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Article history:
Received 1 August 2013
Received in revised form 3 April 2014
Accepted 15 October 2014
Available online 6 December 2014
The principal historical focus of this paper is the measurement procedures recommended for the use of merchants by accounting thinkers of the early modern period
(1550e1800) and employed by them when constructing numerical illustrations intended to approximate the real world of commerce. A clear preference is shown for measurements based on historical cost both overall and when re-examined by author
occupation and date of publication. The paper locates these ndings within the broader
development of accounting from the high Middle Ages through to 1800 to the extent
that this is a feasible proposition given limitations of space and the current lack of
knowledge about how accounting was actually done. The study draws on the notion of
path dependence to help explain the demonstrated hegemony of historical cost through
the ages.
2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Keywords: Accounting
history Asset
valuation Charge and
discharge
Double entry bookkeeping
Path dependence
1. Introduction
It is frequently asserted that accounting is as old as writing, but most discussion of accounting in Britain begins with
the manorial and monastic estates of the thirteenth century (Oldroyd & Dobie, 2009). The charge and discharge-based
system of accounting was devised around that time to enable the agent (e.g. the steward) to report to the principal (e.g. the
lord of the manor). This is the origin of the term stewardship accounting which signies, during this early period, a narrow
version of accountability, namely to provide a check on the ability of the steward to render a complete and honest
account of the re- sources entrusted to him. Unsurprisingly, the lord of the manor expected the steward to manage the
estate efciently as well as honestly, and there are numerous treatises on estate management testifying to this priority
(Oldroyd & Dobie, 2009). Furthermore, there is evidence to show that a strictly cash-based system of charge and
discharge accounting might be modied to achieve some of the attributes of accruals accounting, but such elaborations
usually relate to later time periods (e.g. Baxter, 1980; Boyns & Edwards, 2013, chapter 4; Jones, 1991; King, 2010).
More extensive claims have been made for the utility of record keeping as a consequence of the development of double
entry bookkeeping (DEB). Yamey (1956, p. 7) identied the potential of DEB for providing a more comprehensive and
orderly record of business transactions, for helping to conrm the accuracy and completeness of the ledger, and to
facilitate the
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production of a periodic income statement and statement of nancial position.1 Edwards, Dean, and Clarke (2009) have
further shown that writers of treatises published in the early modern period (1550e1880) demonstrate the ability of DEB
to generate relevant information to assess nancial performance and position, and for decision making.
1.1. Scope, limitations, sources and structure
One might imagine that the concern with decision usefulness during the early modern period would have resulted in
a shift from cost to value as the recommended measurement basis for nancial reports. Certainly this has happened in
recent years as the focus on stewardship as the principal objective of nancial reports published by joint-stock companies
has been
replaced by one of decision usefulness.2 A regulatory manifestation of this transition, in Britain, is that the Statement of
principles for nancial reporting (Accounting Standards Board, 1999, para. 6.6) recognises the following bases for valuing
assets and liabilities as possible alternatives to cost: entry value (replacement cost), exit value (net realisable value) or
value in use (discounted present value of the cash ows expected from continuing use and ultimate sale by the present
owner).
The purpose of this paper is to improve our understanding of the history of asset valuation and prot measurement
procedures by studying how accounting thinkers considered assets should be measured and reported during a period,
1550e1800, when the preparation of the income statement and the balance sheet was in its infancy.3 The accounting
practices of merchants are the focus of this study and Mair (1736, p. 4) explains why their affairs dominated the literature4:
Though this Method of Debitor and Creditor be of a very general Nature, and may be used to good Purpose in most
kinds of Accompts; yet I propose to explain it here chiey with a View to Merchant-Accompts; which as they are
the most considerable in themselves, and therefore justly challenge our rst Care, so they afford the greatest Variety of
different Cases and Circumstances.
This literature-based study also contributes to our understanding of accounting practice during the early modern period.
It is not claimed that accounting theory, as exemplied by the early literature, can be equated with contemporary
accounting practice. Nevertheless, the measurement procedures explained in the literature might be considered tolerable
indicators of actual practice for two reasons. First, some writers and teachers claimed that they described existing
business practice. Second, their students would have taken the accounting methods they had learnt with them into the
work place.
The ndings from the study of DEB treatises are located within the broader development of measurement systems used
in nancial reports, based on formal systems of record-keeping,5 from the high Middle Ages through to 1800 to the extent
that this is a feasible proposition given limitations of space and the current lack of knowledge about how accounting was
actually
done. In so doing, this study draws on the notion of path dependence to help explain the demonstrated hegemony of historical cost throughout this long time period.
Research has been facilitated by the ready availability of early treatises in electronic form at Early English Books Online,
Eighteenth Century Collections Online and Google Books.6 At the time of writing, electronic versions of 103 of the 126
bookkeeping texts identied in Edwards (2011) were available for study.7 Forty-one were excluded for a variety of
different reasons,8 leaving 62 texts the subject of evaluation (Appendix 1). For the six authors with dual publications, the
measurement
procedures detailed and analysed in this paper were arrived at by combining relevant information from both treatises.
The remainder of the paper is structured as follows. First, path dependence is introduced as a relevant theoretical lens for
the purpose of explaining the history of asset valuation and prot measurement procedures up to 1800. Second, the main
features of the periodic accounting reports which writers believed should be made available to merchants during the
early modern period are described. The asset measurement procedures employed in early bookkeeping texts are next
presented to elucidate the degree of support provided for identied alternatives and to discover whether the favoured
methods can be
The terms commonly used to describe these statements in books published during the early modern period were prot and loss account and balance
or ballance, with the latter two terms sometimes linked with the words accompt or account. Other differences in terminology between today and the
early modern period include the word stock which was used to signify the balance on the capital account. Also, some terms which it is convenient to
use here for ease of communication had no accounting signicance during the period covered by this paper. For example, Parker (1994, p. 79) points out
that the term asset did not achieve accounting signicance until the nineteenth century.
