Page 1
1.87
THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK
LEARNING OUTCOMES
UNIT – 6 ACCOUNTING AS A MEASUREMENT
DISCIPLINE – VALUATION PRINCIPLES,
ACCOUNTING ESTIMATES
After studying this Unit, you will be able to:
? Understand the meaning of measurement and its basic elements.
? Know how far accounting is a measurement discipline if considered
from the standpoint of the basic elements of measurement.
? Distinguish measurement from valuation.
? Learn the different measurement bases namely historical cost,
realizable value and present value.
? Understand the measurement bases which can give objective and
valuation to transactions and events.
? Understand that the traditional accounting system mostly uses
historical cost as measurement base, although in some cases other
measurement bases are also used.
© The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India
Page 2
1.87
THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK
LEARNING OUTCOMES
UNIT – 6 ACCOUNTING AS A MEASUREMENT
DISCIPLINE – VALUATION PRINCIPLES,
ACCOUNTING ESTIMATES
After studying this Unit, you will be able to:
? Understand the meaning of measurement and its basic elements.
? Know how far accounting is a measurement discipline if considered
from the standpoint of the basic elements of measurement.
? Distinguish measurement from valuation.
? Learn the different measurement bases namely historical cost,
realizable value and present value.
? Understand the measurement bases which can give objective and
valuation to transactions and events.
? Understand that the traditional accounting system mostly uses
historical cost as measurement base, although in some cases other
measurement bases are also used.
© The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India
ACCOUNTING
1.88
6.1 MEANING OF MEASUREMENT
Measurement is vital aspect of accounting. Primarily transactions and events are measured in
terms of money. Any measurement discipline deals with three basic elements of measurement
viz., identification of objects and events to be measured, selection of standard or scale to be
used, and evaluation of dimension of measurement standards or scale.
Prof. R. J. Chambers defined ‘measurement’ as “assignment of numbers to objects and events
according to rules specifying the property to be measured, the scale to be used and the
dimension of the unit”. (R.J. Chambers, Accounting Evaluation and Economic Behaviour,
Prentice Hall, Englewood Cliffs, N.J. 1966, P.10).
Valuation Principles
Historical Cost Current Cost Relizable Value
Present
Value
Elements of Measurement
Identification of Objects
and Events
Selection of Standards
or Scale
Evaluation of Dimension
of Measurement
Standards or Scale
UNIT OVERVIEW
© The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India
Page 3
1.87
THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK
LEARNING OUTCOMES
UNIT – 6 ACCOUNTING AS A MEASUREMENT
DISCIPLINE – VALUATION PRINCIPLES,
ACCOUNTING ESTIMATES
After studying this Unit, you will be able to:
? Understand the meaning of measurement and its basic elements.
? Know how far accounting is a measurement discipline if considered
from the standpoint of the basic elements of measurement.
? Distinguish measurement from valuation.
? Learn the different measurement bases namely historical cost,
realizable value and present value.
? Understand the measurement bases which can give objective and
valuation to transactions and events.
? Understand that the traditional accounting system mostly uses
historical cost as measurement base, although in some cases other
measurement bases are also used.
© The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India
ACCOUNTING
1.88
6.1 MEANING OF MEASUREMENT
Measurement is vital aspect of accounting. Primarily transactions and events are measured in
terms of money. Any measurement discipline deals with three basic elements of measurement
viz., identification of objects and events to be measured, selection of standard or scale to be
used, and evaluation of dimension of measurement standards or scale.
Prof. R. J. Chambers defined ‘measurement’ as “assignment of numbers to objects and events
according to rules specifying the property to be measured, the scale to be used and the
dimension of the unit”. (R.J. Chambers, Accounting Evaluation and Economic Behaviour,
Prentice Hall, Englewood Cliffs, N.J. 1966, P.10).
Valuation Principles
Historical Cost Current Cost Relizable Value
Present
Value
Elements of Measurement
Identification of Objects
and Events
Selection of Standards
or Scale
Evaluation of Dimension
of Measurement
Standards or Scale
UNIT OVERVIEW
© The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India
1.89
THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK
Kohler defined measurement as the assignment of a system of ordinal or cardinal numbers to
the results of a scheme of inquiry or apparatus of observations in accordance with logical or
mathematical rules – [A Dictionary of Accountant].
Ordinal numbers, or ordinals, are numbers used to denote the position in an ordered
sequence: first, second, third, fourth, etc., whereas a cardinal number says ‘how many there
are’: one, two, three, four, etc.
Chambers’ definition has been widely used to judge how far accounting can be treated as a
measurement discipline.
According to this definition, the three elements of measurement are:
(1) Identification of objects and events to be measured;
(2) Selection of standard or scale to be used;
(3) Evaluation of dimension of measurement standard or scale.
