of the first criticisms of the FASB was for failing to provide timely guidance on emerging
implementation and practice problems. During 1984 the FASB responded to this criticism by (1)
establishing a task force, the Emerging Issues Task Force (EITF), to assist in identifying issues
and problems that might require action, and (2) expanding the scope of the FASB Technical Bul-
letins in an effort to offer quicker guidance on a wider variety of issues.
The EITF was formed in response to two conflicting issues. On the one hand, accountants
are faced with a variety of issues that are not fully addressed in accounting pronouncements, such
as interest rate swaps or new financial instruments. These and other new issues need immediate
resolution. On the other hand, many accountants maintain that the ever‐increasing body of
professional pronouncements has created a standards overload problem (discussed in more detail
later). The FASB established the EITF in an attempt to simultaneously address both issues. The
goal of the EITF is to provide timely guidance on new issues while limiting the number of issues
whose resolutions require formal pronouncements by the FASB.
All members of the task force occupy positions that make them aware of emerging issues.
Current members include the directors of accounting and auditing from the largest CPA firms,
representatives from smaller CPA firms, and the FASB’s director of research, who serves as
chairman. It is also expected that the chief accountant of the SEC will attend task force meetings
and participate in the deliberations.
The EITF discusses current accounting issues that are not specifically addressed by current
authoritative pronouncements and advises the FASB staff on whether an issue requires FASB
action. Emerging issues arise because of new types of transactions, variations in accounting for
existing types of transactions, new types of securities, and new products and services. They fre-
quently involve a company’s desire to achieve “off–balance sheet” financing or “off–income
statement” accounting.
Issues may come to the EITF from a variety of sources. Many are raised by members of
the task force themselves; others come from questions asked by auditors. Occasionally, an issue
arises because of a question from the SEC or another federal agency. An issue summary is pre-
pared, providing the basis for each issue brought before the EITF. Issue summaries generally
include a discussion of the issue, alternative approaches to the resolution of the issue, available
references pertaining to the issue, and examples of the transaction in question. An issue summary
is not an authoritative pronouncement—it merely represents the views of the EITF members at
that time.
The task force attempts to arrive at a consensus on each issue. A consensus is defined as
thirteen of the fifteen voting members. A consensus results in the establishment of GAAP and
constitutes an accounting standards update to the FASB ASC.
Standards Overload
Over the years, the FASB, the SEC, and the AICPA have been criticized for imposing too many
accounting standards on the business community. This standards overload problem has been par-
ticularly burdensome for small businesses that do not have the economic resources to research
and apply all the pronouncements issued by these authoritative bodies. Those who contend that
there is a standards overload problem base their arguments on two allegations: Not all GAAP
requirements are relevant to small business financial reporting needs, and even when GAAP
requirements are relevant, they often violate the pervasive cost–benefit constraint.22
22
Cost is described in SFAC No. 8 as a pervasive constraint on the information that can be provided by financial reporting.
Reporting financial information imposes costs, and it is important that those costs are justified by the benefits of reporting that
information. See Chapter 2 for a further discussion of this issue.
Accounting in the United States since 1930 13
Critics of the standard‐setting process for small businesses also assert that GAAP were
developed primarily to serve the needs of the securities market. Many small businesses do not
raise capital in these markets; therefore, it is contended that GAAP were not developed with
small business needs in mind.
The standards overload problem has several consequences for small businesses:
1. If a small business omits a GAAP requirement from audited financial statements, a qualified
or adverse opinion may be rendered.
2. The cost of complying with GAAP requirements can cause a small business to forgo the
development of other, more relevant information.
3. Small CPA firms that audit smaller companies must keep up to date on all the same require-
ments as large international firms, but they cannot afford the specialists who are available on
a centralized basis in the large firms.
Many accountants have argued for differential disclosure standards as a solution to the stan-
dards overload problem. That is, standards might be divided into two groups. One group would
apply to businesses regardless of size. The second group would apply only to large businesses,
small businesses, or particular industries. For example, the disclosure of significant accounting
policies would pertain to all businesses, whereas a differential disclosure such as earnings per
share would apply only to large businesses.
The FASB and various other organizations have studied but have not reached a consensus.
A special committee of the AICPA favored differential reporting standards.23 The FASB had his-
torically taken the position that financial statement users might be confused when two different
methods are used to describe or disclose the same economic event, but in 2009 the International
Accounting Standards Board (IASB) issued a pronouncement that omits or simplifies the appli-
cability of its standards and disclosure requirements for small and medium‐sized companies (see
Chapter 3). The attempt to harmonize U.S. and international GAAP can result in the adoption of
a similar FASB standard; however, bankers (a major source of capital for small businesses) and
financial analysts have fairly consistently criticized differential reporting requirements as a solu-
tion to the standards overload problem.24
23
Special Committee on Accounting Standards Overload, Report on the Special Committee on Accounting Standards Overload
(New York: AICPA, 1983).