2
In his extensive study of the changing objectives of corporate reports Zeff (2013, p. 264) notes that, for much of the twentieth century, the purpose of
stewardship reporting was to enable shareholders to assess management's honesty in husbanding the enterprise resources. During the twentieth century,
in his estimation, the meaning was transformed into one of providing evidence of management's efciency in utilising shareholders' money and even,
perhaps, towards providing a means for shareholders to assess whether management had earned a suitable return on their investment.
3
Edwards et al. (2009), Yamey (1984) and Yamey et al., (1963) address the question of how early writers tackled measurement issues. None of these
writings comprise a systematic study of the relevant literature. Nor do they reach the same conclusions that are presented here.
4
Occasionally texts on DEB focused on farming, where the activities undertaken gave rise to additional measurement issues, i.e. the creation of assets
(crops and newborn livestock) and the transfer of assets between operating units (Edwards, in press).
5
Measurements of prots and capital prepared on an ad hoc basis, perhaps as the result of the proprietor carrying out an inventory of assets and liabilities, are outside the scope of this paper.
6
Available at: http://eebo.chadwyck.com/home; http://galenet.galegroup.com/servlet/ECCO?locIDucw_itc; http://books.google.com/.
7
In four cases later editions have been identied electronically for use in this paper: Clare, 1758, Dafforne, 1651, London, 1758 and Wise, 1757.
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Fifteen because measurement issues were
not addressed; eight were reworkings (under a new title) of previously published texts; 10 focused on
farming operations, four on retailing, one each on domestic affairs and shipping, and one further text contains insufcient information to enable judgements to be made about the measurement procedures employed. No copy of Oldcastle (1543) survives.
88
associated with date of publication or author occupation. Finally, the paper draws on the theoretical construct of path
dependence to help explain the demonstrated hegemony of cost-based asset measurements from the high Middle Ages
through to 1800.
2. Path dependence
Sociological historians, following the lead of economic historians, have suggested that many crucial social phenomena
can be adequately explained only in terms of path dependence (Mahoney, 2000, p. 507). The idea of path dependence has
been little applied to accounting despite arising out of studies of its uncongenial twin, economics (Boulding, 1977). It was
during
1980s that the economic historian Paul A. David (1985, 1987) and the economist and technology thinker W. Brian
Arthur (1988, 1989) published papers which supplied the foundation of path dependency (Stack & Gartland, 2003, p. 487).
Work began when David (1985) argued that inferior standards can persist simply because of the legacy they have built
up. The QWERTY keyboard is presented as the classic manifestation of this phenomenon, representing a standard that was
rst to the market and, having become entrenched, was impossible to displace despite the creation of a superior alternative,
namely the Dvorak Simplied Keyboard which had long held most of the world's records for speed typing (David, 1985, p.
332).
A common feature of the work of both David and Arthur was to question the efciency assumptions of neo-classical
economics. That is, they challenged the economists' assumption of rational choice between competing alternatives. As
Liebowitz and Margolis (2000, p. 981) summed things up: path dependence means that where we go next depends not
only on where we are now, but also upon where we have been. Or as Djelic (2008, p. 539.) puts it: Contemporary
behaviours are constrained and structured by the aggregation of past actions and decisions; innovation is bounded.
Choices about how to do this or that, made on the basis of transitory circumstances, can therefore persist long after those
conditions no longer apply. In short, in the words of David (2001, p. 15) and others, history matters.
David (1985, 1987) identies three conditions which, together, lead to path dependence. First, the technical interrelatedness of a particular phenomenon which, in the case of QWERTY, could be found in the complementarity between
keyboard layout and the training of typists. Second, the increasing returns (economies of scale) associated with the use of a
product or technique due to the fact that the more they are adopted, the more experience is gained with them, and the
more they are improved (Arthur, 1989, p. 116), i.e. the value of a product or technique for each user rises as the total
number of users in- creases. Third, the quasi-irreversibility of investment (David, 1985, p. 334), which may be attributed
to, for example, the durability of the investment in physical or human capital. A popular example here is the gauge of the
railway track which has remained unchanged, not because the existing width between rails is technically perfect but
because the life of the track exceeds that of the equipment that uses it.
These conditions taken together lend persistence or stability to a specic path of outcomes, producing a lock-in effect
(Arthur, 1989; Liebowitz & Margolis, 1995) to a particular product or technique. This can itself be attributed to two
inter- related perceptions. First, the cost of switching from the existing system to a potential alternative is considered
prohibitive.
Second, change is hindered by the existence of imperfect foresight,9 i.e. current users are unable to foresee a positive
payoff,
and this makes remedial action more difcult if not impossible. Consequently, many of the things that we do today are
based on what appeared optimal or prot-maximising at some point in the past rather than on what might be the
theoretically superior solution in the current conditions.
The next section explains the form, content and purpose of a typical set of accounting reports recommended for use by the
merchant of the early modern period.
3. Accounting reports during the early modern period
Early writers did their best to present accounting systems which recorded and reported transactions that replicated
real- world business situations. The format of treatises typically followed the approach employed by John Mellis (1588)
which was, rst, to supply a narrative explanation of the main books of account e memorial or waste book, journal and
ledger e and, second, to work through one or more numerical examples which showed how the theory might be
applied in practice. Would-be merchants or clerks destined for the counting house, professional or public ofce, might
receive instruction at teaching academies (Edwards, 2011) such as that run by John Cooke at the lower end of CharlesStreet, St. James's Square, London. Cooke's treatise entitled The Compting-House Assistant (1764) is mainly devoted to
two numerical illustrations focussing on the merchanting activities of Solomon Trafck. The accounting practices
demonstrated in this didactic work, as
in almost all others,10 involve closure within the ledger of what are today called nominal accounts to the Prot and Loss
account and real and personal accounts to the Balance account (Figs. 1 and 2).
