INTANGIBLE ASSETS AND THE ACCOUNTING REPRESENTATION CRISIS
Keywords:
Intangible assets. Post-structuralism. Discretion. Representation crisis.Abstract
This theoretical essay aims to promote a reflection on the accounting process’ ability to capture and represent the companies’ economical status through accounting statements. It puts in question the current model of recognition, measurement, and disclosure. This reflection particularly focuses on the intangible assets, which have been widely recognized as the most relevant assets in the current days, yet rarely stated and measured adequately in the accounting statements. This reduces the informational power and the usefulness of such statements. Assuming the likelihood that accounting has been going through a representational crisis, a crisis in which the intangible assets play a crucial role, this essay, consistent with critiques emerging in the financial and capital markets, recommends a wide re-examination of the philosophical and theoretical grounds of the current accounting model. This leads to an issue that seems to be inevitable: the accounting professionals will have to face the challenge of subjectivity and discretion, feared by some, desired by others, but fundamental to everyone. Without subjectivity and discretion, accounting will remain far-off from the company’s economical representation.Downloads
Download data is not yet available.
Published
2015-04-30
How to Cite
Zanoteli, E. J., Amaral, H. F., & de Souza, A. A. (2015). INTANGIBLE ASSETS AND THE ACCOUNTING REPRESENTATION CRISIS. Advances in Scientific and Applied Accounting, 8(1), 003–019. Retrieved from https://asaa.emnuvens.com.br/asaa/article/view/159
Issue
Section
ARTICLES
License
Copyright for articles published in the ASAA Journal is held by the author, with first publication rights to the journal. By virtue of appearing in this publicly accessible journal, the articles are free to use, with their own attributions, in educational and non-commercial applications. The ASAA Journal will allow the use of published works for non-commercial purposes, including the right to submit the work to publicly accessible databases. Published articles are the authors' full and exclusive responsibility. There are no submission/publishing charges or fees for processing articles (APC).