The Reckoning: Financial Accountability and the Rise and Fall of Nations

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Basic Books, 29 d’abr. 2014 - 312 pàgines
Whether building a road or fighting a war, leaders from ancient Mesopotamia to the present have relied on financial accounting to track their state’s assets and guide its policies. Basic accounting tools such as auditing and double-entry bookkeeping form the basis of modern capitalism and the nation-state. Yet our appreciation for accounting and its formative role throughout history remains minimal at best—and we remain ignorant at our peril. The 2008 financial crisis is only the most recent example of how poor or risky practices can shake, and even bring down, entire societies.

In The Reckoning, historian and MacArthur “Genius” Award-winner Jacob Soll presents a sweeping history of accounting, drawing on a wealth of examples from over a millennia of human history to reveal how accounting has shaped kingdoms, empires, and entire civilizations. The Medici family of 15th century Florence used the double-entry method to win the loyalty of their clients, but eventually began to misrepresent their accounts, ultimately contributing to the economic decline of the Florentine state itself. In the 17th and 18th centuries, European rulers shunned honest accounting, understanding that accurate bookkeeping would constrain their spending and throw their legitimacy into question. And in fact, when King Louis XVI’s director of finances published the crown’s accounts in 1781, his revelations provoked a public outcry that helped to fuel the French Revolution. When transparent accounting finally took hold in the 19th Century, the practice helped England establish a global empire. But both inept and willfully misused accounting persist, as the catastrophic Stock Market Crash of 1929 and the Great Recession of 2008 have made all too clear.

A masterwork of economic and political history, and a radically new perspective on the recent past, The Reckoning compels us to see how accounting is an essential instrument of great institutions and nations—and one that, in our increasingly transparent and interconnected world, has never been more vital.
 

Continguts

A Short History of Early Accounting Politics and Accountability
1
For God and Profit The Books According to Saint Matthew
15
Medici Magnificence A Cautionary Tale
29
The Mathematician the Courtier and the Emperor of the World
48
The Dutch Audit
70
The Accountant and the Sun King
87
The First Bailout
101
Fame and Profit Counting on the Wedgwood Vase
117
Railroaded
165
The Dickens Dilemma
178
Judgment Day
189
Conclusion
205
Acknowledgments
209
Notes
213
Bibliography
241
Index
263

Big Debts Big Numbers and the French Revolution
132
The Price of Liberty
147

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Sobre l'autor (2014)

Jacob Soll is a Professor of History and Accounting at the University of Southern California. The author of Publishing The Prince and The Information Master, Soll was awarded the MacArthur “Genius” Grant in 2011. He lives in Los Angeles.

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