8000 BC
|
The birth of
civilization: fortified cities. Ancient Jericho
was founded about 8,000 years ago. Salt was mined and available for trade
near this Dead Sea site. There is no
evidence of intensive agriculture at this date (much of their food must have
been imported), suggesting that the city was founded primarily as a trading
center.
|
7500 BC
|
Agriculture and
tokens--the first accounting records. The domestication of livestock and grains started at
different sites about the same time. Simple tokens were associated with
agricultural sites, clay balls of various shapes (round, oval, etc.)
representing specific goods (e.g., 2 round tokens could be a pair of cattle,
12 oval tokes a dozen units of wheat). This was the first representation of
inventory and the beginning of the concept of numbers.
|
3200 BC
|
Writing. Over the next 5,000 years, accounting records
advanced from simple to complex tokens representing inventory, to clay
tablets, to the development of abstract symbols and cuneiform writing in
Sumeria. This paralleled advances in agriculture, pottery and textiles,
building, war and nation-states.
|
3000 BC
|
Bronze, abacus,
& papyrus. Bronze was
first used to make tools in the Middle East,
the start of the Bronze Age. The abacus was invented in China and later made its way
west. Papyrus scrolls were found in Egyptian graves.
|
2200 BC
|
The Code of
Hammurabi. One of the
earliest law codes, which standardized weights and measures, commercial
transactions and contracts, and criminal penalties. Payments were based on
fixed amounts of silver or grain. About this time metal became used as a
medium of exchange in the Middle East.
|
7th Century
BC |
Coins invented in Lydia. It started with crude slugs of electrum (a
gold and silver alloy) of a standard weight. Later coins were stamped, first
with simple lines and then with more complicated designs.
|
5th Century
BC |
The development of
Greek banking. By 575 BC Athens started to mint coins.
Financial transactions were made only in coined money. Money changing was the
most common financial activity. Bankers accepted deposits and made loans.
|
By 50 BC
|
Roman republic. Rome
developed as a republic, ruled largely by the Senate. With the rise of a
professional army, Rome successfully conquered
neighbors and then much of the Mediterranean world and Europe.
Rome was
known for engineering marvels that included roads, acquiducts, and buildings.
Rome adopted
coinage, the abacus, Greek alphabet, "Roman numerals", writing on
papyrus, banking & credit. The corporation was established in Rome as an entity that
could own property, make contracts, and engage in many activities.
|
1 AD
|
Roman empire. With
the rise of Julius Caesar, the republic was replaced by the empire. At the
start of the new era, the age of Augustus was the Pax Romana, an era
of peace and prosperity--one definition of the Golden Age of Rome. Augustus
reformed the money and tax systems. Taxes included general sales tax, a land
tax, and a flat-rate poll or head tax.
|
410
|
Fall of Rome. Rome
was sacked by the Visigoths; the Dark Ages began in the West. Local
areas became self sufficient and the feudal system developed. Roman rule in
the East continued at Constantinople for
another thousand years.
|
1095-1270
|
Crusades--with western armies attempting to conquer the Holy Land. Vast sums of money were needed to finance
the armies, stimulating banking in Europe
and encouraging trade with the exotic east. Italian city states prosper.
|
from 1000
|
Italian merchants
extend trade from England
to the Far East and improve bookkeeping. The most successful merchants developed
complex trading networks across Europe and the Mediterranean,
often using partnerships. Bills of exchange and clearing houses were established
in major European trading centers.
|
1066
|
Battle of Hastings.
William of Normandy conquered
England.
In 1086 the Domesday Book surveyed the wealth of the kingdom to
determine taxes and England's
fiscal system. England's
legal system and government evolve from Normal
rule.
|
1100
|
Piscan Document--demonstrated systematic but primitive
bookkeeping by Italian merchants.
|
1160-1200
|
Tally sticks. Tallies evolved into credit instruments in England.
