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.







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.







"HUMAN RESOURCE ACCOUNTING AND AUDITING"


Book Description

This unit aims to provide a basis for the conceptual framework of Human Capital Management. An attempt is made to highlight the following aspects.




How to Value Human Resources


Book Description

Human resource accounting (HRA) is an attempt to identify, quantify and report investment made in Human resources of an organization that are not presently accounted for under conventional accounting practice. Businesses which require a considerable creativity or are science-based show a significant difference between market value and net book value. This difference is for intangible assets (including human skills). However the Human Resources are yet to get recognition in Balance Sheet. Researches in this field have been slow and researchers are not able to develop a model which are free from major limitations. In this paper I have given a new method to value human resource. This method is specially relevant in knowledge companies.




Human Resource Accounting in Indi


Book Description

This book highlights the valuation of human recourse through different model by providing theoretical justification to the human resource valuation concept. The human resource management models suggested to data includes both monetary and non-monetary methods. Human Recourse Accounting (HRA) helps in identifying the right person for the right job, based on the persons' specialized skills, knowledge, capabilities, experience, etc. Valuation of human assets could also be effectively used to motivate employees to achieve best results, using the best of their abilities. It also ensured continuous evaluation and follow up of various human resource policies associated with recruitment, selection, training, development and retention. By adopting and implementing HRA in an organization could obtained information's i.e. Cost per employee, Human Capital Investment Ratio, The ratio of salary paid to revenue generated, Absenteeism rates, Employee turnover rate and retention rate. Although this book is helpful to researchers, students and society in various ways to understand the information about HRA and its importance in terms of income, occupation, finance, economics etc.....




Human Resource Due Diligence within the Context of Mergers & Acquisitions


Book Description

Master's Thesis from the year 2004 in the subject Business economics - Business Management, Corporate Governance, grade: 1.0, University of Strathclyde, language: English, abstract: The process of M&A (Mergers & Acquisitions) represents a predominate form of expansion, growth and internationalisation. In the past, M&A research into the strategic fit producing optimal synergies between two corporations has largely focused on the financial, legal and economic aspects of any prospective deal. Only since the increased awareness of a nearly fifty percent failure ratei has there also been growing consciousness of HR’s significance in this equation, together with the cultural aspects of integration strategies, and the cultural factors for globalisation – in other words, the cultural fit! In global terms, there is increasing acknowledgement and awareness of intellectual capital as a core economic resource, rating the significance of a company’s sum of human capital and intellectual property on a par with physical assets such as equipment, plant and inventories. Empirical evidence suggests that the management of cultural and human factors in a M&A implementation is crucial for smooth integration and overall positive outcome. The project work discusses, investigates, and reports on research into the essentials of human resource due diligence and its cultural aspects in a cross-border integration. It focuses on human resource management and cultural integration during a M&A phase. It also points out specific findings on integration using and intensive HR due diligence approach. The issues of discussions are based on a wide range of literature supported by findings of empirical studies published internationally and the M&A knowledge of the management staff . The project intends to tackle the contrast between pre-acquisition motives and post-acquisition behaviour, and the subtle process of sound integration in terms of HR due diligence in general cross-border M&A. The work will touch on the measurement approaches of the field of human resource accounting (HRA), specifically the stochastic rewards valuation model for M&A, as a tools for the measurement of the value of the ROI on human capital. The discussion on cultural integration includes cultural fit, cultural change and management across national cultures in mergers and acquisitions. Addressing these issues is designed to provide further insights for the two companies in question into the significance of HR due diligence in the run-up to any possible merger or an acquisition of ADMECO AG.




Human Resource Accounting


Book Description

Dostoevsky's Democracy offers a major reinterpretation of the life and work of the great Russian writer by closely reexamining the crucial transitional period between the early works of the 1840s and the important novels of the 1860s. Sentenced to death in 1849 for utopian socialist political activity, the 28-year-old Dostoevsky was subjected to a mock execution and then exiled to Siberia for a decade, including four years in a forced labor camp, where he experienced a crisis of belief. It has been influentially argued that the result of this crisis was a conversion to Russian Orthodoxy and reactionary politics. But Dostoevsky's Democracy challenges this view through a close investigation of Dostoevsky's Siberian decade and its most important work, the autobiographical novel Notes from the House of the Dead (1861). Nancy Ruttenburg argues that Dostoevsky's crisis was set off by his encounter with common Russians in the labor camp, an experience that led to an intense artistic meditation on what he would call Russian "democratism." By tracing the effects of this crisis, Dostoevsky's Democracy presents a new understanding of Dostoevsky's aesthetic and political development and his role in shaping Russian modernity itself, especially in relation to the preeminent political event of his time, peasant emancipation.