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BAO5535 Issues in
contemporary Accounting

        Week 1
      Introduction
Welcome to BAO5535 Issues in
  contemporary accounting
Subject coordinators and lecturers:
Ms Helen Yang
Contact: helen.yang@vu.edu.au (preferred)
Phone: 03-9919 5265
Office: G3.36 Footscray Park Campus
Professor Colin Clark
Phone 03-9919 1565
Office: C10.16 City Flinders Campus
             BAO5535 Issues in Contemporary   2
                      Accounting
What we are going to learn?
• Refer to your Unit of Study Guide for
  further details




               BAO5535 Issues in Contemporary   3
                        Accounting
What Assessment is there?
• Refer to Unit Guide




              BAO5535 Issues in Contemporary   4
                       Accounting
How to start with this subject?
• Prescribed textbooks
  Deegan, C, 2009, Financial Accounting
  Theory, 3rd edition
  Deegan, C, 2010, Australian Financial
  Accounting, 6th edition
  Accounting Handbook 2011 available
  online at www.aasb.com.au
• Subject website at Blackboard (Webct)
• Seminars
              BAO5535 Issues in Contemporary   5
                       Accounting
How to successfully complete
        the course?
• Do your homework
   – Attempt weekly activities before each class
• Attend seminars
• Be an Active learner, i.e. participating in class
  discussions and online discussions
• Don’t forget to ask for help
   –   Student learning service
   –   Your lecturers
   –   Librarians
   –   Student administrators
   –   Your peers

                 BAO5535 Issues in Contemporary    6
                          Accounting
Any questions so far?




      BAO5535 Issues in Contemporary   7
               Accounting
“A long journey starts from the
very first step”, I wish you a
challenging but a rewarding
semester



         BAO5535 Issues in Contemporary   8
                  Accounting
Topic 1 Professional ethics and theories in
accounting – Learning outcomes
     – Be able to explain the difference between deductive and
       inductive approaches to theory development
     – Be able to explain ethical theories and their implication to
       accounting practice
     – Be able to apply APES 110 Code of ethics for
       professional accountants to decision-making process
     – Be aware of development of accounting theories
     – Appreciate that there is no single unified theory of
       accounting
     – Be able to critically evaluate difference theories in
       accounting




                                                                1-9
The role of professional judgement in
financial reporting
• While the accounting treatment of many
  transactions and events is regulated, many others
  are unregulated
• Accountants expected to be objective and free
  from bias (although, as we will see, various
  theories of accounting question whether
  accountants will allow objectivity to determine the
  selection of accounting methods)




                                                  1-10
The role of professional judgement in
financial reporting (cont.)
• Information generated should faithfully represent
  underlying transactions and be neutral and
  verifiable
• The consideration of economic and social
  implications of possible accounting standards
  implies bias in their development and
  implementation
   – standard setters face a ‘dilemma which requires a
     delicate balancing of accounting and non-accounting
     variables’ (Zeff 1978, p. 62)




                                                           1-11
The power of accountants
• Output of the accounting process impacts many
  decisions about wealth transfers so the judgement
  of accountants affect various parties’ wealth
• The provision of accounting information leads to
  power of knowledge for others
• Accountants can give legitimacy to organisations
  which may not otherwise be deemed legitimate
  (e.g. emphasising profits)
   – e.g. profits legitimise Commonwealth Bank (see
     Accounting Headline 2.1, p. 45)




                                                      1-12
The power of accountants (cont.)
• Profit measures ignore many social and
  environmental externalities caused by the
  reporting entity
   – e.g. major adverse social consequences of a cigarette
     manufacturer
• Accounting does not objectively reflect a particular
  entity—it creates it




                                                         1-13
Ethical theories and Ethical decision making
principles
   •   Consequence-based (teleological)
        – Utilitarianism
        – Egoism
   •   Duty-based (deontological)
        – Fairness
        – Justice
   •   Virtue-based (ontological)
        – Aristotle virtue ethics
        – Confucius virtue ethics

        Please refer to: An introduction to Business Ethics, 2nd Edition, Des
           Jardins, 2006, McGrall Hill, Chapter 2: Ethical Theory and
           Business for further details