Fig. 1 lists, rst, a Stock account which shows that Trafck's opening assets (Sundries detailed in the journal), debited
separately to bespoke real and personal accounts, totalled 7450 15s 4d.11 Liabilities amounted to 692 12s 0d. The
Stock
9
10
11
The terms s d, often expressed as l s d, are the abbreviations for pounds (sterling), shillings and pence which was the pre-decimalisation (15 February
1971) currency in Britain. There were 12 pennies (old pence) in a shilling and 20 shillings in a pound.
account also reveals prots gained by trade during the accounting period ended 18 October 1763 amounting to 2013 11s
7d, with the detailed build-up of that gure given in the Prot and Loss account which reveals that the bulk of
Trafck's increased capital arose from a legacy of 2000. The prot and loss account also shows that Trafck received
agency com- missions on sales, a gain on the disposal of some of his South-Sea Stock, and prots from the sale of
various types of merchandise and from Adventures that included a voyage to Lisbon in company with Parsons and
Lane. Debits to the account comprise a loss after agreeing to a Composition at 12s in the pound (Cooke, 1764, p. 99) with
Paul Roberts, house expenses and the loss arising from an unsuccessful trading venture to Hamburg. The prot and loss
account therefore brings together the results of Trafck's business activities together with other wealth increases and
expenses deemed to have no future economic value.
The Balance account (Fig. 2) lists, as assets, cash, numerous types of merchandise, South-Sea Stock, investment in the
Ship Neptune and various debts. Listed as creditors are amounts due to several individuals and the balance transferred
from Trafck's Stock account for the neat of my estate.
The next section describes and analyses the asset measurement procedures recommended by accounting thinkers
during the period 1550e1800.
Information about measurement procedures is often found, in early treatises, within both the narrative discussion and
the numerical illustrations of accounting practice. Instruction on measurement practices, when addressed in the
narration, increasingly took place under the heading balancing the ledger (e.g. Cooke, 1764, p. xx) or equivalent
terminology.
It has often proved necessary to weigh up all the available textual evidence in the endeavour to reach a justied
(Napier, 2002, p. 136) conclusion concerning the favoured measurement procedure. For example, the numerical
Table 1
Measurement bases by asset class.
Asset class e total authors
Merchandise e 54
Ships e 27
Voyages e 22
Estates and land - 10
Houses e 16
Household furnishings, movables and valuables e 17
Securities and annuities e 6
Total
a
Measurement bases
no
%
no
%
no
%
no
%
no
%
no
%
no
%
no
%
Cost
Market price
Valuation
Arithmetical balance
Total methods
51
82.3%
23
76.7%
22
84.6%
1
9.1%
12
63.2%
10
55.6%
4
57.1%
123
71.1%
10
16.1%
0
0.0%
4
15.4%
0
0.0%
0
0.0%
0
0.0%
3
42.9%
17
9.8%
1
1.6%
6
20.0%
0
0.0%
9
81.8%
4
21.1%
8
44.4%
0
0.0%
28
16.2%
0
0.0%
1
3.3%
0
0.0%
1
9.1%
3
15.8%
0
0.0%
0
0.0%
5
2.9%
62
100.0%
30
100.0%
26
100.0%
11
100.0%
19
100.0%
18
100.0%
7
100.0%
173
100.0%
Figures given are not necessarily the sum of numbers in each row as some authors recognise the use of multiple measurement bases.
illustration which Dilworth provides clearly accounts for merchandise on the basis of historical cost despite the following
advice given earlier in the text: each Particular [asset] is Dr. to Stock [Account] for its respective Quantity and Value
(Dilworth, 1777, JaneFeb ledger fo. 10, emphasis added). Similarly, Donn's ctitious merchant states, on a number of
occasions, that I value the asset, whereas cost price is clearly used for illustrative purposes (Donn, 1765, ledger fos 6e7).
Thus, for these and some other authors, the term value appears to be used as a synonym for cost. Sometimes the information provided is insufcient to reach a justied conclusion concerning how assets are measured. For example,
Hamilton (1735, p. 13) states:
Accounts of Estates, Houses and Ships, lies on the Debit Side, the rst Cost, with Charges of Improvements,
Reparations [repairs], Outriggs, &c. on the Credit if not sold, it is Creditor by Balance for the Value, and then shut
up with Prot and Loss for the Difference.
For estates and ships, the inconsistency between rst Cost and Value cannot be resolved by reference to the numerical
examples contained in Hamilton's text, and these items do not, therefore, feature in Table 1.
The remainder of this section reviews the measurement of particular categories of asset.
4.1. Merchandise
The valuation of goods traded by merchants naturally receives most attention, with 54 out of 56 authors indicating the
procedure(s) to be used. Overwhelming support (82.3%) is provided for historical cost, with 43 (79.6%)12 of the 56 authors
recognising it as the only acceptable measurement basis. They include the author of the earliest surviving text, James
Peele (1553), who, in a later work, refers to Wares nowe remayninge valewed as the cost the rst penie (Peele,
1569, n.p.). For many, the focus is on prime cost: when only part of the Goods are sold the goods must be
Credited by Balance for those remaining at prime cost (Cooke, 1764, p. xx). The exclusion of incidental costs is
explained as follows:
The other accompts, such as Charges of merchandize,13 House-expences, &c. as they are disbursements from which no
return can be expected, are all balanced by Prot and Loss (Cooke, 1764, p. xx). Support for prime cost is by no means
unanimous with Dodson (1750, p. v14) favouring full cost: When Charges are paid on any particular Species of Goods; let
the Account of those Goods be made Debtor; and the Account of Cash, Creditor. For those Charges are only an Addition to
the Prime Cost.
Advocates of historical cost sometimes explain their choice. Drummond (1718, p. 3) acknowledges the fact that Some
[merchants] in their Inventary value Goods as they do desire to sell them and continues: but I know no Reason for this, but
to make a Man appear rich by his Inventary, and, at balancing, his Gain appear little. Clearly, Drummond does not
favour
recognition of holding gains15 and consequential diminished operating prots when realisation takes place.
