In The Failure and the Future of Accounting, David Hatherly rethinks accounting in the light of a financial crisis which exposed its limitations. He reminds us that in the run up to 2008 the accounts of financial institutions reported increasing profits and healthy balance sheets whilst their business models were undermining their own financial health and the economy. Accounts failed to provide appropriate feedback on business performance. This failure illustrated a general problem. There is a need in all companies for better alignment between the business model and the accounting model. To understand the performance of the business we need to know how much value is created and how value is created, who it is created for, what kind of value is created and how it is measured. Here, Professor Hatherly provides an accounting model that addresses all these questions. Coordinating business as strategy, business as a stakeholder network and business as value, the four slice (4S) accounting model overcomes the complexity and incoherence of existing accounting standards. It allows managers and shareholders to analyse the effectiveness of the business model and for management to be held to account. It prevents the misreporting of speculative gains as distributable income and therefore allows capital to be better allocated towards productive enterprise, making financial crises less likely. With its insights into both accounting and business more generally, this book is essential reading for accountants and accountancy students and for those running businesses of any description.
Industry Reviews
'This book proposes a major revolution in financial reporting. By expanding on the traditional accounting model by accounting for the components of the market capitalisation of the business, the author challenges directly the world's present system of accounting. Using examples such as Enron and the financial crisis Professor Hatherly illustrates the deficiencies of the present model and, unusually, suggests how to rectify them. A must-read book for all who wonder where the future of reporting might lie.' Sir David Tweedie. Chairman of the IASB 2001-11; President of ICAS 'Hatherly has made an important, if controversial, contribution to the debate on improving the standards of corporate financial reporting. His proposed deconstruction of reported results and returns into discrete categories poses real challenges to the status quo and his ideas merit careful consideration and discussion. Investment managers, financial analysts and journalists would do well to read this timely book.' Stewart Hamilton, Emeritus Professor, IMD, Lausanne, Switzerland '...the book provides a very good starting point for instigating a broader debate in the area of financial reporting, including the entire integrated reporting debate. ...this is a book that paves the way for a productive debate on what accounting should focus on and how to go about it, as well as offering an opportunity to reconsider the focal points of current accounting and valuation analysis.' Stergios Leventis, Accounting and Business Research, vol.43, no.6