                                                                        1-14
Code of ethics for Professional accountants
(Cont)
Refer to APES 110 Code of Ethics for Professional
    Accountants
Threats and Safeguards
Para 100.10 of circumstances. Many threats fall into the
    following categories:
(d) Self-interest threats
(e) Self-review threats
(f) Advocacy threats
(g) Familiarity threats
(h) Intimidation threats,
                                                           1-15
Code of ethics for Professional accountants –
Fundamental principles

Refer to APES 110 Code of Ethics for Professional Accountants
Para.100.4 A Member is required to comply with the following
    fundamental principles:
(a) Integrity
(b) Objectivity
(c) Professional competence and due care
(d) Confidentiality
(e) Professional behaviour
Note: Please refer to Section 110 –150 of APES 110 for further details
Also refer to APES 205 Conformity with accounting standards (effective
   on 1 July 2008), available at
http://www.apesb.org.au/Document/Issued_Standards/APES%20205%20Conformity%20with%20Accounting%20




                                                                                     1-16
Application of ethical principles to ethical
    issues in business – common avoidance
    of professional responsibility

•   Listen to your heart or to your head?
•   It is not my problem!
•   Everybody else does it!
•   It is not ‘cooking the book’ , it is creative accounting method!
•   It does not breach the law when people are sacked!
•   I am just doing what I have been told!
•   Greed is good!??




                                                                       1-17
Class activity
 Application of ethical principles to ethical issues in
 business

• Ethical dilemma decision making tree.doc
• Harris accountant jailed for $36 m fraud” Courier-
  mail 27 June 2002, cited in Deegan (2009, p.276)




                                                       1-18
What is a theory?
• ‘A coherent set of hypothetical, conceptual and
  pragmatic principles forming the general
  framework of reference for a field of inquiry’
  (Hendriksen 1970, p. 1)
• Based on logical (coherent) reasoning, and not ad
  hoc in nature




                                                1-19
How theories are developed
  Inductive method (Bottom up)
  – Conducts empirical studies and form theory


  Deductive method (Top down)
  - Develop hypothesis and test them




                                                 1-20
Accounting theories
• Accounting is a human activity
• It would seem illogical to study financial accounting
  (for example, the accounting standards) without
  also studying accounting theory
• Theories of accounting consider
   – people’s behaviour with respect to accounting information
   – people’s needs for accounting information
   – why people within organisations elect to supply particular
     information




                                                           1-21
Why study accounting theories
• Learning the rules of financial accounting without
  considering the implications of accounting
  information is not recommended
• Studying theories of accounting exposes students
  to various issues, including
   – how elements of accounting should be measured
   – motivation for organisations to provide certain types of
     accounting information




                                                            1-22
Why study accounting theories (cont.)
  – motivation for individuals to support or lobby regulators
    for some accounting methods in preference to others
  – the implications for organisations and their stakeholders if
    one accounting method is chosen or mandated in
    preference to others
  – how and why the capital markets react to particular
    information
  – whether there is a ‘true measure’ of income




                                                            1-23
Examples of uses of accounting theories
• Theories might
   – prescribe how assets should be valued
   – predict why managers will choose particular accounting
     methods
   – explain how an individual’s cultural background affects
     accounting information provided
   – prescribe what accounting information should be
     provided to particular classes of stakeholders
   – predict that the relative power of a stakeholder group will
     affect the accounting information it receives




                                                             1-24
Overview of theories of accounting
• Many theories of financial accounting exist
• No universally accepted theory of accounting
   – different perspectives about the central objective, role
     and scope of financial accounting
• No universally accepted perspective about the role
  of accounting theory
   – different researchers have different perspectives of the
     role of accounting theory
   – a researcher’s own values will influence which theory he
     or she elects to embrace




                                                                1-25
Overview of accounting theories development
• General scientific period (1920s-60s)
   – Inductive method, explanation of practice and development of
     explanatory framework
• Normative period (1960s-70s)
   – Prescriptive approach
• Empirical period (mid to late 1970s – 2000)
   – Rational economic persons assumption, a framework to explain
     and predict behaviour
• Mixed development (2000 – present)
   – Positive and behavioural theories