6.2 OBJECTS OR EVENTS TO BE MEASURED
We have earlier defined Accounting as the process of identifying, measuring and
communicating economic information to permit informed judgements and decisions by the
users of the information. So accounting essentially includes measurement of ‘information’.
Decision makers need past, present and future information. For external users, generally the past
information is communicated.
There is no uniform set of events and transactions in accounting which are required for
decision making. For example, in cash management, various cash receipts and expenses are
the necessary objects and events. Obviously, the decision makers need past cash receipts and
expenses data along with projected receipts and expenses. For giving loan to a business one
needs information regarding the repayment ability (popularly called debt servicing) of
principal and interest. This also includes past information, current state of affairs as well as
future projections. It may be mentioned that past and present objects and events can be
measured with some degree of accuracy but future events and objects are only predicted, not
measured. Prediction is an essential part of accounting information. Decision makers have to
take decisions about the unseen future for which they need suitable information.
6.3 STANDARD OR SCALE OF MEASUREMENT
In accounting, money is the scale of measurement (see money measurement concept),
although now-a- days quantitative information is also communicated along with monetary
information.
© The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India
Page 4
1.87
THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK
LEARNING OUTCOMES
UNIT – 6 ACCOUNTING AS A MEASUREMENT
DISCIPLINE – VALUATION PRINCIPLES,
ACCOUNTING ESTIMATES
After studying this Unit, you will be able to:
? Understand the meaning of measurement and its basic elements.
? Know how far accounting is a measurement discipline if considered
from the standpoint of the basic elements of measurement.
? Distinguish measurement from valuation.
? Learn the different measurement bases namely historical cost,
realizable value and present value.
? Understand the measurement bases which can give objective and
valuation to transactions and events.
? Understand that the traditional accounting system mostly uses
historical cost as measurement base, although in some cases other
measurement bases are also used.
© The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India
ACCOUNTING
1.88
6.1 MEANING OF MEASUREMENT
Measurement is vital aspect of accounting. Primarily transactions and events are measured in
terms of money. Any measurement discipline deals with three basic elements of measurement
viz., identification of objects and events to be measured, selection of standard or scale to be
used, and evaluation of dimension of measurement standards or scale.
Prof. R. J. Chambers defined ‘measurement’ as “assignment of numbers to objects and events
according to rules specifying the property to be measured, the scale to be used and the
dimension of the unit”. (R.J. Chambers, Accounting Evaluation and Economic Behaviour,
Prentice Hall, Englewood Cliffs, N.J. 1966, P.10).
Valuation Principles
Historical Cost Current Cost Relizable Value
Present
Value
Elements of Measurement
Identification of Objects
and Events
Selection of Standards
or Scale
Evaluation of Dimension
of Measurement
Standards or Scale
UNIT OVERVIEW
© The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India
1.89
THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK
Kohler defined measurement as the assignment of a system of ordinal or cardinal numbers to
the results of a scheme of inquiry or apparatus of observations in accordance with logical or
mathematical rules – [A Dictionary of Accountant].
Ordinal numbers, or ordinals, are numbers used to denote the position in an ordered
sequence: first, second, third, fourth, etc., whereas a cardinal number says ‘how many there
are’: one, two, three, four, etc.
Chambers’ definition has been widely used to judge how far accounting can be treated as a
measurement discipline.
According to this definition, the three elements of measurement are:
(1) Identification of objects and events to be measured;
(2) Selection of standard or scale to be used;
(3) Evaluation of dimension of measurement standard or scale.
6.2 OBJECTS OR EVENTS TO BE MEASURED
We have earlier defined Accounting as the process of identifying, measuring and
communicating economic information to permit informed judgements and decisions by the
users of the information. So accounting essentially includes measurement of ‘information’.
Decision makers need past, present and future information. For external users, generally the past
information is communicated.
There is no uniform set of events and transactions in accounting which are required for
decision making. For example, in cash management, various cash receipts and expenses are
the necessary objects and events. Obviously, the decision makers need past cash receipts and
expenses data along with projected receipts and expenses. For giving loan to a business one
needs information regarding the repayment ability (popularly called debt servicing) of
principal and interest. This also includes past information, current state of affairs as well as
future projections. It may be mentioned that past and present objects and events can be
measured with some degree of accuracy but future events and objects are only predicted, not
measured. Prediction is an essential part of accounting information. Decision makers have to
take decisions about the unseen future for which they need suitable information.
6.3 STANDARD OR SCALE OF MEASUREMENT
In accounting, money is the scale of measurement (see money measurement concept),
although now-a- days quantitative information is also communicated along with monetary
information.