24
Barbara J. Shildneck and Lee Berton “The FASB’s Second Decade,” Journal of Accountancy (November 1983): 94–102.
25
Charles T. Horngren, “The Marketing of Accounting Standards,” Journal of Accountancy (October 1973): 61–66.
14 C H A P T E R 1 The Development of Accounting Theory
Two of the most notable examples of the politicizing of accounting standards involved
the issues of employee stock options and fair value accounting. By the early 1990s, the award-
ing of employee stock options to company executives had become widespread. This was espe-
cially true in the new technology companies, where stock options were a major component of
employee compensation. As a result, the FASB developed a preliminary standard that would have
required companies to expense the fair value of the stock options granted to executives and other
employees. The proposed standard was met with widespread opposition. Companies in the high‐
technology industry expressed the most vocal objections. Many of these companies had been
reporting no earnings, and they feared that a required expensing of stock options would greatly
increase their losses or lessen whatever earnings they might ever report. When it became evident
that the FASB was determined to proceed with the standard, they appealed to members of Con-
gress. Subsequently, proposed legislation was introduced in both the House and the Senate that
ordered the SEC not to enforce the FASB’s proposed standard on expensing stock options. As
the FASB continued on toward issuing a standard, the Senate responded by passing a resolution
that urged the FASB not to move ahead with its standard. One senator even introduced legislation
that would have required the SEC to hold a public hearing and cast a vote on each future standard
issued by the FASB, a procedure that probably would have led to the demise of the FASB. At that
point, SEC Chairman Arthur Levitt, who had been on record as strongly favoring the FASB’s pro-
posed standard, counseled the FASB not to issue a standard that required the expensing of the fair
value of stock options in the income statement; otherwise, its future existence might be at risk.26
A watered‐down version of the stock option standard was passed in 1995; however, a standard
based on the original FASB proposal was later adopted.27
The fair value controversy was just as contentious. In September 2006 the FASB pub-
lished Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 157, “Fair Value Measurements,” now
contained in FASB ASC 820‐10, which outlined the method to be used when determining fair
values such as is required by FASB ASC 320‐10 for marketable securities. Later in 2008, a market
crisis occurred that resulted in a credit crunch for banks. Critics maintained that the requirement
to use fair value to measure investments caused or exacerbated the market crisis by forcing a
downward spiral of valuations based on distressed institutions. The SEC responded with a study
that recommended retaining the fair value requirements.28 This did not silence the critics, and the
Wall Street Journal reported that its analysis of public filings revealed that thirty‐one financial
firms and trade groups had formed a coalition in early 2009 and spent $27.6 million to lobby leg-
islators about the fair value requirement.29 Subsequently, public hearings were held in Congress
that resulted in several heated exchanges—including one congressman telling FASB Chairman
Robert Herz, “Don’t make us tell you what to do, just do it,” and another stating, “If you don’t
act, we will.”30 The outcome was that the FASB issued a modification FAS 157‐4, Determining
Fair Value When the Volume and Level of Activity for the Asset or Liability Have Significantly
Decreased and Identifying Transactions That Are Not Orderly (see FASB ASC 820‐10‐65), that
was generally thought to lessen the impact of the fair value requirements. However, a subsequent
study of the impact of FAS ASC 820‐10‐65 on seventy‐three of the largest banks in the United
26
The events surrounding this controversy are documented in Stephen A. Zeff, “The Evolution of U.S. GAAP: The
Political Forces behind Professional Standards (Part II),” CPA Journal Online (February 2005), http://www.nysscpa.org/
cpajournal/2005/205/index.htm.
27
See Chapter 15 for a further discussion of accounting for stock options.
28
Report and Recommendations Pursuant to Section 133 of the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008: Study on Mark-
To-Market Accounting (Washington, DC: Securities and Exchange Commission, 2008).
29
Susan Pulliam and Tom McGinty, “Congress Helped Banks Defang Key Rule,” Wall Street Journal, 3 June 2009, http://
online.wsj.com/article/SB124396078596677535.html.
30
Financial Executives Institute, “Levitt, Beresford on Congress, FASB and Fair Value; Breeden Calls for Merger of SEC,”
CFTC and PCAOB FEI Financial Reporting Blog (March 26, 2009), http://financialexecutives.blogspot.com/2009/03/levitt-
beresford-on-congress-fasb-and.html.
Accounting in the United States since 1930 15
States found that a large majority of the banks reported that the adoption of the new requirements
did not have a material impact.31
Economic Consequences
The increased pressure on the standard‐setting process is not surprising, considering that many
accounting standards have significant economic consequences. Economic consequences refers
to the impact of accounting reports on various segments of our economic society. This concept
holds that the accounting practices a company adopts affect its security price and value. Conse-
quently, the choice of accounting methods influences decision making rather than just reflecting
the results of these decisions.
