Management, Valuation, and Risk for Human Capital and Human Assets


Book Description

Perspectives on Human Capital and Assets goes beyond the current literature by providing a platform for a broad scope of discussion regarding HC&A, and, more importantly, by encouraging a multidisciplinary fusion between diverse disciplines.




Effective Human Resource Management


Book Description

Effective Human Resource Management is the Center for Effective Organizations' (CEO) sixth report of a fifteen-year study of HR management in today's organizations. The only long-term analysis of its kind, this book compares the findings from CEO's earlier studies to new data collected in 2010. Edward E. Lawler III and John W. Boudreau measure how HR management is changing, paying particular attention to what creates a successful HR function—one that contributes to a strategic partnership and overall organizational effectiveness. Moreover, the book identifies best practices in areas such as the design of the HR organization and HR metrics. It clearly points out how the HR function can and should change to meet the future demands of a global and dynamic labor market. For the first time, the study features comparisons between U.S.-based firms and companies in China, Canada, Australia, the United Kingdom, and other European countries. With this new analysis, organizations can measure their HR organization against a worldwide sample, assessing their positioning in the global marketplace, while creating an international standard for HR management.




Valuation of Human Capital


Book Description

This book addresses the gap between the espoused importance of organizational human capital and how it is actually reported and assessed. It also discusses the current and potential uses of human capital measurement and a way for HR to position itself among other business functions such as finance, accounting, and operations. Readers will finish with an understanding of approaches for the valuation of a firm’s human capital, practical applications for the economic analysis of human capital, and gaps that are ripe for research and practice to address.




Human Resource Valuation


Book Description

"Employees are definitely the most important assets of a firm. Yet the value and contributions of human resources are rarely accounted for and disclosed to users of accounting information. This book focuses on the need for a better accounting for human resource through a human resource valuation strategy. This strategy includes: (a) disclosing the value of human resources in the annual reports through the application of human resource accounting (HRA); (b) disclosing an employee report that informs employees about vital information for their conditions and decision needs, through the application of employee reporting; and (c) disclosing a value-added report that highlights the labor contribution to wealth, through the application of value-added reporting."--Pref.




Human Resource Accounting


Book Description

Updating the book since its last publication in 1985, this new edition of the landmark work on human resource accounting has been substantially revised to reflect the current state of the field through the late 1990s. The economies of many nations are increasingly dominated by knowledge- or information-based sectors driven by highly trained and specialized personnel. Whereas physical capital was of the utmost economic importance in the past, the distinctive feature of the emerging post-industrial economies is an increasing reliance on human and intellectual capital. The growing importance of human capital as a determinant of economic success at both the macroeconomic and microeconomic levels dictates that firms need to adjust to this new economic reality. Specifically, if human capital is a key determinant for organizational success, then investment in the training and development of employees to improve performance is a critical component of this success. This broad socioeconomic shift underscores a growing need for measuring and analyzing human capital when making managerial and financial decisions. Yet important human resource decisions involving hiring, training, compensation, productivity and other matters are often made in the absence of specific information about the different costs and benefits of these particular choices. Human resource accounting is a managerial tool that can be used to gain this valuable information by measuring the costs of recruiting, hiring, compensating and training employees. It can be used to evaluate employee training programs, increase productivity, and improve managerial decision-making regarding promotions, transfers, layoffs, replacement and turnover. Case studies illustrate, for example: How an insurance company evaluated a training program for claims adjusters and found that it would return two dollars for every one dollar spent. How a human resources accounting study revealed that an electronics firm's losses from employee turnover equalled one year's new income, and how the company initiated a program to reduce turnovers. The third edition presents the current state of the art of human resource accounting by (1) examining the concepts and methods of accounting for people as human resources; (2) explaining the present and potential uses of human resource accounting for human resource managers, line managers and investors; (3) describing the research, experiments and applications of human resource accounting in organizations; (4) considering the steps involved in developing a human resource accounting system; and (5) discussing some of the remaining aspects of human resource accounting that require further research.







Performance Management Systems and Strategies:


Book Description

Performance Management Systems and Strategies aims to provide extensive theoretical knowledge with practical overtones for students, and application-based knowledge for professionals to successfully implement performance management systems and stra




Valuation and Disclosure of Human Resource Accounting (HRA).


Book Description

Human resource is now considered to be the asset of the company, as it's the hard work and intellect of the human resource, that a company earns profits. It is a reportable investment that is not presently accounted for under the conventional accounting practice. The monetary unit assumption of accounting does not allow reporting value of company employees in company's financial report because value of HR is difficult to measure in monetary unit. Though companies all over the world are showing their expenses related to human resources in the financial statements, they are not being able to show the expertise of their 'Human Capital' and how these resources are utilized, in the financial statements. Auditor certifies in his report that balance sheet shows true and fair position of business in spite of the fact that it is not showing the value of knowledge workers. The main purpose of preparing this paper is the accumulating different models and assumptions and those models and assumptions have been cited and illustrated here in order to proper valuation and disclosure of human resource in the financial statements.




Management, Valuation, and Risk for Human Capital and Human Assets


Book Description

Perspectives on Human Capital and Assets goes beyond the current literature by providing a platform for a broad scope of discussion regarding HC&A, and, more importantly, by encouraging a multidisciplinary fusion between diverse disciplines.