                                                                    1-26
General scientific period
• Relied upon the process of induction
   – development of ideas or theories through observation
• 1920s to 1960s theories developed from observing
  what accountants did in practice
   – codified as doctrines or conventions of accounting




                                                            1-27
Criticisms of inductive method
• ‘… concentrates on the status quo, is reactionary
  in attitude and cannot provide a basis upon which
  current practice may be evaluated or from which
  future improvements may be deduced’ (Gray,
  Owen & Maunders 1987, p. 66)
• Assumes what is done by the majority is the most
  appropriate practice
• Perspective of accounting Darwinism




                                                 1-28
Example of inductive approach to theory
development
• Grady (1965) undertook research commissioned
  by the American Institute of Certified Public
  Accountants (AICPA)
• Formed the basis of APB Statement No. 4 ‘Basic
  Concepts and Accounting Principles Underlying
  the Financial Statements of Business Enterprises’
   – reflected generally accepted accounting principles at the
     time




                                                           1-29
Normative Period —1960s and 1970s
• Sought to prescribe particular accounting practices
   – known as normative theories
• Not driven by existing practices, and hence not
  typically inductive in nature (that is, not based on
  observation)
• Rather, were deductive in nature and, based on
  logical argument, sought to develop new methods
  of accounting
• Theories critical of historical cost accounting
• Sought to provide improved approaches to asset
  valuation in a time of widespread inflation

                                                    1-30
Normative theories
• Based on what the researcher believes should
  occur in particular circumstances
   – not based on observation
• Example of normative theory
   – Continuously Contemporary Accounting (CoCoA) by
     Raymond Chambers
• Should not be evaluated on whether they reflect
  actual accounting practice




                                                       1-31
Classifications of normative theories
• True income theories
   – make assumptions about the role of accounting then
     seek to provide a single ‘best measure’ of profits
• Decision usefulness theories
   – ascribe a particular type of information for particular
     classes of users on the basis of assumed decision-
     making needs




                                                               1-32
Decision usefulness theories
• Decision-makers emphasis
  – undertaking research that seeks to ask decision makers
    what information they want
  – knowledge then used to make prescriptions about what
    information should be supplied
• Decision-models emphasis
  – develops models based on the researchers’ perceptions
    about what is necessary for efficient decision making




                                                       1-33
Criticism of normative theories—an
example
• Normative theories have been criticised for lack of
  empirical observation
   – based on personal opinion about what should happen
   – positive theorists argue that they would prefer to provide
     information about expected implications of actions and let
     others decide themselves what they should do
   – positive theorists also make value judgements




                                                           1-34
Example of prescriptive theory
• 1961 and 1962 studies by Moonitz, and Sprouse
  and Moonitz commissioned by the Accounting
  Research Division of the AICPA
• Authors proposed that accounting measurement
  systems be changed from historical cost to a
  system based on current values
• Such research should not be evaluated by
  reviewing current practice
• Not supported by AICPA as too radically different
  from current practice



                                                  1-35
Positivistic Period — mid to late 1970s - 2000
• Research aimed at explaining and predicting
  accounting practice rather than prescribing
  particular practices
• Known as positive theories




                                                 1-36
Positive theories
• Seek to predict and explain particular phenomena
• Begins with assumption(s), and through logical
  deduction enables prediction(s) to be made
• If predictions are sufficiently accurate when tested
  against observations of reality, they are regarded
  as having provided explanation of why things are
  as they are




                                                   1-37
Positive theories (cont.)
• Positive Accounting Theory
   – developed by Watts and Zimmerman
   – seeks to predict and explain why accountants elect to
     adopt particular accounting methods in preference to
     others
   – based on ‘rational economic person’ assumption
       individuals motivated by self-interest tied to wealth
        maximisation




                                                                1-38
Criticism of positive theories—an example
• Positive theories of accounting have been
  criticised for not providing prescription
• The decision not to provide prescription could
  alienate academic accountants from their
  counterparts within the profession




                                                   1-39
Evaluating theories of accounting
• Students should consider the merit of the
  argument and the research methods employed
• Some researchers may adopt strategies (such as
  overt condemnation of alternative theories) to
  support their own research and theoretical
  perspective




