
Estimation Theory in Financial Accounting as It Applies to Valuing Intellectual Property Assets
Author(s) -
Jeffrey E. Jarrett
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
advances in social sciences research journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2055-0286
DOI - 10.14738/assrj.811.11103
Subject(s) - abandonment (legal) , capital budgeting , cash flow , financial statement , accounting , economics , book value , discounted cash flow , estimation , financial accounting , finance , actuarial science , business , accounting information system , audit , debt , earnings , management , political science , law
The abandonment option under various capital budgeting models are discussed in this study to illustrate the notion that present value of cash flows is often improperly estimated in financial models utilizing decision analytics in estimation theory as it applies in financial accounting. In this study, intellectual property rights and other intangible assets which are often not considered in the accounting estimation processes utilized in financial accounting. An investor/analyst often misestimates cash flow resulting in less-than-optimum capital budgeting decisions. This is especially a problem when actions to abandon for salvage and other similar decisions improve when the present value of intangibles and property rights are included in the decision process. This last statement is the goal of this study as well as to present well-founded processes to improve abandonment and similar decisions in capital budgeting decisions. The estimation problem in financial accounting is included in the analysis to accomplish this goal.