Consider the release of the FASB’s pronouncement on other postretirement benefits
(OPRBs), FASB Statement No. 106, “Other Post Retirement Benefits” (see FASB ASC 715‐10‐30,
60, and 80). The accounting guidelines for OPRBs required companies to change from a pay‐
as‐you‐go basis to an accrual basis for health care and other benefits that companies provide to
retirees and their dependents. The accrual basis requires companies to measure the obligation to
provide future services and accrue these costs during the years employees provide service. This
change in accounting caused a large increase in recorded expenses for many companies. Conse-
quently, a number of companies simply ceased providing such benefits to their employees, at a
large social cost.
The impact on our economic society of accounting for OPRBs illustrates the need for the
FASB to fully consider both the necessity to further develop sound reporting practices and the
possible economic consequences of new codification content. Accounting standard setting does
not exist in a vacuum. It cannot be completely insulated from political pressures, nor can it avoid
carefully evaluating the possible ramifications of standard setting.
31
Jack M. Cathey David Schauer and Richard G. Schroeder, “The Impact of FSP FAS 157-4 on Commercial Banks,”
International Advances in Economic Research, 18, no. 1 (January, 2012): 15–27.
32
Zeff, “The Evolution of U.S. GAAP.”
16 C H A P T E R 1 The Development of Accounting Theory
The guidance for determining authoritative literature was originally outlined in Statement of
Auditing Standards (SAS) No. 5. Later, SAS No. 5 was amended by SAS No. 43. This amendment
classified the order of priority that an auditor should follow in determining whether an accounting
principle is generally accepted. Also, it added certain types of pronouncements that did not exist when
SAS No. 5 was issued to the sources of established accounting principles. SAS No. 43 was further
amended by SAS No. 69, whose stated purpose was to explain the meaning of the phrase “present
fairly . . . in conformance with generally accepted accounting principles” in the independent audi-
tor’s report.33 SAS No. 69 noted that determining the general acceptance of a particular accounting
principle is difficult because no single reference source exists for all such principles. In July 2003,
the SEC issued the Study Pursuant to Section 108(d) of the Sarbanes–Oxley Act of 2002 on the
Adoption by the United States Financial Reporting System of a Principles‐Based Accounting System
(the Study). Consistent with the recommendations presented in the Study, the FASB undertook a
number of initiatives aimed at improving the quality of standards and the standard‐setting process,
including improving the conceptual framework, codifying existing accounting literature, transition-
ing to a single standard‐setter regimen, and converging FASB and IASB standards.
In 2008, the FASB issued SFAS No. 162, The Hierarchy of Generally Accepted Accounting
Principles.34 SFAS No. 162 categorized the sources of accounting principles that are generally
accepted into descending order of authority. Previously, the GAAP hierarchy had drawn criticism
because it was directed toward the auditor rather than the enterprise, it was too complex, and it
ranked FASB Concepts Statements, which are subject to the same level of due process as FASB
Statements, below industry practices that are widely recognized as generally accepted but are not
subject to due process.35
According to SFAS No. 162, the sources of generally accepted accounting principles were:
1. AICPA Accounting Research Bulletins and Accounting Principles Board Opinions that are
not superseded by action of the FASB, FASB Statements of Financial Accounting Standards
and Interpretations, FASB Statement 133 Implementation Issues, and FASB Staff Positions
2. FASB Technical Bulletins and, if cleared by the FASB, AICPA Industry Audit and Accounting
Guides and Statements of Position
3. AICPA Accounting Standards Executive Committee Practice Bulletins that have been cleared
by the FASB and consensus positions of the FASB Emerging Issues Task Force (EITF)
4. Implementation guides published by the FASB staff, AICPA accounting interpretations, and
practices that are widely recognized and prevalent either generally or in the industry
Finally in 2009, the FASB issued SFAS No. 168, The FASB Accounting Standards Codifi-
cation and the Hierarchy of Generally Accepted Accounting Principles—A Replacement of FASB
Statement No. 162. SFAS No. 168 identified the FASB ASC (discussed later) as the official source
of U.S. GAAP.
In this chapter and throughout much of the book, special attention is given to the pronounce-
ments referred to in Rule 203 of the AICPA Code of Professional Ethics. The reason for this special
attention is apparent. Practicing CPAs have an ethical obligation to consider such pronouncements as
the primary source of GAAP in their exercise of judgment as to the fairness of financial statements.
Opposing views as well as alternative treatments are considered in the text narrative; however, the
reader should keep in mind that the development of GAAP has been narrowly defined by the AICPA.
