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Replacement Costs and Accounting Reform in Post-world War I Germany by Graeme Dean

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Replacement Costs and Accounting Reform in Post-world War I Germany

1st Edition

Graeme Dean, Frank Clarke, Finley Graves

Taylor and Francis · Print & ebook · June 8, 2017

Reading lane: Government Accounting

Originally published in 1990, this anthology of articles from the German financial and industrial press, translated into English for this volume, discusses the socio/politico/economic background that was a catalyst for the development of replacement cost accounting ideas in Europe and Anglo-American countries.

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At a Glance

Who It's For

Reading lane: Government Accounting and German Literary Criticism.Publisher: Taylor and Francis.

Book Details

Authors
Graeme Dean, Frank Clarke, Finley Graves
Publisher
Taylor and Francis
Published
June 8, 2017
Format
Print & ebook
Theme
Government Accounting · German Literary Criticism
Reading lane
Government Accounting

Affinity

Publisher Categories

  • International Economics

About This Book

Originally published in 1990, this anthology of articles from the German financial and industrial press, translated into English for this volume, discusses the socio/politico/economic background that was a catalyst for the development of replacement cost accounting ideas in Europe and Anglo-American countries. The contributions to the replacement cost debate contained in this anthology, in general, defended depeciation and cost accumulation based on replacement cost. If indu...

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Originally published in 1990, this anthology of articles from the German financial and industrial press, translated into English for this volume, discusses the socio/politico/economic background that was a catalyst for the development of replacement cost accounting ideas in Europe and Anglo-American countries. The contributions to the replacement cost debate contained in this anthology, in general, defended depeciation and cost accumulation based on replacement cost. If industry and the German economy were to prosper in a time of social, economic and political chaos in the immediate post World War I period, replacement cost accounting was considered essential.

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