Prelims

Harold Cecil Edey: A Collection of Unpublished Material from a 20th Century Accounting Reformer

ISBN: 978-1-78973-670-0, eISBN: 978-1-78973-669-4

ISSN: 1479-3504

Publication date: 30 September 2019

Citation

Persson, M.E. (2019), "Prelims", Persson, M.E. (Ed.) Harold Cecil Edey: A Collection of Unpublished Material from a 20th Century Accounting Reformer (Studies in the Development of Accounting Thought, Vol. 23), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. i-xiii. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1479-350420190000023002

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2019 Emerald Publishing Limited


Half Title Page

HAROLD CECIL EDEY

Series Page

STUDIES IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF ACCOUNTING THOUGHT

Series Editor: Gary J. Previts, Case Western Reserve University

Recent Volumes:

Volume 1: Henry Rand Hatfield: Humanist, Scholar, and Accounting Educator, by Stephen A. Zeff
Volume 2: Foundations for the Future: The AICPA from 1980–1995, by Philip B. Chenok and Adam Snyder
Volume 3: The Story of a Fortunate Man: Reminiscences and Recollections of Fifty-Three Years of Professional Accounting, by Maurice E. Peloubet, Ed. Alfred R. Roberts
Volume 4: Development of the Income Smoothing Literature 1893–1998: A Focus on the United States, by Dale A. Buckmaster
Volume 5: The Murphy-Kirk-Beresford Correspondence, 1982–1996: Commentary on the Development of Financial Accounting Standards, Eds. Robert J. Bricker and Gary J. Previts
Volume 6: Doing Accounting History: Contributions to the Development of Accounting Thought, Eds. Richard K. Fleischman, Vaughan S. Radcliffe, and Paul A. Shoemaker
Volume 7: Accounting: How to Meet the Challenges of Relevance and Regulation, by Eugene H. Flegm
Volume 8: The Life and Writings of Stuart Chase (1888–1985): From an Accountant’s Perspective, by Richard Vangermeersch
Volume 9: Seekers of Truth: The Scottish Founders of Modern Public Accountancy, by T. A. Lee
Volume 10: The Contributions of John Lansing Carey to the Profession of Accountancy, by Laurie A. Barfitt
Volume 11: Abraham J. (Abe) Briloff: A Biography, by E. Richard Criscione
Volume 12: Early Warning and Quick Response: Accounting in the Twenty-First Century, by David Mosso
Volume 13: Gerhard G. Mueller: Father of International Accounting Education, Dale L. Flesher
Volume 14A: A Global History of Accounting, Financial Reporting and Public Policy: Europe, Eds. Gary Previts, Peter Walton, and Peter Wolnizer
Volume 14B: A Global History of Accounting, Financial Reporting and Public Policy: Americas, Eds. Gary Previts, Peter Walton, and Peter Wolnizer
Volume 14C: A Global History of Accounting, Financial Reporting and Public Policy: Asia and Oceania, Eds. Gary Previts, Peter Walton, and Peter Wolnizer
Volume 14D: A Global History of Accounting, Financial Reporting and Public Policy: Middle East and Africa, Eds. Gary Previts, Peter Walton, and Peter Wolnizer
Volume 15: Understanding Accounting Academic Research: Before and After Sarbanes-Oxley, by Stephen R. Moehrle and Jennifer Reynolds-Moehrle
Volume 16: The Big Four and the Development of the Accounting Profession in China, by Paul L. Gillis
Volume 17: Management Accounting at the Hudson’s Bay Company: From Quill Pen to Digitization, by Gary Spraakman
Volume 18: Japanese Management Accounting: Cultural and Institutional Significance of Cost Designing, by Hiroshi Okano
Volume 19: Count Down: The Past, Present, and Uncertain Future of the Big Four Accounting Firms, by Jim Peterson
Volume 20: A. C. Littleton’s Final Thoughts on Accounting: A Collection of Unpublished Essays, by Martin E. Persson
Volume 21: Understanding Mattessich and Ijiri: A Study of Accounting Thought, by Nohora Garcia
Volume 22: William A. Paton: A Study of his Accounting Thought, by Kelly L. Williams and Howard J. Lawrence