                                              1-40
Evaluation of theories—the position taken
in this book
• Theories of accounting are only abstractions of
  reality
• The choice of one theory in preference to another
  is based on value judgements
• Cannot expect to provide perfect explanations or
  predictions of human behaviour or assess what
  types on information users actually need




                                                 1-41
Evaluating theories—logic and evidence
• When evaluating theories, need to consider
   – whether the argument supporting the theory is logical
   – whether you agree with the central assumptions of the
     theory
   – whether you accept any supporting evidence provided




                                                         1-42
Logical deduction
• Acceptance of an argument must be based on the
  accuracy of the premises
   – an argument is logical to the extent that if the premises
     on which it is based are true, then the conclusion will be
     true
   – Compare the following statements
        All cats have fur and four legs
        Tom has fur and four legs
        Therefore Tom is a cat
       And All cats have fur and four legs, Tom is a cat, therefore
         Tom has fur and four legs
• We do not need to refer to ‘real world’ observations
  to determine the logic of an argument


                                                                  1-43
The role of assumptions
• Even though an argument is logical we might only
  accept the argument if we accept any critical
  assumptions being made
   – if we reject any central assumptions we may reject the
     prediction




                                                          1-44
Can we prove a theory?
• Can we expect that a theory of financial
  accounting (and hence, about people) can provide
  perfect predictions in all cases?
• A theory might not have perfect predictive
  capabilities, but still be useful
• Saying that we have proved a theory on the basis
  of observations ignores the fact that subsequent
  observations might not be in accordance with the
  theory




                                               1-45
Can we prove a theory? (cont.)
• Falsificationists would argue that a theory can
  never be proved, though it might be the ‘best’ at a
  particular point in time
• Safer to say that our evidence supports a
  particular theory




                                                   1-46
Dishonest tricks in argument
• Thouless (1974) identifies 38 dishonest tricks
  some writers use to support their argument
  including
   –   emotionally toned words
   –   statements where ‘all’ is implied but ‘some’ is true
   –   diversion to another question or to a side issue
   –   use of speculative argument
   –   prestige by false credentials
   –   appeal to mere authority




                                                              1-47
Summary
• Methods to develop a theory
• Ethics theory and application in accounting
  practice
• Accounting theories and development
• Evaluation of theories


Topic references:
FAT Ch1
APES 110 Code of Ethics for Accounting Professionals




                                                       1-48
Class activities
• Case study “Harris Accountant ”
• Discussion Questions
   – Ch 1 FAT: 1.1-3, 1.5, 1.8, 1.16, 1.20, 1.25, 1.27


