Financial Crisis, Firms, Reporting Entities, and the Going Concern Assumption

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Authors

Moore, Louella

Issue Date

2017-03-1

Type

Working paper

Language

en_US

Keywords

Accounting , Entity , Identity , Corporations , Financial crisis , Going concern (accounting) , Quantum theory

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Alternative Title

Abstract

Orthodox academic and accounting standard setting literature has historically viewed accounting reporting entities as independent units with an indefinite life. The 1929 and 2008 financial crises are used as focal points for a critical evaluation of the theory of a firm, the reporting entity concept, and the going concern assumption. Alternative perspectives from organizational theory, physics, and non-Western philosophical traditions suggest that firms and markets are best conceptualized not as separate static units, but as a dynamic and intricately entangled matrix of relationships. This paper argues that a Western cultural bias, philosophical pragmatism, and Aristotelian logic implicit in dominant accounting conceptual frameworks have all worked to downplay normative public interest issues that are essential to an understanding of the functioning of economic enterprise in a dynamic global society.

Description

Citation

Publisher

Washburn University. School of Business

Rights

Journal

Volume

Issue

PubMed ID

DOI

ISSN

EISSN