Accounting at the London School of Economics: Opportunity lost?
Author(s) -
Christopher J. Napier
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
accounting history
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.596
H-Index - 28
eISSN - 1749-3374
pISSN - 1032-3732
DOI - 10.1177/1032373210396333
Subject(s) - accounting , activity based costing , management accounting , value (mathematics) , schools of economic thought , financial accounting , positive accounting , unintended consequences , sociology , accounting information system , economics , political science , public relations , management , law , neoclassical economics , machine learning , computer science
Given the aims of the founders of the London School of Economics, it is not surprising that accounting should have been taught at the School from soon after its establishment. An early focus on teaching practical accounting, with professional practitioners as teachers, was gradually supplanted by approaches informed by the economics of decision-making in conditions of scarce resources. By the 1930s, the Department of Business Administration provided an intellectual basis for thinking about financial reporting and costing that challenged taken-for-granted practices. After World War II, the “LSE Triumvirate” of William Baxter, Harold Edey and David Solomons took forward ideas of opportunity cost and value to the owner as core theoretical concepts, while developing undergraduate and later postgraduate programmes that provided rigorous education for future accountants, administrators, business people and academics. However, the focus on education, and the weak infrastructure for accounting research in the UK had the unintended consequence that, by the early 1970s, the Department of Accounting did not have the opportunity of responding to changes in research focus in North America, which were influenced by developments in financial economics
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