Eight authors consider both cost and market (buying or selling) price to be acceptable measurement bases. They include:
Malcolm (1731, p. 89), who suggests that you may value the Balances of Goods as they cost you, or according to the
current Rates; and Fisher (c. 1735, p. 211) who states that if any [goods] remain Unsold, value them as they cost you, or
according to
the present Market Price, ready Money.16 Hayes (1739, p. 79) implies the widespread use of market price when commenting that merchants value Goods that they have by them at the Market Price they then go at, at the Time of their
balancing; but some do not so. If Hayes is right, common practice contrasted starkly with the measurement procedures
recommended by most writers of bookkeeping treatises during the early modern period, but the likelihood is that it did not.
Dodson (1750, p. v) recognises the effect on the proprietor's wealth where closing inventories are worth more than they
cost: Hence, altho the Goods be not actually sold, yet if their Value or Market-Price be increased, or diminished; Stock is
likewise affected thereby. But Dodson's numerical illustration of inventory measurement procedures is based squarely on
historical cost.
Just two authors are unequivocal advocates of market price (Table 1). The accomptant Hustcraft Stephens (1735, p.
63), on nding 20 pieces of linen unsold at the end of the year which according to the current Price at present is worth
200l. then continues: wherefore I place such Sum, together with 20 Pieces of Holland Linen on the Creditor side of the
stock account. Robert Hamilton who, at the time of writing held the post of Professor of Philosophy in the Marischal
College, Aberdeen, uses the words: afx a moderate value to each article, according to the current prices at the time;
such value as the owner would be willing at present to buy for. He also explains why market buying price should be
used:
12
This is less than Yamey's (1940, p. 337) assertion that: At least nine-tenths of the writers before 1840 advocated the valuation of stocks at cost, or, as
it was sometimes called, at prime cost. However, if we add in the eight authors who considered both cost and market price to be acceptable
measurement bases, the proportion becomes 94.4%.
13
Covering items such as: postage of Letters, Custom, Freight, &c. also Warehouse-rent, Clerks wages, and the like (Cooke, 1764, p.
vii).
14
For a practical application of full costing, see Collins (1653, n.p.; also: Hawkins, 1689, ledger fo. 18, raisins; Malcolm, 1718, ledger fo. 2, claret
wine; Scruton, 1777, p. 12) where Capers of Tholoon are reported at cost plus customs and other charges.
15
Edwards and Bell (1961) presented the rst systematic treatment of replacement cost accounting, with recognition of holding gains now standard
practice in, for example, International Accounting Standard 39, Financial instruments: recognition and measurement.
16
See also: Mather, 1737, p. 294; Postlethwayt, 1755, p. 214; Society of merchants, 1763, p. 92; Woolgar, 1766, p. 202; Anonymous 1800, p.
125.
It is much more proper to value the goods on hand in conformity to the current prices, than at prime cost: For the
design of afxing any value is to point out the gain or loss; and the gain is in reality obtained so soon as the prices
rise, or the loss suffered as soon as they fall (Hamilton, 1788a, p. 285).
4.2. Ships
It was common practice for merchants to invest in ships used to transport goods abroad, and their accounting
treatment features prominently it the dataset (Table 1). Malcolm (1718, p. 148) draws attention to the fact that such
vessels could be rented out to produce freight revenue that might be transferred from the ship account to the prot and
loss account after deducting associated costs and charges. Alternatively, merchants might trade in her, i.e. undertake a
voyage in their own vessel. In such a case Malcolm (1718, p. 148) explains how, presumably for performance assessment
purposes, the merchant could split the overall prot from ship ownership between the opportunity cost of using rather
than renting, on the one hand, and the prot or loss on merchandise sold, on the other: you may charge the Freight
upon your own Goods, as you would take from others, to keep the Accompt of your Merchandize and its Product, distinct
from that of your Ship.
The authors of twenty-three texts recognise, as acceptable, cost-based measurement practices, while six acknowledge
the possible use of some kind of valuation procedure to measure the closing balance on the ship account. These comprise,
respectively, 76.7% and 20% of the 30 measurement bases (Table 1) that feature in the 27 texts which deal with ship
valuation. Examples of the valuation approach include Monteage (1675, ledger fo. 9) whose th share17 in Ship Bonadventure is stated at 250 at the beginning of the year, whereas the year-end balance is annotated as follows: I value my
part
e 225. Crosby's ctitious merchant John Thompson initially held a th share in Ship Success but later purchased a
further
th share to give a share at the year-end. Ship Success is stated at the same gure at the end of the year as at the
beginning, with the merchant lamenting: for part now worth but 190 (Crosby, 1749, ledger fo. 20).18 For Booth (1789,
p.
164): In transferring the loss or gain on ships, for instance, it is sufcient to leave a balance equal to their present
estimated value, and whatever surplus appears on either side of the account, should then be transferred to Prot and
Loss. As with many of the other assets entered in the Valuation column of Table 1 (see further comment below), the way
in which the gure is computed remains unstated. The most likely candidates are estimated market selling price or current
replacement cost, but the present value of future cash ows (see recommended valuation methods for estates and
land below) is a possibility that cannot be ruled out.
Two authors recognised multiple measurement bases. Mair (1736, p. 79) considers it appropriate to state ships at what
they cost at rst, or are valued at, though his merchant's share in Ship Britannia is measured at cost. Focussing on ships
and houses, Malcolm acknowledges the use of three different period-end accounting treatments: cost, valuation and
arithmetical balance. Comparing their merits, he concludes: but the rst Method I think the best (Malcolm, 1731, p. 90).