© The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India
ACCOUNTING
1.90
Money as a measurement scale has no universal denomination. It takes the shape of currency
ruling in a country. For example, in India the scale of measurement is Rupee, in the U.K. Pound-
Sterling (£), in Germany Deutschmark (DM), in the United States Dollar ($) and so on. Also there
is no constant exchange relationship among the currencies.
If one businessman in India took loan $5,000 from a businessman of the U.S.A., he would enter
the transaction in his books in terms of ` Suppose at the time of loan agreement exchange
rate was US $ = ` 50. Then loan amounted to ` 2,50,000. Afterwards the exchange rate has
been changed to $ 1 = ` 55. At the changed exchange rate the loan amount becomes`
2,75,000. So money as a unit of measurement lacks universal applicability across the boundary
of a country unless a common currency is in vogue. Since the rate of exchange fluctuates
between two currencies over the time, money as a measurement scale also becomes volatile.
6.4 DIMENSION OF MEASUREMENT SCALE
An ideal measurement scale should be stable over time. For example, if one buys 1 kg. cabbage
today, the quantity he receives will be the same if he will buy 1 kg. cabbage one year later.
Similarly, length of 1 metre cloth will not change if it is bought a few days later. That is to say
a measurement scale should be stable in dimension. Money as a scale of measurement is not
stable. There occurs continuous change in the input output prices. The same quantity of
money may not have the ability to buy same quantity of identical goods at different dates.
Thus information of one year measured in money terms may not be comparable with that of
another year. Suppose production and sales of a company in two different years are as follows:
Year 1 Year 2
Qty.
`
Qty.
`
5,000 pcs 5,00,000 4,500 pcs 5,40,000
Looking at the monetary figures one may be glad for 8% sales growth. In fact there was 10%
production and sales decline. The growth envisaged through monetary figures is only due to
price change. Let us suppose further that the cost of production for the above mentioned two
years is as follows:
Year 1 Year 2
Qty.
` Qty. `
5,000 pcs 4,00,000 4,500 pcs 4,50,000
Take Gross profit = Sales – Cost of Production. Then in the first year profit was ` 1,00,000 while
in the second year the profit was ` 90,000. There was 10% decline in gross profit.
So, money as a unit of measurement is not stable in the dimension.
© The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India
Page 5
1.87
THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK
LEARNING OUTCOMES
UNIT – 6 ACCOUNTING AS A MEASUREMENT
DISCIPLINE – VALUATION PRINCIPLES,
ACCOUNTING ESTIMATES
After studying this Unit, you will be able to:
? Understand the meaning of measurement and its basic elements.
? Know how far accounting is a measurement discipline if considered
from the standpoint of the basic elements of measurement.
? Distinguish measurement from valuation.
? Learn the different measurement bases namely historical cost,
realizable value and present value.
? Understand the measurement bases which can give objective and
valuation to transactions and events.
? Understand that the traditional accounting system mostly uses
historical cost as measurement base, although in some cases other
measurement bases are also used.
© The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India
ACCOUNTING
1.88
6.1 MEANING OF MEASUREMENT
Measurement is vital aspect of accounting. Primarily transactions and events are measured in
terms of money. Any measurement discipline deals with three basic elements of measurement
viz., identification of objects and events to be measured, selection of standard or scale to be
used, and evaluation of dimension of measurement standards or scale.
Prof. R. J. Chambers defined ‘measurement’ as “assignment of numbers to objects and events
according to rules specifying the property to be measured, the scale to be used and the
dimension of the unit”. (R.J. Chambers, Accounting Evaluation and Economic Behaviour,
Prentice Hall, Englewood Cliffs, N.J. 1966, P.10).
Valuation Principles
Historical Cost Current Cost Relizable Value
Present
Value
Elements of Measurement
Identification of Objects
and Events
Selection of Standards
or Scale
Evaluation of Dimension
of Measurement
Standards or Scale
UNIT OVERVIEW
© The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India
1.89
THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK
Kohler defined measurement as the assignment of a system of ordinal or cardinal numbers to
the results of a scheme of inquiry or apparatus of observations in accordance with logical or
mathematical rules – [A Dictionary of Accountant].
Ordinal numbers, or ordinals, are numbers used to denote the position in an ordered
sequence: first, second, third, fourth, etc., whereas a cardinal number says ‘how many there
are’: one, two, three, four, etc.
Chambers’ definition has been widely used to judge how far accounting can be treated as a
measurement discipline.
According to this definition, the three elements of measurement are:
(1) Identification of objects and events to be measured;
(2) Selection of standard or scale to be used;
(3) Evaluation of dimension of measurement standard or scale.
6.2 OBJECTS OR EVENTS TO BE MEASURED
We have earlier defined Accounting as the process of identifying, measuring and
communicating economic information to permit informed judgements and decisions by the
users of the information. So accounting essentially includes measurement of ‘information’.