• Additional Activities
   – Online discussion forum




                                                         1-49
Relax, we are finished




                         1-50

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Week 13

  • 1. BAO5535 Issues in contemporary Accounting Week 1 Introduction
  • 2. Welcome to BAO5535 Issues in contemporary accounting Subject coordinators and lecturers: Ms Helen Yang Contact: helen.yang@vu.edu.au (preferred) Phone: 03-9919 5265 Office: G3.36 Footscray Park Campus Professor Colin Clark Phone 03-9919 1565 Office: C10.16 City Flinders Campus BAO5535 Issues in Contemporary 2 Accounting
  • 3. What we are going to learn? • Refer to your Unit of Study Guide for further details BAO5535 Issues in Contemporary 3 Accounting
  • 4. What Assessment is there? • Refer to Unit Guide BAO5535 Issues in Contemporary 4 Accounting
  • 5. How to start with this subject? • Prescribed textbooks Deegan, C, 2009, Financial Accounting Theory, 3rd edition Deegan, C, 2010, Australian Financial Accounting, 6th edition Accounting Handbook 2011 available online at www.aasb.com.au • Subject website at Blackboard (Webct) • Seminars BAO5535 Issues in Contemporary 5 Accounting
  • 6. How to successfully complete the course? • Do your homework – Attempt weekly activities before each class • Attend seminars • Be an Active learner, i.e. participating in class discussions and online discussions • Don’t forget to ask for help – Student learning service – Your lecturers – Librarians – Student administrators – Your peers BAO5535 Issues in Contemporary 6 Accounting
  • 7. Any questions so far? BAO5535 Issues in Contemporary 7 Accounting
  • 8. “A long journey starts from the very first step”, I wish you a challenging but a rewarding semester BAO5535 Issues in Contemporary 8 Accounting
  • 9. Topic 1 Professional ethics and theories in accounting – Learning outcomes – Be able to explain the difference between deductive and inductive approaches to theory development – Be able to explain ethical theories and their implication to accounting practice – Be able to apply APES 110 Code of ethics for professional accountants to decision-making process – Be aware of development of accounting theories – Appreciate that there is no single unified theory of accounting – Be able to critically evaluate difference theories in accounting 1-9
  • 10. The role of professional judgement in financial reporting • While the accounting treatment of many transactions and events is regulated, many others are unregulated • Accountants expected to be objective and free from bias (although, as we will see, various theories of accounting question whether accountants will allow objectivity to determine the selection of accounting methods) 1-10
  • 11. The role of professional judgement in financial reporting (cont.) • Information generated should faithfully represent underlying transactions and be neutral and verifiable • The consideration of economic and social implications of possible accounting standards implies bias in their development and implementation – standard setters face a ‘dilemma which requires a delicate balancing of accounting and non-accounting variables’ (Zeff 1978, p. 62) 1-11
  • 12. The power of accountants • Output of the accounting process impacts many decisions about wealth transfers so the judgement of accountants affect various parties’ wealth • The provision of accounting information leads to power of knowledge for others • Accountants can give legitimacy to organisations which may not otherwise be deemed legitimate (e.g. emphasising profits) – e.g. profits legitimise Commonwealth Bank (see Accounting Headline 2.1, p. 45) 1-12
  • 13. The power of accountants (cont.) • Profit measures ignore many social and environmental externalities caused by the reporting entity – e.g. major adverse social consequences of a cigarette manufacturer • Accounting does not objectively reflect a particular entity—it creates it 1-13
  • 14. Ethical theories and Ethical decision making principles • Consequence-based (teleological) – Utilitarianism – Egoism • Duty-based (deontological) – Fairness – Justice • Virtue-based (ontological) – Aristotle virtue ethics – Confucius virtue ethics Please refer to: An introduction to Business Ethics, 2nd Edition, Des Jardins, 2006, McGrall Hill, Chapter 2: Ethical Theory and Business for further details 1-14
  • 15. Code of ethics for Professional accountants (Cont) Refer to APES 110 Code of Ethics for Professional Accountants Threats and Safeguards Para 100.10 of circumstances. Many threats fall into the following categories: (d) Self-interest threats (e) Self-review threats (f) Advocacy threats (g) Familiarity threats (h) Intimidation threats, 1-15
  • 16. Code of ethics for Professional accountants – Fundamental principles Refer to APES 110 Code of Ethics for Professional Accountants Para.100.4 A Member is required to comply with the following fundamental principles: (a) Integrity (b) Objectivity (c) Professional competence and due care (d) Confidentiality (e) Professional behaviour Note: Please refer to Section 110 –150 of APES 110 for further details Also refer to APES 205 Conformity with accounting standards (effective on 1 July 2008), available at http://www.apesb.org.au/Document/Issued_Standards/APES%20205%20Conformity%20with%20Accounting%20 1-16
  • 17. Application of ethical principles to ethical issues in business – common avoidance of professional responsibility • Listen to your heart or to your head? • It is not my problem! • Everybody else does it! • It is not ‘cooking the book’ , it is creative accounting method! • It does not breach the law when people are sacked! • I am just doing what I have been told! • Greed is good!?? 1-17