To order volumes in this series, please visit books.emeraldinsight.com/page/series-detail/Studies-in-the-Development-of-Accounting-Thought/

Title Page

STUDIES IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF ACCOUNTING THOUGH VOLUME 23

HAROLD CECIL EDEY: A COLLECTION OF UNPUBLISHED MATERIAL FROM A 20TH CENTURY ACCOUNTING REFORMER

EDITED BY

MARTIN E. PERSSON

United Kingdom – North America – Japan – India – Malaysia – China

Copyright Page

Emerald Publishing Limited

Howard House, Wagon Lane, Bingley BD16 1WA, UK

First edition 2019

Chapters by Harold Cecil Edey © Nerys Bailey and David Edey; all other editorial matter © Emerald Publishing Limited, 2019

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Contact: permissions@emeraldinsight.com

No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, transmitted in any form or by any means electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise without either the prior written permission of the publisher or a licence permitting restricted copying issued in the UK by The Copyright Licensing Agency and in the USA by The Copyright Clearance Center. No responsibility is accepted for the accuracy of information contained in the text, illustrations or advertisements. The opinions expressed in these chapters are not necessarily those of the Editor or the publisher.

British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data

A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

ISBN: 978-1-78973-670-0 (Print)

ISBN: 978-1-78973-669-4 (Online)

ISBN: 978-1-78973-671-7 (Epub)

ISSN: 1479-3504 (Series)

Contents

Foreword vii
Acknowledgments xiii
Chapter 1 Accounting and the Imagination 1
Chapter 2 Hire Purchase 11
Chapter 3 Double Entry and Electronics 15
Chapter 4 Asset Values, Depreciation, Profit and Management Information 23
Chapter 5 Valuation 41
Chapter 6 The Teaching of Accounting and Financial Management 57
Chapter 7 Special Characteristics of Accounting in Great Britain 67
Chapter 8 Economics and Accounting 73
Chapter 9 Depreciation and Price Control 85
Chapter 10 Current Cost Accounting 97
Chapter 11 Implications of Cash Flow Accounting for Management 103
Chapter 12 The 130-Year Lag 113
Chapter 13 Financial Accounting: Thoughts for the Future or Random Thoughts on a Well-worn Topic 125
References 131
Appendices 137

Foreword

This edited volume contains 13 of Harold Cecil Edey’s (1913–2007) unpublished essays, manuscripts, and speeches. I first became aware of Edey and his contribution to the development of accounting thought as a graduate student at the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE) in 2009. Sara Rossberg’s portrait of Edey still hangs on the walls of the Department of Accounting on the third floor of the Old Building, and, at least during my time, faculty members were still offering coursework on deprival value, a concept introduced by Bonbright (1937) and later developed by Edey and his colleagues in the 1970s (Baxter, 2003; Edey, 1974b; Solomons, 1961). During my ensuing doctoral studies, my focus shifted to the Australian academic Raymond J. Chambers (1917–1999) and his contribution to accounting thought, but, once I graduated in 2013, I had a chance to revisit the former while I worked through the Harold C. Edey Collection at the Archives and Special Collections at the British Library of Political and Economic Science. This volume is the result of that work.

