Companies accounting standard practices /
edited by Chean Chin.
- viii, 226 pages ; 25 cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Companies accounting for national success and failure: rethinking the UK case -- Cost accounting skills needs for companies -- Financial accounting expertise and earnings management -- Development of financial accounting and implications for the broader post-secondary community -- Determinants of corporate social responsibility -- The private equity business model -- Information asymmetry and capital structure: accounting standards -- Stock recommendations after earnings announcements.
"Standard accounting practices require publicly traded companies to follow certain accounting rules when presenting financial statements so that the readers of the statements can easily compare different companies. Private companies are also often required by banks and shareholders, for example, to present information according to their specified rules. This text has been divided inti eight chapters. First chapter presents some basic political arithmetic on UK economic performance, including empirics on the sources of new job creation and regional differences. These empirics support an argument about the need for new measures and concepts of national success and failure. The purpose of second chapter is to determine the record-keeping, inventory control and price determination skills needs of small business operators. Third chapter examines the importance of the interaction of relative audit committee status and financial expertise in constraining earnings management. Several factors have been important for the successful development of the OER accounting text described in chapter fourth. Fifth chapter observes the current level of CSR in the well-represented and fast-emerging Indian economy with its large corporate sector. Sixth chapter reveals how the financial crisis undermined the performance of Private Equity Partnerships. The uses Regulation Fair Disclosure (FD) as a plausibly exogenous shock to the information environment to identity the causal effect of information asymmetry on corporate financing behavior has been described in seventh chapter. Last chapter describes the stock recommendations after earnings announcements." -- Back cover