33
Statement on Auditing Standards No. 69, “The Meaning of Present Fairly in Conformity with Generally Accepted Accounting
Principles in the Independent Auditor’s Report” (New York, 1993), para. 1.
34
Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 162: The Hierarchy of Generally Accepted Accounting Principles
(Norwalk, CT: FASB, 2008).
35
Study Pursuant to Section 108(d) of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 on the Adoption by the United States Financial
Reporting System of a Principles-Based Accounting System (Washington, DC: SEC, July 2003).
Accounting in the United States since 1930 17
Despite the continuing effort to narrow the scope of GAAP, critics maintain that management
is allowed too much leeway in the selection of the accounting procedures used in corporate financial
reports. These criticisms revolve around two issues that are elaborated on later in the text: (1) Execu-
tive compensation is often tied to reported earnings, so management is inclined to adopt accounting
principles that increase current revenues and decrease current expenses; and (2) the value of a firm
in the marketplace is determined by its stock price. This value is highly influenced by financial ana-
lysts’ quarterly earnings estimates. Managers are fearful that failing to meet these earnings estimates
will trigger a sell‐off of the company’s stock and a resultant decline in the market value of the firm.
Previously, SEC Chairman Levitt noted these issues and indicated his belief that financial
reports were descending “into the gray area between illegitimacy and outright fraud.”36 As a
consequence, the SEC has set up an earnings management task force to uncover accounting dis-
tortions. Some companies voluntarily agreed to restructure their financial statements as a result of
this new effort by the SEC. For example, SunTrust Bank, Inc., of Atlanta, though not accused of
any wrongdoing, agreed to a three‐year restructuring of earnings for the period ended December
31, 1996.37
Arthur Levitt, The “Numbers Game” (NYU Center for Law and Business, September 28, 1998).
36
E. McDonald, “SEC’s Levitt Pushes Harder for Changes in Fiscal Reporting and Some Cry Foul,” Wall Street Journal, 17
37
The FASB ASC contains all current authoritative accounting literature. However, if the
guidance for a particular transaction or event is not specified within it, the first source to con-
sider is accounting principles for similar transactions or events within a source of authoritative
GAAP. If no similar transactions are discovered, nonauthoritative guidance from other sources
may be considered. Accounting and financial reporting practices not included in the Codification
are nonauthoritative. Sources of nonauthoritative accounting guidance and literature include, for
example, the following:
1. Practices that are widely recognized and prevalent either generally or in the industry
2. FASB Concepts Statements
3. American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) Issues Papers
4. International Financial Reporting Standards of the International Accounting Standards
Board Pronouncements of professional associations or regulatory agencies
5. Technical Information Service Inquiries and Replies included in AICPA Technical Practice
Aids
6. Accounting textbooks, handbooks, and articles
The FASB ASC stipulates that the appropriateness of other sources of accounting guidance
depends on their relevance to particular circumstances, the specificity of the guidance, the gen-
eral recognition of the issuer or author as an authority, and the extent of its use in practice (FASB
ASC 105‐10‐05‐3).
This text takes a historical approach to the development of accounting theory that traces the
evolution of accounting standards. As such, we refer to all authoritative pronouncements by their
original titles with a parenthetical reference to either the fact that they have been superseded or
where they are now contained in the FASB ASC. In the assignment material for each chapter we
have included several cases that utilize the FASB ASC.
The Role of Ethics are concerned with the types of behavior society considers right and wrong. Accounting
Ethics in ethics incorporate social standards of behavior as well as behavioral standards that relate specifi-
cally to the profession. The environment of public accounting has become ethically complex. The
Accounting accountants’ Code of Professional Ethics developed by the AICPA has evolved over time, and
as business transactions have become more and more complex, ethical issues have also become
more complex.
The public accountant has a Ralph Nader–type overseer role in our society. This role was
described by Chief Justice of the Supreme Court Warren Burger, who maintained that corporate
financial statements are the primary source of information available to assist the decisions of the
investing public. Consequently, various provisions of the federal securities laws require publicly
held corporations to file their financial statements with the Securities and Exchange Commission
to control the accuracy of information made available to the public. SEC regulations stipulate that
these financial reports must be audited by an independent certified public accountant. The auditor
then issues an opinion as to whether the financial statements fairly present the financial position
and operations of the corporation for the relevant period.38
By certifying the public reports that collectively depict a corporation’s financial status, the
independent accountant assumes a public responsibility transcending any employment relation-
ship with the client. The independent public accountant performing this special function owes
38
U.S. v. Arthur Young and Co. et al., U.S. Supreme Court No. 8206871 U.S.L.W. 4355 (U.S. Mar. 21, 1984), 1.
The Role of Ethics in Accounting 19
ultimate allegiance to the corporation’s creditors and stockholders as well as the investing public.
