The
name that looms largest in early accounting history is Luca Pacioli, who in
1494 first described the system of double-entry bookkeeping used by Venetian
merchants in his Summa de Arithmetica, Geometria, Proportioni et
Proportionalita. Of course, businesses and governments had been recording
business information long before the Venetians. But it was Pacioli who was the
first to describe the system of debits and credits in journals and ledgers that
is still the basis of today's accounting systems. The industrial
revolution spurred the need for more advanced cost accounting systems,
and the development of corporations created much larger classes of external
capital providers - share owners and
bond holders - who were not part of the firm's management but had a vital
interest in its results. The rising public status of accountants helped to
transform accounting into a profession, first in the United Kingdom and then in
the United States. In 1887, thirty-one accountants joined together to create
the American Association of Public Accountants. The first standardized test for
accountants was given a decade later, and the first CPAs were licensed in 1896. The Great
Depression led to the creation of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) in 1934.
Henceforth all publicly-traded companies had to file periodic reports with the
Commission to be certified by members of the accounting profession. The American Institute of Certified Public
Accountants (AICPA) and its predecessors had responsibility for
setting accounting standards until 1973, when the Financial Accounting Standards
Board (FASB) was established. The industry thrived in the late 20th
century, as the large accounting firms expanded their services beyond the
traditional auditing function
to many forms of consulting. The Enron scandals in
2001, however, had broad repercussions for the accounting industry. One of the
top firms, Arthur Andersen, went out of business and, under the Sarbanes-Oxley
Act, accountants faced tougher restrictions on their consulting
engagements. One of the paradoxes of the profession, however, is that
accounting scandals generate more work for accountants, and demand for their
services continued to boom throughout the early part of the 21st century.
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