  • 18. Class activity Application of ethical principles to ethical issues in business • Ethical dilemma decision making tree.doc • Harris accountant jailed for $36 m fraud” Courier- mail 27 June 2002, cited in Deegan (2009, p.276) 1-18
  • 19. What is a theory? • ‘A coherent set of hypothetical, conceptual and pragmatic principles forming the general framework of reference for a field of inquiry’ (Hendriksen 1970, p. 1) • Based on logical (coherent) reasoning, and not ad hoc in nature 1-19
  • 20. How theories are developed Inductive method (Bottom up) – Conducts empirical studies and form theory Deductive method (Top down) - Develop hypothesis and test them 1-20
  • 21. Accounting theories • Accounting is a human activity • It would seem illogical to study financial accounting (for example, the accounting standards) without also studying accounting theory • Theories of accounting consider – people’s behaviour with respect to accounting information – people’s needs for accounting information – why people within organisations elect to supply particular information 1-21
  • 22. Why study accounting theories • Learning the rules of financial accounting without considering the implications of accounting information is not recommended • Studying theories of accounting exposes students to various issues, including – how elements of accounting should be measured – motivation for organisations to provide certain types of accounting information 1-22
  • 23. Why study accounting theories (cont.) – motivation for individuals to support or lobby regulators for some accounting methods in preference to others – the implications for organisations and their stakeholders if one accounting method is chosen or mandated in preference to others – how and why the capital markets react to particular information – whether there is a ‘true measure’ of income 1-23
  • 24. Examples of uses of accounting theories • Theories might – prescribe how assets should be valued – predict why managers will choose particular accounting methods – explain how an individual’s cultural background affects accounting information provided – prescribe what accounting information should be provided to particular classes of stakeholders – predict that the relative power of a stakeholder group will affect the accounting information it receives 1-24
  • 25. Overview of theories of accounting • Many theories of financial accounting exist • No universally accepted theory of accounting – different perspectives about the central objective, role and scope of financial accounting • No universally accepted perspective about the role of accounting theory – different researchers have different perspectives of the role of accounting theory – a researcher’s own values will influence which theory he or she elects to embrace 1-25
  • 26. Overview of accounting theories development • General scientific period (1920s-60s) – Inductive method, explanation of practice and development of explanatory framework • Normative period (1960s-70s) – Prescriptive approach • Empirical period (mid to late 1970s – 2000) – Rational economic persons assumption, a framework to explain and predict behaviour • Mixed development (2000 – present) – Positive and behavioural theories 1-26
  • 27. General scientific period • Relied upon the process of induction – development of ideas or theories through observation • 1920s to 1960s theories developed from observing what accountants did in practice – codified as doctrines or conventions of accounting 1-27
  • 28. Criticisms of inductive method • ‘… concentrates on the status quo, is reactionary in attitude and cannot provide a basis upon which current practice may be evaluated or from which future improvements may be deduced’ (Gray, Owen & Maunders 1987, p. 66) • Assumes what is done by the majority is the most appropriate practice • Perspective of accounting Darwinism 1-28
  • 29. Example of inductive approach to theory development • Grady (1965) undertook research commissioned by the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) • Formed the basis of APB Statement No. 4 ‘Basic Concepts and Accounting Principles Underlying the Financial Statements of Business Enterprises’ – reflected generally accepted accounting principles at the time 1-29
  • 30. Normative Period —1960s and 1970s • Sought to prescribe particular accounting practices – known as normative theories • Not driven by existing practices, and hence not typically inductive in nature (that is, not based on observation) • Rather, were deductive in nature and, based on logical argument, sought to develop new methods of accounting • Theories critical of historical cost accounting • Sought to provide improved approaches to asset valuation in a time of widespread inflation 1-30
  • 31. Normative theories • Based on what the researcher believes should occur in particular circumstances – not based on observation • Example of normative theory – Continuously Contemporary Accounting (CoCoA) by Raymond Chambers • Should not be evaluated on whether they reflect actual accounting practice 1-31
  • 32. Classifications of normative theories • True income theories – make assumptions about the role of accounting then seek to provide a single ‘best measure’ of profits • Decision usefulness theories – ascribe a particular type of information for particular classes of users on the basis of assumed decision- making needs 1-32