This public‐watchdog function demands that the accountant maintain total independence from
the client at all times and requires complete fidelity to the public trust.
The SEC requires the filing of audited financial statements to obviate the fear of loss from
reliance on inaccurate information, thereby encouraging public investment in the nation’s indus-
tries. It is therefore not enough that financial statements be accurate; the public must perceive
them as being accurate. Public faith in the reliability of a corporation’s financial statements
depends on the public perception of an outside auditor as an independent professional.
Justice Burger outlined the very important role accountants play in our society. This role
requires highly ethical conduct at all times. The role of ethics in accounting is discussed in detail
in Chapter 17.
39
Analysts’ recommendations take different forms but can be generally categorized as strong buy, buy, hold, underperform, and
sell. This issue is covered in more depth in Chapter 17.
40
Accounting for SPEs is now guided by the requirements for variable interest entities (VIEs) contained in FASB ASC 810. See
Chapter 16 for a discussion of VIEs.
41
Financial leverage involves the use of debt financing as described in Chapter 11. Return on assets is calculated as net income
divided by total assets and is discussed in more detail in Chapter 7.
20 C H A P T E R 1 The Development of Accounting Theory
On October 16, 2001, the company reported a third‐quarter loss, and its stock dropped to
about $33 a share. On October 28, as some of the problems with the SPEs were made public, a
special committee of the board of directors of Enron was established under the chairmanship of
William C. Powers, dean of the University of Texas Law School. The Powers Committee Report
concluded that some Enron employees were directly involved in the SPEs and were enriched by
tens of millions of dollars they never should have received. The committee also found that many
of the transactions were designed to achieve favorable financial statement results and were not
based on legitimate economic objectives or to transfer risk.
In the meantime, the company’s stock went into a free fall. On October 22, 2001, the SEC
requested information about the company’s off–balance sheet entities, and its stock price fell
to just above $20. On November 12, the company announced restated earnings for the period
1997–2000 that resulted in $600 million in losses, and its stock price fell to about $8 per share.
On December 2, the company filed for bankruptcy, and its stock became virtually worthless. How
did this happen? What can be done to prevent similar episodes in the future?
The Enron case was just one in a series of accounting and auditing failures that include
HealthSouth, WorldCom, and Tyco. These failures were triggered by a series of events that critics
have attributed to the change from a manufacturing to a service economy in the United States and
the resulting large increase in consulting services by public accounting firms.
Historically, accounting has been considered a highly trustworthy profession. Public
accounting firms trained new accountants in the audit function with oversight from senior part-
ners, who believed that their firm’s integrity rode on every engagement. That is, new auditors
were assigned client responsibility after minimal formal audit training. Most of the training of
new accountants took place on‐site, and the effectiveness of the new auditor depended on the
effectiveness of the instructor.
CPA firms have always called their customers “clients” and have worked hard to cultivate
them. Partners routinely entertained clients at sporting events, country clubs, and restaurants, and
many CPA firm employees later moved on to work in their clients’ firms. Any conflicts in these
relationships were at least partially offset by the CPA firm’s commitment to professional ethics.
These relationships changed as information technology advisory services grew in the late
1970s and early 1980s. Also in the mid‐1980s, the AICPA lifted its ban on advertising. As a
result, revenue generation became more critical to partners’ compensation. Thereafter, the profit
structure of CPA firms changed dramatically, and in 1999, revenues for management consulting
accounted for more than 50 percent of the then–Big Five’s revenue.
As a result, the audit function evolved into a loss leader that public accounting firms offered
in conjunction with vastly more lucrative consulting engagements. But as public accounting firms
competed more aggressively on price for audit engagements, they were forced by cost consider-
ations to reduce the number of procedures performed for each client engagement. This resulted
in increased tests of controls and statistical models and in fewer of the basic, time‐consuming
tests of transactions that increase the likelihood of detecting fraud. In addition, junior auditors
were often assigned the crucial oversight roles usually filled by senior partners, who were other-
wise engaged in marketing activities to prospective clients. This reduced the effectiveness of the
instructor–new accountant training process.
Two major changes in the accounting profession have taken place in the wake of the
accounting scandals:
1. Arthur Andersen, formerly one of the Big Five audit firms, has gone out of business.
2. In July 2002, President George W. Bush signed into law the Sarbanes–Oxley Bill, which
imposes a number of corporate governance rules on publicly traded companies.42
42
The act is discussed in depth in Chapter 17.
The Role of Ethics in Accounting 21
Enron was the fourth major audit failure affecting Arthur Andersen (AA) since 1999. In
May 2001, AA paid $110 million to settle Sunbeam’s shareholders’ lawsuit. In June 2001, AA
agreed to pay a $7 million fine to the SEC in the Waste Management case. AA had already agreed
to pay part of a $220 million suit to settle a class action case related to Waste Management, which
had overstated income by approximately $1 billion. On May 7, 2002, AA agreed to pay $217 mil-
lion to settle civil litigation over its audits of the Baptist Foundation of Arizona.
