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Measurement Theory: Godfrey Hodgson Holmes Tarca

This document discusses measurement theory and its application in accounting. It defines measurement as assigning numerals to objects or events according to rules, which creates scales. There are four main scales: nominal, ordinal, interval, and ratio. In accounting, capital and profit are the two fundamental measures, though they are derived and there are debates around their measurement. For auditors, determining accurate measurement of capital and profit in light of alternative valuation methods poses issues.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
265 views27 pages

Measurement Theory: Godfrey Hodgson Holmes Tarca

This document discusses measurement theory and its application in accounting. It defines measurement as assigning numerals to objects or events according to rules, which creates scales. There are four main scales: nominal, ordinal, interval, and ratio. In accounting, capital and profit are the two fundamental measures, though they are derived and there are debates around their measurement. For auditors, determining accurate measurement of capital and profit in light of alternative valuation methods poses issues.

Uploaded by

arda321
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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GODFREY HODGSON HOLMES TARCA

CHAPTER 5 MEASUREMENT THEORY

Importance of measurement
Campbell: The assignment of numerals to represent properties of material systems other than numbers

Assignment of numerals to objects or events according to rules. (Stevens)


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Importance of measurement
Involves linking the formal number system to some property of objects or events by means of semantic rules
e.g. semantic rules in accounting are represented by transactions

In accounting we measure profit by:


first assigning a value to capital then calculating profit as the change in capital over the period
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Scales
Every measurement is made on a scale Created when a semantic rule is used to relate the mathematical statement to objects or events The scale shows what information the numbers represent

Nominal scale
In this scale, numbers used only as labels Numbers represent classification e.g. numbering footballers e.g. the classification of assets and liabilities into different classes

Ordinal scale
In this scale, rank orders objects with respect to a given property
e.g. tallest to shortest person e.g. investment alternatives that are ranked 1, 2, 3 according to the size of their net present values

Intervals between the numbers are not necessarily equal

Interval scale
In this scale, rank orders objects with respect to a given property The distance between each interval is equal and known An arbitrarily selected zero point exists on the scale
e.g. celsius temperature scale e.g. standard cost accounting

Ratio scale
In this scale, rank orders objects with respect to a given property Intervals between objects are known and equal A unique origin exists
e.g. measurement of length e.g. use of dollars to measure assets and liabilities

Permissible operations of scales


Invariance of a scale means that the measurement system will provide the same general form of the variables, and the decision maker will make the same decisions This is not the case in accounting there is more than one accounting system The information they provide will differ and different decisions will be made
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Permissible operations of scales


Nominal and ordinal scales
no arithmetic operations

Interval scale
addition and subtraction

Ratio scale
all arithmetic operations

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Types of measurement
There must be a rule to assign numbers before there can be measurement The formulation of the rules gives rise to a scale Measurement can be made only on a scale

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Fundamental measurements
Numbers are assigned by reference to natural laws Fundamental properties are additive
e.g. length, number and volume

In accounting there is considerable debate over the nature of fundamental value

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Derived measurements
Is one that depends on the measurement of two or more other quantities Depends on known relationships to fundamental properties
e.g. the measurement of density depends on the measurement of both mass and volume e.g. the measurement of profit depends on the measurement of both income and expenses

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Fiat measurements
Typical in social sciences including accounting Based on arbitrary definitions - e.g. of profit Numerous ways in which scales can be constructed May lead to poor levels of confidence in the scale e.g. there are hundreds of ways to measure profit

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Reliability and accuracy


No measurement is free of error except counting
e.g. we can count the chairs in a room and be exactly correct

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Sources of error
The sources of error include the following: Measurement operations stated imprecisely Measurer Instrument Environment Attribute unclear Risk and uncertainty We need to establish limits of acceptable error
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Reliable measurement
What is reliable measurement?
proven consistency repeatable or reproducible precision

Reliability incorporates two aspects


accuracy and certainty of measurement representative faithfulness
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Accurate measurement
Consistency of results, precision and reliability do not necessarily lead to accuracy Accuracy has to do with how close the measurement is to the true value of the attribute measure - representation True value may not be known
e.g. in accounting accuracy relates to the pragmatic notion of usefulness
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Accurate measurement
Many accounting measurements are on a ratio scale This is the most informative scale Weakest theoretical foundation as they are fiat measurements

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Measurement in accounting
Two fundamental measures
capital & profit

Capital and profit can be defined & derived in various ways Concepts of capital & profit have changed over time
number of concepts of fundamental measurement

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Measurement in accounting
Two notable developments in international standards (2005, IASB)
profit measurement and revenue recognition should be linked to timely recognition the fair value approach should be adopted as the working measurement principle

At no stage has the principle of capital maintenance been explicitly discussed


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Measurement issues for auditors


The focus of profit measurement has shifted from matching revenues and expenses to assessing the changes in the fair value of net assets
e.g. immediate recognition of impairment losses

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Measurement issues for auditors


Auditors must determine whether management has made appropriate and reasonable valuations
e.g. at least 12 methods of valuing intangibles

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Measurement issues for auditors


It is possible for several different but reasonable measurements and impairment losses to be recognised by management These would all be acceptable to an auditor if management have
applied the valuation models correctly used appropriate data made appropriate assumptions acted in a consistent manner
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Summary
Measurement involves the formal linking of numbers to some property or event via semantic rules Rules used to assign numbers are determined according to four scales Invariance of a scale means the measurement system will provide the same general form of the variables and the decision maker will make the same decisions There are three different types of measurement Reliability refers to consistency, and accuracy refers to the representation of a fundamental value

The two fundamental measures in accounting are capital and profit and they are both derived measures
The existence of alternative valuation methods creates auditing issues
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Key terms and concepts


Measurement Nominal scale Ordinal scale Interval scale Ratio scale Invariance of a scale Fundamental measurements Derived measurements Fiat measurements Reliability in measurement Accuracy in measurement Capital and profit as derived measurements Appropriate measurement in an auditing context

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