4.3. Voyages
Where merchants transported goods to another country, authors recommend that the merchandising transactions be
recorded in a separate voyage account. Of the 22 authors who focus on this measurement issue, 18 prescribe the use of
historical cost. The issues involved, when balancing the ledger, are neatly summarised by Dowling (1765, pp. 33e34):
The Debit shews the Cost and Charges of the Cargo, the Credit shews the neat Proceeds as by the Account of
Sales.
1st, If the Account of Sales be not as yet come to Hand, credit the Account by Balance for the Amount of the Debtor
Side.
2d, If the neat Proceed be ready entered, close the Account with Prot and Loss for the Gain or Loss.
3d, If it be a general Account of Voyages, 1st, credit the Account by Balance for the Cost and Charges of those Cargos
of which you have had no Account of Sales, in as many Lines as there remain such Voyages, and 2d, close the Account
with Prot and Loss for the Gain or Loss on the rest.
Some authors comment on the treatment of the closing balance of merchandise assigned to a voyage when dealing with
the measurement of merchandise in general, including one of four writers who consider it appropriate to value goods in
transit at either cost or market price:
When not all [goods or goods on voyages are] sold (as you may see by comparing the debtor and creditor-side of the
ledger) Dr ballance to the said goods or voyage, for the quantity unsold, which value at the prime cost or marketprice; and credit the said goods or voyage by ballance (Postlethwayt, 1755, p. 214).
17
It was quite usual to take a share (typically , or th) in a ship to spread risk among the partners in what were often hazardous ventures.
18
19
See also: London (1758, Part II, 16) who uses 22 years rental; Fitzgerald (1771, p. 72, 80), 21 years purchase; Monteage (1675, n.p.), 20 years
purchase; Peele (1569, n.p.), 20 years purchase for freehold land.
4.8. In sum
Historical cost is comfortably the favoured measurement method for most classes of asset displayed in Table 1.
However, we have seen that some authors put forward arguments for the use of market price which, together with the
often undened
valuation label, reveal non-trivial support for reporting assets at estimations of current worth. For estates and land, a
valuation is recommended in 81.8% of the cases, though this proportion is almost certainly boosted by the need to construct
a gure for initial recognition in a newly installed system of DEB. Unequivocal support is provided for stating securities
and annuities (42.9% of the recommended treatments of these assets) and merchandise (16.1%) at market price.
Given the problematic character of the valuation category, recalculations which exclude that measurement basis show
support for merchandise accounting on the historical cost basis increasing to 83.6% and for all asset categories it becomes
84.8%. If the authors who equivocate on the choice between cost and market price are also omitted, support for historical
cost further rises, respectively, to 95.6% and 91.7%.
20
In the mid-eighteenth century the term economist might refer to an expert in managing (nancial) resources within the domestic realm or, in the
more modern sense, the production, distribution, consumption, and transfer of wealth (OED online, 2013). Postlethwayt (Groenewegen, 2004) fell into the
latter category.
21
A treatment that is in line with today's International Accounting Standard 39 which requires nancial assets held for trading to be recorded and re-
London (1758, ledger fo. 15) recommends the caption Debts bad and desperate.
Table 2
Asset measurement bases through time.
Time period
1553e1683 (11 books)
1689e1735 (11 books)
1735e1758 (12 books)
1760e1774 (11 books)
1776e1800 (11 books)
1553e1800 (56 books)
no
%
no
%
no
%
no
%
no
%
no
%
Cost
Market price
Valuation
Arithmetical balance
Total
24
72.7%
22
71.0%
31
68.9%
28
80.0%
18
62.1%
123
71.1%
0
0.0%
2
6.5%
8
17.8%
3
8.6%
4
13.8%
17
9.8%
7
21.2%
5
16.1%
6
13.3%
4
11.4%
6
20.7%
28
16.2%
2
6.1%
2
6.5%
0
0.0%
0
0.0%
1
3.4%
5
2.9%
33
100.0%
31
100.0%
45
100.0%
35
100.0%
29
100.0%
173
100.0%
The next section interrogates the database in the endeavour to elucidate patterns of measurement through time and by
occupation.
23
There will of course have been further editions of the numerous existing texts published in this, as in other, sub-periods.
24
Certainly Sedger's rst attempt to achieve publication failed because too many books were already on the market (Sedger, 1777, p. 2).
25
Authors describing themselves as accountant and businessman are classied as accountants, and those styling themselves as writing masters are
included in the teacher category.
26
Stephens (1735) favours its use for the measurement of merchandise whether in stock or allocated to a voyage.
Table 3
Merchandise measurement bases through time.
Time period
1553e1683 (11 books)
no
%
no
%
no
%
no
%
no
%
no
%
Cost
Market price
Valuation
Total
10
90.9%
10
83.3%
11
73.3%
11
84.6%
9
81.8%
51
82.3%
0
0.0%
2
16.7%
4
26.7%
2
15.4%
2
18.2%
10
16.1%
1
9.1%
0
0.0%
0
0.0%
0
0.0%
0
0.0%
1
1.6%
11
100.0%
12
100.0%
15
100.0%
13
100.0%
11
100.0%
62
100.0%
Table 4
Asset measurement bases by occupation.
Occupation
Accountants (11)
Gentlemen (4)
Merchants (7)
Teachers (26)
Other (8)
All (56)
no
%
no
%
no
%
no
%
no
%
no
%
Cost
Market price
Valuation
Arithmetical balance
Total
25
73.5%
7
87.5%
18
60.0%
62
72.9%
11
68.8%
123
71.1%
5
14.7%
0
0.0%
2
6.7%
5
5.9%
5
31.3%
17
9.8%
4
11.8%
0
0.0%
8
26.7%
16
18.8%
0
0.0%
28
16.2%
0
0.0%
1
12.5%
2
6.7%
2
2.4%
0
0.0%
5
2.9%
34
100.0%
8
100.0%
30
100.0%
85
100.0%
16
100.0%
173
100.0%
Table 5
Merchandise measurement bases by occupation.