The demise of AA was felt by its employees and across the economy. The company was the
fifth‐largest auditing firm in the world, employing 85,000 people in eighty‐four countries. In 2001,
AA reported U.S. revenues of $9.3 billion. But during that year, the company began to unravel. AA
was fined or paid more than $100 million to settle lawsuits for audit problems concerning two clients,
Waste Management and Sunbeam. After Enron’s October 2002 third‐quarter earnings announcement,
AA’s independence from Enron began to be questioned because the firm had provided significant
nonaudit services to Enron in addition to its fees associated with the Enron audit. Andersen received
$52 million in fees from Enron. Of this amount, $25 million, or 48 percent, was for audit‐related
work. Total fees for other services totaled $27 million. Also, Enron had outsourced some internal
audit functions to AA, a practice that is now specifically prohibited by Sarbanes–Oxley.
On January 10, 2002, AA notified the SEC and the Department of Justice that its personnel
involved with the Enron engagement had disposed of a significant number of documents and
correspondence related to the Enron engagement. Five days later, AA dismissed the lead partner
and placed three other partners involved with the engagement on leave. AA also placed a new
management team in charge of the Houston office. These moves were in an apparent attempt to
distance the firm’s home office from the problems concerning Enron.
On February 2, 2002, the Powers report was released. It suggested that the home office of AA
was well aware of accounting problems at Enron. As the report stated, the evidence suggested that
AA did not function as an effective check on the disclosures reported by Enron. Also, the report noted
that AA expressed no concerns to Enron’s board of directors about accounting problems at Enron.
In response, on February 3, 2002, AA announced that former Federal Reserve Board
Chairman Paul Volcker had agreed to chair an independent oversight board (IOB). The objective
of the IOB was to review all policies and procedures of the firm and to ensure the quality and
credibility of the firm’s auditing process. The IOB had authority to mandate any changes in pol-
icies and procedures needed to ensure quality.
In March 2002, the Justice Department openly questioned AA’s involvement with Enron
and the eventual document shredding. Following a week of negotiations between AA and the U.S.
Justice Department concerning a possible criminal indictment for obstructing justice, a criminal
indictment against AA was unsealed on March 15. On May 2, a federal jury trial began in Hous-
ton. Finally, on June 15, AA was convicted of a single count of obstructing justice. AA was
barred from conducting and reporting on the audits of SEC‐registered companies after August
2002 and subsequently went out of business.43
The Sarbanes–Oxley Public Company Accounting Reform and Investor Protection Act of
2002 (SOX) was passed by Congress to address corporate accountability in response to the finan-
cial scandals that had begun to undermine citizens’ confidence in U.S. business.44 In summary,
SOX established the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB). The PCAOB has
the responsibility of setting auditing standards, reviewing the practices and procedures used by
public accounting firms in conducting audits, and ensuring compliance with the provision of the
legislation.
43
The conviction was later overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court on the grounds that the federal judge’s instructions to the
jury were too vague and failed to demand that jurors conclude Andersen knew its actions were illegal. The court did not acquit
Andersen, but it sent the case back to the lower court for a retrial. However, the case has not been retried because the firm no
longer exists as a viable entity.
44
Specific provisions of the legislation are discussed in depth in Chapter 17.
22 C H A P T E R 1 The Development of Accounting Theory
SOX also places new legal constraints on corporate executives by requiring corporate
presidents and chief financial officers to certify the accuracy of a company’s financial state-
ments. Specifically, they are required to indicate that they have reviewed both quarterly
and annual filings and that based on their knowledge, the reports do not contain any untrue
statements or material misstatements of facts; also, based on their knowledge, the financial
information in the reports is fairly presented. In addition, SOX puts the accounting profession
under tightened federal oversight and establishes a regulatory board—with broad power to pun-
ish corruption—to monitor the firms and establishes stiff criminal penalties, including long jail
terms, for accounting fraud.
Finally, SOX changes the way the FASB is funded. Previously, about a third of FASB’s
annual budget came from voluntary contributions from public accounting firms, the AICPA,
and about one thousand individual corporations. Under SOX, those voluntary contributions
are replaced by mandatory fees from all publicly owned corporations based on their individual
market capitalization. But the fees are to be collected by the PCAOB, and the SEC oversees
the PCAOB. As a result, some fear that SOX has inadvertently made FASB more vulnerable to
political pressure. Some have called SOX one of the most significant legislative reform pack-
ages since the New Deal of Franklin D. Roosevelt,45 others have likened it to medical history,
when a correct diagnosis was followed by an inappropriate or even harmful therapy such as the
nineteenth‐century practice of bleeding patients who were suffering from fever. This therapy
turned out to be the opposite of what is necessary and beneficial because it weakened patients
precisely when they needed strength to combat the cause of the fever.46 The critics of SOX see a
flaw in the system in that the auditor is retained and paid by the client, thereby making the auditor
beholden to the client and its management. As a consequence the auditor, though he or she might
not realize it, ends up seeing things through the eyes of management. Although it is still too early
to determine which view will ultimately turn out to be correct, SOX will undoubtedly signifi-
cantly affect the accounting profession.