The volume is also part of a larger research program to preserve the historical record of the development of accounting thought (e.g., see Persson, 2016, for a similar compilation of A. C. Littleton’s unpublished work). Whittington (1994) describes how the “LSE Triumvirate” – Edey and his colleagues William T. Baxter (1907–2006) and David Solomons (1912–1995) – influenced a “generation of students” who came to populate the British accounting profession and academia to the point where, in the early 1970s, half of all full-time accounting professors in the United Kingdom were LSE alumni (see Table 3 in Parker, 1997). While Chambers, Solomons, and Baxter were all inducted into the Accounting Hall of Fame in 1991, 1992, and 2005, respectively, for their contribution to the development of accounting thought, Edey has not receive the same honor.1

There are at least three contributing factors for this underappreciation of Edey’s contribution.2 First, there was a scarcity of outlets for academic research during Edey’s tenure, and less institutional pressure to publish, which resulted in a modest amount of publications compared to present standards (see Napier, 2011, for the British context and Previts & Flesher, 2016, for the American context). Second, Edey was more of an institution builder in similar vein as, for example, Alvin R. Jennings (Persson, Radcliffe, & Stein, 2015), Elmer G. Beamer (Persson, Radcliffe, & Stein, 2018), and Vernon K. Zimmerman (Schoenfeld, 1996), whereas Chambers (Clarke, Dean, & Persson, 2019), Baxter (Bromwich, Macve, & Ranger, 2006), and Solomons (Zeff, 1995) focused primarily on research, which, in turn, left behind a comparably larger body of work for subsequent generations to appreciate. And, third, the capital market research paradigm that began at the Universities of Chicago and Rochester in the late 1960s led to a situation where Edey’s concerns with improving the accounting measurements used in financial reporting was replaced with efforts to investigate the market response to accounting numbers using new methods from financial economics and statistics (for more about this transition, see Dyckman & Zeff, 2015; Jeanjean & Ramirez, 2009; Whitley, 1986).3

Edey was born in South London in 1913, and he remained in the city through secondary school. He articled with a small local firm, John Baker Sons & Bell in 1930, and qualified as a Chartered Accountant with the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales (ICAEW) in 1935. The following years were spent working at Deloitte, Plender, Griffiths & Co. (today Deloitte), Whitehall Securities Corporation (today Pearson PLC), and then serving in the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve during the war effort. Edey received a “Class A” release after the defeat of Germany, and he returned to London to complete a B.Com. degree at the LSE, graduating in 1947.4 His performance in the coursework led to an appointment as a research assistant to the economist Frank Paish, then a part-time lectureship, and eventually a full-time lectureship in accounting and business finance in 1949 (for more biographical information about Edey, see Appendix 1; Bailey, 2009; Macve, 2007).

With his full-time appointment at the LSE, Edey joined Solomons and Baxter – appointed in 1946 and 1947, respectively – at an institution that had been at the forefront of accounting education since its establishment as an independent entity in 1895. The B.Sc. degree in economics was one of the first of its kind to incorporate accounting in its curriculum in 1902. The course offerings in accounting expanded with the establishment of the B.Com. degree after the First World War, and, after the Second World War, these three individuals formed what Whittington (1994) refers to as the LSE Triumvirate (for more about the history of the LSE, see Abse, 1977; Cain, 1963; Dahrendorf, 1995). The triumvirate was part of the reorientation of the faculty from its roots in professional practice to one that drew heavily on insights from their colleagues in economics, such as Friedrich Hayek, John Hicks, Lionel Robbins, and Ronald Coase. This influence took the form of a research program that sought to address the flaws in conventional accounting measurements, which would become increasingly apparent with the rise of inflation in the late 1960s (for more about this research program, see Napier, 1996a, 1996b).

During his tenure at the LSE, Edey participated in the establishing of the Department of Accounting in 1962 and the offering of the first M.Sc. program in accounting in the UK in 1967. He was promoted to a Reader in 1955 (a uniquely British academic rank situated between the positions of Associate and Full Professor); Full Professor in 1962; and the university’s first Pro-Director in 1967. Edey also served in various capacities outside of his home institution, such as a member on the board that led to the establishment of the London Business School; as the first academic member of ICAEW’s Council; and as a founding member of the Accounting Standards Steering Committee.