Occupation
Accountants (11)
Gentlemen (4)
Merchants (7)
Teachers (26)
Other (8)
All (56)
no
%
no
%
no
%
no
%
no
%
no
%
Cost
Market price
Valuation
10
71.4%
4
100.0%
5
71.4%
24
92.3%
8
72.7%
51
82.3%
4
28.6%
0
0.0%
1
14.3%
2
7.7%
3
27.3%
10
16.1%
0
0.0%
0
0.0%
1
14.3%
0
0.0%
0
0.0%
1
1.6%
Total
14
100.0%
4
100.0%
7
100.0%
26
100.0%
11
100.0%
62
100.0%
cost basis, but it is the large cadre of teachers that are mainly responsible for its hegemony. Twenty-three favour cost while
Hamilton (1788a) supports market price and Malcolm (1731) judges either measurement method to be acceptable.27
The nal section focuses, rst, on new knowledge arising from the systematic study of texts on DEB and, second, argues
that the notion of path dependence helps us to understanding why historical cost remained the dominant asset
measurement procedure through to 1800.
6. Discussion and concluding remarks
The purpose of this study is to improve our understanding of the history of asset valuation and prot measurement
procedures. In terms of uncovering new knowledge, particular attention has been devoted to examining and analysing
how accounting thinkers during the early modern period (1550e1800) believed these things should be done. Many writers
saw it as the key issue which needed to be addressed when balancing the ledger, thereby enabling the preparation of a
prot and
27
loss account and a balance sheet that yielded relevant information for purposes of performance assessment and decision
making (Edwards et al., 2009; Yamey, 1956).28 Historical cost accounting was, overall, the measurement system of choice
for most accounting thinkers who played a part in moulding ideas and practices between the sixteenth and eighteenth
centuries.
It was not unusual for authors to assert, robustly, the need to implement a particular measurement practice. Others adopted
a more measured approach which caused them to acknowledge alternative procedures and, sometimes, to explain why a
particular option was favoured. The evidence presented in this paper reveals at least a degree of support for the full range
of measurement bases recognised in the Statement of principles for nancial reporting (Accounting Standards Board, 1999).
We therefore discern a degree of variety in accounting measurement throughout an era when the preparation of the prot
and loss account and balance sheet was in its infancy and accounting choice was unconstrained either by regulation or the
need to report objective and veriable information to external stakeholders, which became priorities following the
creation of the joint-stock company by registration under the Companies Act 1844.
The ndings presented in Sections 4 and 5 above add signicantly to our knowledge of pre-1800 ideas about how accounting measurements should be made. The most comprehensive prior study of early accounting treatises was mounted
by Yamey et al. (1963) who identied the use of three measurement bases: cost, valuation and the arithmetical balance.
Those authors did not explore the variety in recommended valuation methods which this study shows to have included
replace- ment cost, selling price and, in the case of estates and land, valuations based on expected future rental income. Nor
was any attempt made by Yamey et al. to assess the relative popularity of the different measurement bases. In contrast,
the current study reveals overwhelming support for historical cost accounting and negligible advocacy of the
arithmetical balance approach.
Another well-known study of early measurement practices in Britain was mounted by Brief (1966, p. 6, p. 7) who asserts
that, except for companies (e.g. railways) employing the cost-oriented double account system, Historically, the process of
valuing assets was analogous to taking an inventory so that prot was dened as the change in the value of net assets in
two successive periods. Georgiou and Jack (2011, p. 311), in their study of the history behind fair value accounting, draw on
Brief's work to argue that the episodic legitimacy of historical cost is conned to the period 1940e1970. However, Brief's
assertion was not based on the examination of published nancial reports. The principal authority offered for Brief's (1966,
p. 7) claim
concerning the currency of the inventory method29 is Littleton (1933, p. 225) who in turn quotes Mair (1757) as
representative
of eighteenth-century texts (Littleton, 1933, p. 224). So these assertions concerning practice possess a fairly limited
foundation. Nor is it a sound foundation. Mair (1757, p. 84), as in his earlier text studied here (Mair, 1736), states that
Ships, Houses and other Possessions should be brought into the books at what they cost at rst, or are valued at, but it is
quite possible that a valuation is required only in the absence of a cost gure so as to enable those assets to be initially
recognised in the accounts. Certainly, the numerical illustration that he supplies reports the merchant's share of the Ship
Britannia at cost and, when turning his attention to merchandise, unambiguously insists that it should be stated at prime
Cost (e.g. Mair, 1736, p. 77).
It is of course impossible to be sure whether writers were adopting a descriptive or normative stance when advising their
audience how to do accounting. Certainly the majority of the authors had business backgrounds, and some of them explicitly
claimed to describe existing practice. Reviewing the content of these early texts, Yamey (1940, p. 336) offers the following
general assessment:
Considering, however, the striking unanimity revealed by the textbooks, the fact that not a few writers were
business men and that in some cases the examples illustrating the text were taken from practice it may be
condently assumed that if there was any divergence between teaching and practice, it lay more in the form than
the substance.
If these assessments are correct, we might infer that businesses operating a system of DEB during the early modern
period would have been likely to measure assets principally at historical cost. If so, why was this the case? It is not argued
here that the dominance of accounting based on cost, within formal systems of record keeping, is prima facie evidence of its
utility for the purpose of fullling contemporary objectives of accounting. That is, a market forces explanation for
accounting choice is not put forward. Indeed, given that the accounts were expected, at least by some of the authors,
to full performance assessment and decision making purposes, one might have expected that accounting values of one
sort or another would have been preferred to historical cost.
Here it is contended that a plausible explanation for the continued primacy of historical cost up to 1800 may be found
in the notion of path dependence despite acknowledged differences of opinion concerning its precise nature and
signicance (see David, 2001). Scapens (2006; see also Mouck, 1995; Kanamori, 2009) is one of the few researchers who
have applied the idea of path dependence to accounting, where his particular focus is on management accounting change.
Scapens' (2006, p.