International A truly global economy emerged during the 1990s, as many U.S. companies generated significant
Accounting amounts of revenue and profits in foreign markets. Multinational companies are faced with
decisions on the allocation of resources to their most efficient uses. These allocations cannot be
Standards accomplished without accurate and reliable financial information. Companies seeking capital or
investment opportunities across national boundaries face cost and time issues. Capital‐seeking
firms must reconcile their financial statements to the accounting rules of the nation in which they
are seeking capital, and investors must identify foreign reporting differences. The increasingly
global economy requires that this process be simplified. Thus there is a push to harmonize inter-
national accounting standards.
The IASB is an independent private‐sector body that was formed in 1973 to achieve this
purpose. Its objectives are:
1. To formulate and publish in the public interest accounting standards to be observed in
the presentation of financial statements and to promote their worldwide acceptance and
observance
45
R. R. Miller and P. H. Pashkoff, “Regulations under the Sarbanes–Oxley Act,” Journal of Accountancy (October 2002):
33–36.
46
J. Ronen, J. Cherny and T. W. Morris, “A Prognosis for Restructuring the Market for Audit Services,” CPA Journal 73, no. 5
(May 2003): 6–8.
Cases 23
2. To work generally for the improvement and harmonization of regulations, accounting stan-
dards, and procedures relating to the presentation of financial statements47
These objectives have resulted in attempts to coordinate and harmonize the activities of
the many countries and agencies engaged in setting accounting standards. The IASB standards
also provide a useful starting point for developing countries wishing to establish accounting
standards.48
The IASB has also developed a conceptual framework titled the Framework for the Prepa-
ration and Presentation of Financial Statements.49 The conclusions articulated in this release are
similar to those contained in the FASB’s Conceptual Framework Project. That is, the objective of
financial statements is to provide useful information to a wide range of users for decision‐making
purposes. The information provided should contain the qualitative characteristics of relevance,
reliability, comparability, and understandability.
At the time this book was published, the IASB had issued forty‐one Statements of
Accounting Standards (IASs) and sixteen Statements of Financial Reporting Standards (IFRSs).
Because it has no enforcement authority, the IASB must rely on the best endeavors of its mem-
bers. Neither the FASB nor the SEC is a member of the IASB, so its standards have no authority
for U.S. companies registered with the SEC at present. However, in 2007 the SEC voted to accept
financial statements from foreign private issuers prepared in accordance with IFRSs without rec-
onciliation to generally accepted accounting principles.50 In 2015 over 400 multinational com-
panies filed their financial reports with the SEC using IFRSAs noted in Chapters 2 and 3, there is
also a movement to have IASB standards become GAAP for U.S. companies. The emergence of
multinational corporations has resulted in a need for the increased harmonization of worldwide
accounting standards.51
Cases
The FASB ASC is now the sole authoritative source for all U.S. c. What literature is now contained in the FASB ASC?
GAAP. d. What should an accountant do if the guidance for a particular
transaction or event is not specified within the FASB ASC?
Required:
a. What are the major goals of the FASB ASC?
b. How is the FASB ASC expected to improve the practice of
accounting?
47
Framework for the Preparation and Presentation of Financial Statements (London: IASC, 1989).
48
The FASB and IASB were originally coordinating their efforts to develop a new conceptual framework and a combined
set of accounting standards. However, in 2010, the FASB deferred further work on the joint project until after other more
urgent convergence projects were finalized. Subsequently, in 2012 the IASB decided to reactivate the Conceptual Framework
project as an IASB-only comprehensive project. In 2014 the FASB also resurrected the Conceptual Framework Project. See
Chapters 2, 3, and 5.
49
Framework for the Preparation and Presentation of Financial Statements (London: IASC, 1989).
50
See Chapter 3 for a further discussion of this issue.
51
The role of the IASB is discussed in more detail in Chapter 3, and the IASB standards are reviewed throughout this text in
chapters dealing with the issues addressed by each IAS or IFRS.
