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Lädt ... Soll und Haben (2011)von Jane Gleeson-White
![]() Keine aktuelle Diskussion zu diesem Buch. ![]() Somewhat interesting but the author does skip around the timeline a bit. Going back and forth and repeating certain facts like we would not be able to understand it if it wasn't repeated. Towards the end it does become a bit of a rant about how we need to find a way to take natural resources and quality of life into account. But basically no one has found a better way to balance the books since 15th century Venice. Can't really recommend this book. A few interesting facts here and there. She spends time on the Renaissance and on Pacioli's background. There's a quick gloss on what double-entry bookkeeping/accounting is and how it works. She then discusses how it changed in 1800s. Then on to accounting scandals then & now. Last was a lot about GDP, GNP, National Systems of Accounts and how they are inadequate. For all the time and attention she spends on this last part, she makes no effort at all to show how this is tied to double-entry accounting. A surprisingly poor attempt to explore the history of accounting, built around an account of the traditional father of modern accounting leading into a superficial plan for using accounting to advance modern environmental concerns. The author appears to be neither an expert in history or accounting, and this book will not enlighten non-accountants who come to understand the importance of accounting in the modern world. Zeige 4 von 4
The invention of double-entry bookkeeping, which originated in Italy more than six centuries ago, is one of the great achievements of Western civilization. Without this venerable method of accounting . . . it is scarcely possible to conceive of our economic system. . . . Ms. Gleeson-White's narrative in Double Entry is clear and approachable. The complexities of accounting are lucidly presented. THIS book traces the 500-year history of double-entry bookkeeping, the basis of modern accounting. A dull and unpromising subject? To the contrary, in the imaginative hands of Sydney writer Jane Gleeson-White it proves fascinating. The dramatic subtitle, How the merchants of Venice shaped the modern world -- and how their invention could make or break the planet, is not an overreach. Auszeichnungen
Describes the history of accounting and double-entry bookkeeping from Mesopotamia to the Renaissance to modern finance and explains how a system developed that could work across all trades and nations. Keine Bibliotheksbeschreibungen gefunden. |
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![]() GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)657.09Technology Management and auxiliary services Accounting Biography; History By PlaceKlassifikation der Library of Congress [LCC] (USA)BewertungDurchschnitt:![]()
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