17)
conclusion is that the concept undoubtedly possesses explanatory
potential:
Change is likely to be evolutionary, and path dependent, as the existing routines are likely to create inertia which
can limit the possibilities for change. This leads us to the notion of lock-in which occurs when current
actions are constrained by past actions.
28
The fact that DEB was often used to maintain a record of transactions, but not to enable the preparation of nal accounts (Yamey, 1956), is
acknowledged.
29
In this writer's estimation, the inventory method of prot measurement is more likely to have been employed by proprietors wishing to establish prot
and nancial position in the absence of a formal system of record keeping.
The primary purpose of accounting qua bookkeeping in the period covered in this paper, as remains the case today, was
to provide a reliable record of amounts owing and owed. When the system of charge and discharge was developed to
create a record of accountability from the agent (e.g. steward) to the principal (e.g. lord of the manor), it typically
comprised a summary of receipts and payments over an agreed period of time and in a format designed to reconcile and
explain changes in the cash balance. It is generally agreed that DEB developed among the Italian City States in the
thirteenth and fourteenth century, but it is not known how the new system was formulated. One plausible hypothesis is
that it emerged by a process of adaption and innovation out of charge and discharge accounting (or some other system of
single entry bookkeeping) which proved inadequate to meet expanding business requirements (Lee, 1976, pp. 6e13).
One of the preconditions for the development of DEB identied by Littleton (1933, p. 12) is the existence of a credit
economy. Once goods were supplied on credit it was important to maintain a careful record of the amounts involved. Such
information enables an entity to keep track of its nancial obligations and helps to ensure that the correct amount is paid
when a liability falls due. Within the system of DEB, a record is retained of the amount paid, as a debit entry, after the
creditor liability has been discharged. During the time DEB was developed and, indeed, for some time afterwards, the
available ev- idence suggests that it was principally used to provide a record of amounts owing and owed and to enable the
accuracy of the bookkeeping system to be monitored. Certainly there is no evidence that it was much used, initially, to
prepare nancial statements in the form of an income statement and a balance sheet.
The development of double entry bookkeeping nevertheless extended the accounting record to include non-cash assets
and liabilities and it enabled a distinction to be made between capital and revenue transactions when the practice of preparing an income statement and balance sheet did begin to emerge. Given the availability of gures for the cost of assets
and liabilities, which may be seen as a chance element within the nomenclature of path dependence (David, 1985, p. 132),
it was
convenient to use them for nancial reporting purposes.30 As Puffert (2014) observes:
The theory of path dependence assumes, generally, that people optimize on the basis of their own interests and
the information at their disposal, but it highlights ways that earlier choices put constraints on later ones,
channeling the sequence of economic outcomes along one possible path rather than another.
In his pioneering paper on path dependence, David (1985, p. 336) concluded: Outcomes of this kind (QWERTY) are not
so exotic. For such things to happen seems only too possible in the presence of strong technical interrelatedness, scale
econ- omies, and irreversibilities due to learning and habituation. It has been argued, above, that the technical
interrelatedness between bookkeeping and accounting reports, within a formal system of record keeping, has been a
powerful factor in ensuring that the initial record of transactions required for the former purpose, being readily available
and capable of fullling the contemporary stewardship objectives of accounting reports, should also be used for the second
purpose. On the issue of scale economies, as Mahoney (2000, p. 508) points out, an institutional pattern e once adopted e
delivers increasing benets with its continued adoption, and thus over time it becomes more and more difcult to
transform the pattern or select previously available options, even if these alternative options would have been more
efcient. This dynamic can become irreversible with, in the context of this study, record keepers who have developed
their jurisdiction (Abbott, 1988) based on the operation of an historical-cost based measurement regime likely to resist
changes which might damage the value of their
specialist skills. A relatively modern parallel occurred when, in E. Kenneth Wright's31 estimation, the great ination debate
[of the 1970s] collapsed e simply because the backwoodsmen got up and said too fast, too far, too soon! (in respect of the
Exposure Draft 18 on Current Cost Accounting) (Mumford, 2007, p. 46).
Once historical cost had become the conventional measurement practice, something fairly dramatic needed to happen
to outweigh the costs associated with accounting change. On the demand side uncertainty or ignorance existed concerning
the possible superiority for decision making purposes of alternative measurement procedures. On the supply side, the
notion of path dependence helped ensure that accounting, as a technology, was locked into a measurement basis which was
perfect for record keeping purposes, well understood by accounting functionaries, and which provided readily available
and reliable gures for stewardship reporting purposes. But Arthur (1989, p. 127) warns: Where we observe the
predominance of one technology or one economic outcome over its competitors we should thus be cautious of any exercise
that seeks the means by which the winner's innate superiority came to be translated into adoption. Whether historical
cost was the right choice throughout the period reviewed and whether it continued to be the right choice over much of
the two centuries which followed are appropriate subjects for study.
Acknowledgements
I am grateful to the anonymous referees, Peter Morgan, Christopher Nobes, Robert H. Parker and those attending presentations at the University of Exeter Business School (January 2012) and at the at the 35th EAA Annual Congress,
Ljubljana, Slovenia (May 2012) for comments on earlier versions of this paper.
30
The situation is of course entirely different where no systematic record of assets and liabilities has been maintained. In such circumstances, readily
available knowledge of value is likely to take the form of current market prices and these numbers are known to have been used.
31
Kenneth Wright was senior partner in Dearden Farrow (now part of BDO) (Mumford, 2007, p.29).
J.R.
J.R.Edwards
Edwards/ The
/ TheBritish
BritishAccounting
AccountingReview
Review4848(2016)
(2016) 87e101
87e101
10
10
Author
Date
Publication
Anonymous
1747
The universal library of trade and commerce; or, a general magazine for gentlemen, ladies, merchants, tradesmen
containing the Italian method of book-keeping made plain and easy. London.