Edey retired as Professor Emeritus in 1980, but he continued to work after his retirement as evidenced by the inclusion of the last three manuscripts in this edited volume. He received an honorary professorship from University College Wales (today Aberystwyth University) in 1980; an honorary fellowship from the LSE in 1986; and a life membership from the ICAEW in 1999. In recognition of his contribution to the development of accounting thought and the discipline, Edey also received numerous awards such as the Founding Societies’ Centenary Award from the Institute; a Doctor of Laws, honoris causa, from the Council for National Academic Awards (today the Open University); and the Queen Elizabeth II Silver Jubilee Medal (see Appendix 1 for more details about these activities and honors).

I was alerted to the existence of the Harold C. Edey Collection from a footnote on p. 91 in Edey’s edited autobiography (Bailey, 2009), which made a reference to a collection of unfinished manuscripts being stored at the Archives and Special Collections at the British Library of Political and Economic Science. The entire collection is made up of 11 boxes of material, some of which is unsorted. Out of this material, I identified a total of 26 unpublished items of potential interest when visiting the archive in 2014. One of these items – a one-act play that Edey had written as a way to teach accounting theory and measurements during an annual “residential course” held at the LSE in the late 1950s – was prepared for publication in Accounting History Review (Persson & Fafatas, 2018). The rest of the material remained idle, until I had secured copyright permission to republish the material and a grant from the CPA-Ivey Centre for Accounting & the Public Interest in 2017 to cover the cost of transcribing it from the carbon copies and handwritten notes contained in the archive.

The 26 unpublished manuscripts in Edey’s collection were later narrowed down to the 13 items contained in this volume. These items, several of which in early draft form, were written over a time period spanning almost 40 years and are reproduced as closely as possible to their original form. My editorial changes have been limited to the adding of missing or incomplete references; the consistent formatting of items such as the font, headers, and use of italics; and the implementation of the changes that Edey had indicated in his handwritten notes on the carbon copies of his manuscripts. My editorial comments are prefaced with “Editor:” and appear in the footnotes at the end of each chapter along with Edey’s footnotes in the original material. Whereas the number of editorial footnotes varies throughout the chapters, I have taken the liberty of introducing at least one footnote at the beginning of each manuscript that aims to situate the material in its historical context. I have also added two appendices: an aide-mémoire and a chronological list of all of Edey’s publications.

The 13 manuscripts in this volume stand on their own, but interested readers might want to consult Accounting Queries (1982), which is an earlier edited volume of a selection of Edey’s published work. In the introduction to Accounting Queries, Edey credits the American economists Irving Fisher and James Bonbright for providing his analytical framework for financial decision-making; the LSE economists Lionel Robbins, Arnold Plant, and Frank Paish for guiding his reading in economics; and his colleagues Ronald Coase, William Baxter, David Solomons, and Basil Yamey for helping him connect the logical foundations of accounting with economic theory. Readers familiar with Edey’s writings will also notice these influences on the present collection, which contains material that overlap in time with those in the previous volume. The central tenant of his writings here, as in the previous volume, remains that:

[o]ne cannot usefully determine accounting procedures by a vain search for the “correct” meaning of the words “profit” and “income.” A useful definition of these words can be found only in the procedures used to find the numbers in question, and then only in a particular context. (Edey, 1982, p. 1)

Edey’s emphasis on the context and procedure when choosing between alternative accounting measurements comes through in all 13 manuscripts included in this volume. This position is perhaps its clearest, however, in the last manuscript, “Financial Accounting,” where Edey argues that companies should be allowed to use non-standard accounting measurements as long as the rationale behind them is explained to the reader (note that he wrote this in the 1980s and well before non-GAAP measurements were commonplace). This emphasis on the context and procedure also puts Edey’s thoughts on accounting theory in an interesting position vis-à-vis his contemporaries. He would be in disagreement with inductive theorists such as A. C. Littleton (1933) – who argue that the use of a particular practice validates the usefulness of that practice – but he would also be in disagreement with deductive theorists, such as Chambers (1966), Ijiri (1967), and Sterling (1970), in their insistence on the fruitfulness of setting out a universal theory that would apply to all companies under all conditions. Pragmatic thought of this kind prevails throughout the volume, although I know of no evidence that Edey ever labeled himself as a pragmatist (for a contemporary discussion of pragmatism and accounting theory, see Rutherford, 2013).5

