Q&A

The end of accounting?

By MATTHEW BIDDLE

Reprinted from Buffalo Business Magazine

Published August 14, 2017 This content is archived.

headshot of Feng Gu.

Feng Gu. Photo: Tom Wolf

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In his new book, “The End of Accounting and the Path Forward for Investors and Managers,” School of Management faculty member Feng Gu asks accounting professionals: Are we doing this the right way? Does the information we report on lengthy financial statements accurately reflect company performance? 

Through extensive analysis of quarterly earnings calls and financial statements, Gu, associate professor and chair of the Department of Accounting and Law, and his co-author, Baruch Lev, the Philip Bardes Professor of Accounting and Finance at the New York University Stern School of Business, argue that Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) have lost their relevance, and a company’s true worth lies in its strategic, value-enhancing resources — not the variables found on traditional earnings reports.

Since its publication in June, the book has been featured in such major media as the Wall Street Journal, Barron’s, Fortune, Forbes and Inc. magazine, as well as other niche business and accounting publications.

Gu shares more insights from the book.

Is this really the end of accounting?

book cover from The End of Accounting.

FG: We observed serious flaws in today’s corporate financial reports (consider the growing chasm between market values and the information in financial reports). Our careful examination of analysts’ questions in hundreds of quarterly conference calls revealed that investors focus on business strategy and the success of its execution, rather than the voluminous information in finan­cial reports. GAAP’s shortcomings are so fundamental and endemic to the accounting system that incremental improve­ments are essentially useless. We don’t advocate for the elimination of corporate periodic reports, but instead pro­pose two reforms: Overhaul the current system and adopt our proposal, which focuses on information that matters.

What do you hope readers learn from this book?

FG: CFO surveys show that current financial reporting has dete­riorated into a “compliance exercise,” where executives and auditors try desperately to abide by the minutiae of con­stantly expanding regulations. Our proposal replaces this mindset with constructive illumination and transparency: in­forming investors, rather than abiding by regulations, and innovating new modes of disclosure, rather than blindly following regulators’ edicts. This change will be no small task and will require different accounting education, profes­sional exams and certifications, and hiring choices.

How can accounting professionals implement your recommendations now?

FG: Focus on information that matters: an enterprise’s strategic, value-creating assets (for example, the customer franchise of media, internet and insurance companies; new product development of pharma, biotech and software companies; and the patents and brands of durable goods manufactur­ers), and the real value those assets create based on “resid­ual cash flow measure.” In essence, invest in companies that possess unique strategic resources, and whose managers can deploy these assets to create value.