Anonymous
Booth, Benjamin
Brodie, Alexander
1800
1789
1722
Browne, Thomas
Browne, Thomas
By a society of merchants
and tradesmen
Carpenter, John
1670
1680
1763
Chamberlain, Robert
Colinson, Robert
1679
1683
Collins, John
Cooke, John
1653
1764
Crosby, Thomas
Dafforne, Richard
Dafforne, Richard
Dilworth, Thomas
1749
1640
1651
1777
Dodson, James
Donn, Benjamin
Dowling, Daniel
Drummond, John
Fisher, George
Fitzgerald, Edmund
Gordon, William
Hamilton, Robert
Hamilton, Robert
Hamilton, William
1750
1765
1765
1718
c. 1735
1771
1765
1788a
1788b
1735
Hatton, Edward
Hawkins, John
1695
1689
Hayes, Richard
1739
Hodson, Thomas
1800
Hutton, Charles
1771
King, Thomas
Lazonby, Thomas
London, John
Macghie, Alexander
Mair, John
1717
1757
1758
1718
1736
Malcolm, Alexander
1718
The accomplished tutor; or, complete system of liberal education: containing stock-holding and merchantsaccompts. London.
The school-master's guide: or, a complete system of practical arithmetic, and book-keeping, both by single and double
entry, 3rd edn. Newcastle.
An exact guide to book-keeping by way of debtor and creditor. London.
Merchants accounts: or, the Italian method of book-keeping. York.
A compleat system of book-keeping, after the Italian method, 3rd edn. London.
The principles of book-keeping explain'd. Edinburgh.
Book-keeping methodiz'd: or, a methodical treatise of merchant-accompts, according to the Italian form, 2nd edn.
Edinburgh.
A new treatise of arithmetick and book-keeping. Containing the admirable method of accompts by debtor and
Malcolm, Alexander
1731
creditor. Edinburgh.
A treatise of book-keeping or merchants accounts. London.
Mather, William
1737
Mellis, John
Monteage, Stephen
Nicholas, Abraham
Peele, James
1588
1675
1711
1553
Peele, James
Perry, William
1569
1774
Petri, Nicolaus
1596
Postlethwayt, Malachy
1755
The young man's companion, containing a short and easy method of shop and book-keeping, merchants-accompts,
15th edn. London.
A briefe instruction and maner how to keepe bookes of accompts after the order of debitor and creditor. London.
Debtor and creditor made easie. London.
The young accomptant's debitor and creditor, 2nd edn. London.
The maner and fourme how to kepe a perfecte reconyng after the order of the moste worthie and notable accompte, of
debitour and creditour. London.
The pathe waye to perfectnes, in th'accomptes of debitour, and creditour. London.
The man of business, and gentleman's assistant: containing book-keeping by single and double entry. Edinburgh.
The pathway to knowledge conteyning the order of keeping of a marchants booke, after the Italian manner.
London.
The universal dictionary of trade and commerce, translated from the French of the celebrated Monsieur Savary with
Quin, Matthew
1776
Roose, Richard
1760
1632
The infallible, most accurate, and most concise method of merchants accompts. London.
The compleat compting-house companion. London.
A most excellent instruction for the exact and perfect keeping merchants bookes of accounts by way of debitor and
creditor. London.
The accomptants guide, or, Merchants book-keeper. London.
Idea rationaria, or The perfect accomptant, necessary for all merchants and trafcquers; containing the true forme of
book-keeping, according to the Italian methode. Edinburgh.
An introduction to merchants accounts. London.
The compting-house assistant; or, book-keeping made easy: being a complete treatise on merchants accompts, 2nd
edn. London.
The book-keeper's guide containing the Italian manner by a double entry into the ledger. London.
The apprentices time-entertainer accomptantly. London.
The merchants mirrour: or, directions for the perfect ordering and keeping of his accounts, 2nd edition. London.
The young book-keeper's assistant: shewing him, in the most plain and easy manner, the Italian way of stating debtor
and creditor, 7th edn. London.
The accountant, or, the method of book-keeping, deduced from clear principles. London.
The accountant and geometrician [containing] An essay on book-keeping by double entry. London.
A compleat system of Italian book-keeping. London.
The accomptant's pocket-companion. Edinburgh.
The instructor: or, young man's best companion, containing Also, merchants accompts. London.
An epitome of the elements of Italian book-keeping. Whitehaven.
The universal accountant and complete merchant, vol. II. Edinburgh.
An introduction to merchandise [containing] book-keeping in various forms, 2nd edn.
A short system of arithmetic and book-keeping. London.
Book-keeping new modelled: or, a treatise on merchants accounts. London.
The merchant's magazine, containing book-keeping. London.
Clavis commercii: or, the key of commerce. Containing an exact, and most concise method of merchants accompts,
after the Italian manner. London.
Modern book-keeping: or, the Italian method improved, 2nd edn. London.
An essay to make a compleat accomptant containing a treatise of book-keeping according to the true Italian
method. London.
(continued )
Author
Date
Publication
Scruton, James
Sedger, John
1777
1777
Snell, Charles
Snell, Charles
Stephens, Hustcraft
Stevenson, William
1701
1709
1735
1762
Taylor, William
Turner, Rev. Richard
Webster, William
1783
1794
1719
A complete system of practical arithmetic with book-keeping by single and double entry. Birmingham.
A new introduction to book-keeping, after the Italian method by debtor and creditor, 3rd edn. London.
An essay on book-keeping, according to the true Italian method of debtor and creditor, by double entry. London.
Weston, William
1754
1797
1660
1766
The complete merchant's clerk: or, British and American compting-house contains a system of book-keeping,
according to the Italian form of debtor and creditor by double entry. London.
Book-keeping reformed: or the method by double entry. London.
The scales of commerce and trade [containing] merchants accounts by debitor and creditor. London.
Youth's faithful monitor [containing] merchants accompts, or, the best method of book-keeping, 3rd edn. London.
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