The first, third, sixth, and eight manuscripts of this edited volume address topics in accounting education. The potential benefits of including economics and computer science into the accounting curriculum are reoccurring themes in these items. The remaining nine manuscripts deal with matters of accounting measurements for various items and under different conditions. Edey addresses both specific issues, such as the accounting for “hire purchase” arrangements, as well as broader issues, such as accounting for changes in general-price levels (i.e., inflation). To the Editor, the most interesting of the latter is perhaps the 11th item, “Implications of Cash Flow Accounting for Management,” in which Edey builds on a number of Ronald S. Edwards’ articles to argue for the use of non-accrual-based cash budgets as supplementary statements in companies’ annual report. The basis for this suggestion is rooted in the insight that discounted future cash flows are likely to provide a better approximation of market values than the rules of accrual accounting (see also fifth manuscript for more on this).

I have a personal connection to Edey in that he convinced Christopher Napier, currently Professor of Accounting at Royal Holloway University of London, to pursue an academic career nearly 40 years ago, who, in turn, persuaded me to do the same about 30 years later. And the letters contained in Edey’s autobiography have numerous such accounts of a person that gave generously of his own time and expertise (see Appendix 5 in Bailey, 2009). In the opening paragraph of his autobiography, Edey writes that he prefers to be remembered as a “teacher” and, in the forewords to Accounting Queries (1982), he writes that he hopes that the material will be of “… interest to people studying the development of … [accounting] (p. 1).” I believe that the material contained in this volume will help accomplishing both.

Martin E. Persson

Department of Accountancy,

Gies College of Business,

University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign

July 2019

Notes

1

Information about their inductions into the Accounting Hall of Fame can be accessed here: http://aaahq.org/Accounting-Hall-of-Fame/Members.

2

It is worth noting that Michael Bromwich, one of Edey’s former colleagues at the LSE, echoes my assessment and states that he has “… always thought that Harold’s contribution to academic research has been undervalued (Bailey, 2009, p. 146).” It is also telling that Edey is referenced more times than any of his accounting colleagues in Dahrendorf’s (1995) history of the LSE.

3

For a Kuhnian interpretation (Kuhn, 1962) of the shift from the development of normative accounting theories to capital market research, see Wells (1976), Cushing (1989), and Mouck (1993).

4

“Class A” releases were issued to some British personnel after the defeat of Germany but before the defeat of Japan. Individuals with “Class A” releases were subject to reenlistment as needed.

5

Readers interested in Edey’s position on accounting theory should also consult his article, “Why All-Purpose Accounting Will Not Do,” which is republished in Accounting Queries (1982). It is also interesting to note that Littleton gravitated toward pragmatism, and the work of John Dewey, in his later writings (for more about this, see Persson, 2016).

Acknowledgments

It is a great pleasure to be the Editor of this collection of 13 of Harold C. Edey’s unpublished essays, manuscripts and speeches. The journey to compile Edey’s unpublished material into an edited volume began in 2014, and several individuals and organizations have helped in its completion. I would like to thank Gary Previts for accepting the manuscript for publication in Emerald’s Studies in the Development of Accounting Thought series. I would also like to thank Nerys Bailey, David Edey, and the Archives and Special Collections at the British Library of Political and Economic Science for the permission to reproduce the material found in this volume. Finally, I would like to thank the CPA-Ivey Centre for Accounting and the Public Interest for funding the project; Christina Zhang, Isabella An, and Zita Lee for helping in the transcription of the material found in this volume; as well as Christopher Napier and Royce Kurtz for assisting in chasing down the references to Edey’s more obscure publications.

 Harold C. Edey, 1913–2007

Harold C. Edey, 1913–2007