Decision makers need past, present and future information. For external users, generally the past
information is communicated.
There is no uniform set of events and transactions in accounting which are required for
decision making. For example, in cash management, various cash receipts and expenses are
the necessary objects and events. Obviously, the decision makers need past cash receipts and
expenses data along with projected receipts and expenses. For giving loan to a business one
needs information regarding the repayment ability (popularly called debt servicing) of
principal and interest. This also includes past information, current state of affairs as well as
future projections. It may be mentioned that past and present objects and events can be
measured with some degree of accuracy but future events and objects are only predicted, not
measured. Prediction is an essential part of accounting information. Decision makers have to
take decisions about the unseen future for which they need suitable information.
6.3 STANDARD OR SCALE OF MEASUREMENT
In accounting, money is the scale of measurement (see money measurement concept),
although now-a- days quantitative information is also communicated along with monetary
information.
© The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India
ACCOUNTING
1.90
Money as a measurement scale has no universal denomination. It takes the shape of currency
ruling in a country. For example, in India the scale of measurement is Rupee, in the U.K. Pound-
Sterling (£), in Germany Deutschmark (DM), in the United States Dollar ($) and so on. Also there
is no constant exchange relationship among the currencies.
If one businessman in India took loan $5,000 from a businessman of the U.S.A., he would enter
the transaction in his books in terms of ` Suppose at the time of loan agreement exchange
rate was US $ = ` 50. Then loan amounted to ` 2,50,000. Afterwards the exchange rate has
been changed to $ 1 = ` 55. At the changed exchange rate the loan amount becomes`
2,75,000. So money as a unit of measurement lacks universal applicability across the boundary
of a country unless a common currency is in vogue. Since the rate of exchange fluctuates
between two currencies over the time, money as a measurement scale also becomes volatile.
6.4 DIMENSION OF MEASUREMENT SCALE
An ideal measurement scale should be stable over time. For example, if one buys 1 kg. cabbage
today, the quantity he receives will be the same if he will buy 1 kg. cabbage one year later.
Similarly, length of 1 metre cloth will not change if it is bought a few days later. That is to say
a measurement scale should be stable in dimension. Money as a scale of measurement is not
stable. There occurs continuous change in the input output prices. The same quantity of
money may not have the ability to buy same quantity of identical goods at different dates.
Thus information of one year measured in money terms may not be comparable with that of
another year. Suppose production and sales of a company in two different years are as follows:
Year 1 Year 2
Qty.
`
Qty.
`
5,000 pcs 5,00,000 4,500 pcs 5,40,000
Looking at the monetary figures one may be glad for 8% sales growth. In fact there was 10%
production and sales decline. The growth envisaged through monetary figures is only due to
price change. Let us suppose further that the cost of production for the above mentioned two
years is as follows:
Year 1 Year 2
Qty.
` Qty. `
5,000 pcs 4,00,000 4,500 pcs 4,50,000
Take Gross profit = Sales – Cost of Production. Then in the first year profit was ` 1,00,000 while
in the second year the profit was ` 90,000. There was 10% decline in gross profit.
So, money as a unit of measurement is not stable in the dimension.
© The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India
1.91
THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK
Thus, Accounting measures information mostly in money terms which is not a stable scale
having universal applicability and also not stable in dimension for comparison over the time. So
it is not an exact measurement discipline.
6.5 ACCOUNTING AS A MEASUREMENT DISCIPLINE
How do you measure a transaction or an event? Unless the measurement base is settled we
cannot progress to the record keeping function of book-keeping. It has been explained that
accounting is meant for generating information suitable for users’ judgments and decisions.
But generation of such information is preceded by recording, classifying and summarising
data. By that process it measures performance of the business entity by way of profit or loss
and shows its financial position. Thus, measurement is an important part of accounting
discipline. But a set of theorems governs the whole measurement sub- system. These
theorems should be carefully understood to know how the cogs of the ‘accounting-wheel’
work. Now-a-days accounting profession earmarked three theorems namely going concern,
consistency and accrual as fundamental accounting assumptions, i.e., these assumptions are
taken for granted. Also while measuring, classifying, summarising and also presenting, various
policies are adopted. Recording, classifying summarising and communication of information
are also important part of accounting, which do not fall within the purview of measurement
discipline. Therefore, we cannot simply say that accounting is a measurement discipline.
But in accounting money is the unit of measurement. So, let us take one thing for granted that all
transactions and events are to be recorded in terms of money only. Quantitative information
is also required in many cases but such information is only supplementary to monetary
information.
6.6 VALUATION PRINCIPLES
There are four generally accepted measurement bases or valuation principles. These are:
(i) Historical Cost;
(ii) Current Cost;
(iii) Realizable Value;
(iv) Present Value.
© The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India
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