Buy Anarchist Accounting: Accounting Principles for a Democratic Economy 1st Edition PDF ebook by author Anders Sandström – published by Routledge in 2021 and save up to 80% compared to the print version of this textbook. With PDF version of this textbook, not only save you money, you can also highlight, add text, underline add post-it notes, bookmarks to pages, instantly search for the major terms or chapter titles, etc.
You can search our site for other versions of the Anarchist Accounting: Accounting Principles for a Democratic Economy 1st Edition PDF ebook. You can also search for others PDF ebooks from publisher Routledge, as well as from your favorite authors. We have thousands of online textbooks and course materials (mostly in PDF) that you can download immediately after purchase.
Note: e-textBooks do not come with access codes, CDs/DVDs, workbooks, and other supplemental items.
eBook Details:
Full title: Anarchist Accounting: Accounting Principles for a Democratic Economy 1st Edition
Edition: 1st
Copyright year: 2021
Publisher: Routledge
Author: Anders Sandström
ISBN: 9780367477035
Format: PDF
Description of Anarchist Accounting: Accounting Principles for a Democratic Economy 1st Edition:
This book is about accounting in an alternative libertarian socialist economic system. It explores what information and transactions we need to enable democratic and effective financial decisions by those affected by the decisions. Based on the economic model, participatory economics, the author proposes a set of accounting principles for an economy comprised of common ownership of productive resources, worker and consumer councils, and democratic planning, promoting the model’s core values. The author tackles questions such as how accounting could be organised in an economy with no private equity owners or private lenders and creditors that is not based on greed and competition but instead on cooperation and solidarity. A large part of the book is focused on issues regarding investments; thus, he asks how and on what basis decisions are made about the allocation of an economy’s production between consumption today and investments that enable more consumption in the future, and how investments are accounted for. He also considers how investments in capital assets and production facilities would be decided, financed, and valued if they are not owned by private capital owners and if allocation does not take place through markets but through a form of democratic planning. In answering these questions and more, the author demonstrates that alternative economic systems are indeed possible, and not merely lofty utopias that cannot be put into practice, and inspires further discussion about economic vision. By applying accounting to a new economic setting and offering both technical information and the author’s bold vision, this book is a comprehensive and valuable supplementary text for courses touching on critical accounting theory. It will also appeal to readers interested in alternative kinds of economies.