24 C H A P T E R 1 The Development of Accounting Theory
When the FASB issues new standards, the implementation date is Required:
often 12 months from the date of issuance, and early implemen- a. What, if any, ethical issue is involved in this case?
tation is encouraged. Becky Hoger, controller, discusses with her b. Is the financial vice president acting improperly or immorally?
financial vice president the need for early implementation of a c. What does Hoger have to gain by advocacy of early implemen-
standard that would result in a fairer presentation of the company’s tation?
financial condition and earnings. When the financial vice president d. Who might be affected by the decision against early implemen-
determines that early implementation of the standard will adversely tation? (CMA adapted)
affect the reported net income for the year, he discourages Hoger
from implementing the standard until it is required.
Some accountants have said that politicalization in the development at which time the Accounting Principles Board came into
and acceptance of generally accepted accounting principles (i.e., existence. In 1973, the Financial Accounting Standards Board
standard setting) is taking place. Some use the term politicalization was formed, and the APB went out of existence. Do the reasons
in a narrow sense to mean the influence by government agencies, these groups were formed, their methods of operation while
particularly the SEC, on the development of generally accepted in existence, and the reasons for the demise of the first two
accounting principles. Others use it more broadly to mean the com- indicate an increasing politicalization (as the term is used in
promising that takes place in bodies responsible for developing the broad sense) of accounting standard setting? Explain your
these principles because of the influence and pressure of inter- answer by indicating how the CAP, APB, and FASB operated
ested groups (SEC, American Accounting Association, businesses or operate. Cite specific developments that tend to support your
answer.
through their various organizations, Institute of Management
b. What arguments can be raised to support the politicalization of
Accountants, financial analysts, bankers, lawyers, etc.).
accounting standard setting?
Required: c. What arguments can be raised against the politicalization of
a. The Committee on Accounting Procedure of the AICPA was accounting standard setting? (CMA adapted)
established in the mid to late 1930s and functioned until 1959,
At the completion of the Darby Department Store audit, the b. The president wants to know how you determine whether or
president asks about the meaning of the phrase “in conformity not an accounting principle is generally accepted. Discuss the
with generally accepted accounting principles,” which appears in sources of evidence for determining whether an accounting
your audit report on the management’s financial statements. He principle has substantial authoritative support.
observes that the meaning of the phrase must include more than c. The president believes that diversity in accounting practice
what he thinks of as “principles.” will always exist among independent entities despite contin-
ual improvements in comparability. Discuss the arguments that
Required: support his belief.
a. Explain the meaning of the term accounting principles as used
in the audit report. (Do not in this part discuss the significance
of “generally accepted.”)
Cases 25
During the early 2000s, the role of accounting and the audit- b. What major changes occurred as a result of the accounting
ing profession changed, and several accounting scandals were scandals at that time?
uncovered.
Required:
a. What conditions caused accounting and the auditing profession
role to change during this time?
The FASB is the official body charged with issuing accounting b. How are the Financial Accounting Foundation members
standards. nominated?
Required:
a. Discuss the structure of the FASB.
For each of the following research cases, search the FASB 2. Is a company that meets the definition of a VIE FASB ASC
ASC database for information to address the issues. Copy required to consolidate the VIE? R es earch
and paste the FASB ASC paragraphs that support your
• FASB ASC 1-2 Status of Accounting Research
responses. Then summarize briefly what your responses
Bulletins
are, citing the paragraphs used to support your responses.
Portions of ARB No. 43 are still considered GAAP. Three
• FASB ASC 1-1 Variable Interest Entities
of the most important issues covered in ARB No. 43 are
In this chapter, we discussed how Enron and other com- revenue recognition, treasury stock, and comparative
panies used special‐purpose entities (SPEs) to keep the financial statements. Find the appropriate sections of the
effects of transactions and events off corporate balance FASB ASC, originally contained in ARB No. 43, that
sheets. Accounting for SPEs is now guided by the require- address these issues. Cite the sources and copy the rele-
ments for variable interest entities (VIEs). vant information.
1. How does the FASB define a VIE? In other words, • FASB ASC 1-3 Accounting for the Investment Tax
how does an entity qualify to be a VIE? Credit
26 C H A P T E R 1 The Development of Accounting Theory
The accounting alternative treatments for the investment 1. Revenue recognition—customer payments and
tax credit originally outlined in APB Opinions 2 and 4 are incentives
still considered GAAP. Find and cite the FASB ASC para- 2. Debt with conversions and other options
graphs and copy the relevant information. 3. Software cost of sales and services
• FASB ASC 1-4 Securities and Exchange • FASB ASC 1-5 Generally Accepted Accounting
Commission Comments Principles Guidelines
SEC observers often provide comments at EITF meetings. Find the guidelines for determining GAAP in the FASB
Find, cite, and copy the observer comments on ASC.
R oom for • Debate 1-1 Which Body Should Set Accounting • Debate 1-2 Should the Scope of Accounting
Deb ate Standards in the United States? Standards Be Narrowed Further?