  • 33. Decision usefulness theories • Decision-makers emphasis – undertaking research that seeks to ask decision makers what information they want – knowledge then used to make prescriptions about what information should be supplied • Decision-models emphasis – develops models based on the researchers’ perceptions about what is necessary for efficient decision making 1-33
  • 34. Criticism of normative theories—an example • Normative theories have been criticised for lack of empirical observation – based on personal opinion about what should happen – positive theorists argue that they would prefer to provide information about expected implications of actions and let others decide themselves what they should do – positive theorists also make value judgements 1-34
  • 35. Example of prescriptive theory • 1961 and 1962 studies by Moonitz, and Sprouse and Moonitz commissioned by the Accounting Research Division of the AICPA • Authors proposed that accounting measurement systems be changed from historical cost to a system based on current values • Such research should not be evaluated by reviewing current practice • Not supported by AICPA as too radically different from current practice 1-35
  • 36. Positivistic Period — mid to late 1970s - 2000 • Research aimed at explaining and predicting accounting practice rather than prescribing particular practices • Known as positive theories 1-36
  • 37. Positive theories • Seek to predict and explain particular phenomena • Begins with assumption(s), and through logical deduction enables prediction(s) to be made • If predictions are sufficiently accurate when tested against observations of reality, they are regarded as having provided explanation of why things are as they are 1-37
  • 38. Positive theories (cont.) • Positive Accounting Theory – developed by Watts and Zimmerman – seeks to predict and explain why accountants elect to adopt particular accounting methods in preference to others – based on ‘rational economic person’ assumption  individuals motivated by self-interest tied to wealth maximisation 1-38
  • 39. Criticism of positive theories—an example • Positive theories of accounting have been criticised for not providing prescription • The decision not to provide prescription could alienate academic accountants from their counterparts within the profession 1-39
  • 40. Evaluating theories of accounting • Students should consider the merit of the argument and the research methods employed • Some researchers may adopt strategies (such as overt condemnation of alternative theories) to support their own research and theoretical perspective 1-40
  • 41. Evaluation of theories—the position taken in this book • Theories of accounting are only abstractions of reality • The choice of one theory in preference to another is based on value judgements • Cannot expect to provide perfect explanations or predictions of human behaviour or assess what types on information users actually need 1-41
  • 42. Evaluating theories—logic and evidence • When evaluating theories, need to consider – whether the argument supporting the theory is logical – whether you agree with the central assumptions of the theory – whether you accept any supporting evidence provided 1-42
  • 43. Logical deduction • Acceptance of an argument must be based on the accuracy of the premises – an argument is logical to the extent that if the premises on which it is based are true, then the conclusion will be true – Compare the following statements  All cats have fur and four legs  Tom has fur and four legs  Therefore Tom is a cat And All cats have fur and four legs, Tom is a cat, therefore Tom has fur and four legs • We do not need to refer to ‘real world’ observations to determine the logic of an argument 1-43
  • 44. The role of assumptions • Even though an argument is logical we might only accept the argument if we accept any critical assumptions being made – if we reject any central assumptions we may reject the prediction 1-44
  • 45. Can we prove a theory? • Can we expect that a theory of financial accounting (and hence, about people) can provide perfect predictions in all cases? • A theory might not have perfect predictive capabilities, but still be useful • Saying that we have proved a theory on the basis of observations ignores the fact that subsequent observations might not be in accordance with the theory 1-45
  • 46. Can we prove a theory? (cont.) • Falsificationists would argue that a theory can never be proved, though it might be the ‘best’ at a particular point in time • Safer to say that our evidence supports a particular theory 1-46
  • 47. Dishonest tricks in argument • Thouless (1974) identifies 38 dishonest tricks some writers use to support their argument including – emotionally toned words – statements where ‘all’ is implied but ‘some’ is true – diversion to another question or to a side issue – use of speculative argument – prestige by false credentials – appeal to mere authority 1-47
  • 48. Summary • Methods to develop a theory • Ethics theory and application in accounting practice • Accounting theories and development • Evaluation of theories Topic references: FAT Ch1 APES 110 Code of Ethics for Accounting Professionals 1-48
  • 49. Class activities • Case study “Harris Accountant ” • Discussion Questions – Ch 1 FAT: 1.1-3, 1.5, 1.8, 1.16, 1.20, 1.25, 1.27 • Additional Activities – Online discussion forum 1-49
  • 50. Relax, we are finished 1-50

Notas do Editor

  1. Who may help you in your study? Academic issues: Your lecturers and tutors General queries: Reception at level 1 Learning issues: LSU Borrowing books: Librarians