Tallies were wooden sticks, notched to represent specific sums of money. The
sticks would be split in two to serve as a receipt. These would be used for
lending and the English Exchequer issued tally sticks as a form of credit.
|
1215
|
Magna Carta--restricted the rights of kings to raise taxes
without the consent of the barons. From this beginning, Parliament would be
established.
|
By 1300
|
Double entry
bookkeeping. Accounting
records of Giovanni Farolfi and Co. documented a complete double entry
bookkeeping system in place.
|
1440
|
Printing press. Gutenberg invented movable type. Printing
presses soon expanded across Europe.
|
1494
|
Pacioli's Summa--codified double entry bookkeeping as the
"Venice
system". Thanks to Gutenberg's printing press, Summa was printed
and spread throughout Europe.
|
1550
|
First English
joint stock company. The
Russia Company was chartered to search for the North-east passage to Asia.
|
1600
|
East India Company
founded. Company had monopoly
trading rights for much of Asia. Thomas
Stevens was the first accountant for the company. This successful company had
much to do with the rise of England
as a mercantile power.
|
1633-72
|
Rise
of goldsmith-bankers in England.
Goldsmiths used their safes
for deposits of coins and other valuables and gradually became bankers.
Beginning in 1633 goldsmith notes was used as receipts for reclaiming
deposits and evidence of ability to pay. By 1660 goldsmith notes became
banknotes, accepted in place of coin.
|
1694
|
Bank of England
founded as a joint stock company. The Bank began to issues notes for deposit, with the
promise to pay the bearer the sum (redeemable in gold or coin) of the note on
demand. Initially written by hand for specific deposits, these were gradually
replaced by printed fixed-denomination notes.
|
1704
|
Promissory Note
Act--confirmed the legality
of goldsmiths' notes as negotiable.
|
1709
|
Abraham Darby set
up his iron works at Coalbrookdale. The smelting of iron with coke at the Ironbridge site
was a significant step in the Industrial Revolution. This Ironbridge iron
smelting site became the largest in the world and attracted many other
manufacturing businesses.
|
1720
|
The South Sea Bubble Collapses. The South Sea Company was founded as a joint
stock company in 1711 to trade with Spanish colonies. Speculation drove the
stock price up ten fold, only to collapse on rumors of financial disaster.
Investors were ruined, a recession started, and investors lost interest in
joint stock companies. An audit was performed by Charles Snell, who
discovered fraud by the company's directors.
|
1733
|
John Kay's flying
shuttle. Wool and then cotton
cloth initially used the domestic system. Mechanization meant replacing hand
made textiles with the factory system. One of the first inventions was Kay's
flying shuttle for spinning cotton thread. James Hargreaves inproved this
with his spinning jenny in the 1760s.
|
1762
|
Barings Bank
founded--Britain's oldest merchant bank.
|
1769
|
Steam Engine
operational. The first steam
engine came from Holland
in the 17th century. Thomas Newcomen improved the engine to use as drainage
pumps in coal mines. James Watt patented his improved steam engine in 1769.
Watt's rotary-motion steam engine was put on the market by Boulton &
Watts in 1782. Steam engines were ordered by textile factories, iron and
steel manufacturers and other businesses.
|
1770-2
|
Josiah Wedgwood
became a cost accountant. The
famous potter set up his first plant in 1754. To avoid bankruptcy during a
recession, Wedgwood studied his books, manufacturing cost structure,
overhead, and his market structure. He became an accounting pioneer and the
firm survived to the present day.
|
1771
|
Factory. Richard Arkwright patented the water frame in
1769, which used water power to spin yarn. Arkwright built an early cotton
factory in Britain.
Most cotton manufacturing used the factory system by 1800.
|
1773
|
London Stock Exchange. Canals, railroads and other utilities needed vast
capital that could only be raised by joint stock companies. Meetings at
Jonathan's Coffeehouse were used by stockbrokers for capital market
transactions, which became known as the Stock Exchange Coffeehouse. The
London Stock Exchange had its own building in 1802.
|
1789
|
U.S. federal government established. Revolution was won, constitution ratified,
George Washington elected first president, Congress met in New York, Alexander Hamilton first
Treasury Secretary and established the federal accounting system.
|
1789
|
First American
factory. Samuel Slater built
the first mechanical spinning mill in the U.S.
|
1802
|
Trevithick's
locomotive. Richard
Trevithick produced a high-pressure engine that he adapted into a railroad
locomotive. George Stephenson built his first locomotive in 1814.
|
1814
|
First integrated
textile mill in the U.S. Francis Lowell built the first integrated
textile mill in America.
|
1825
|
Stockton &
Darlington Railroad, the first commercial railroad. This railroad used Stephenson's locomotive.
|
1827
|
First American
commercial railroad. The
Baltimore & Ohio railroad received a charter from the state of Maryland. Although it
would take 25 years to reach the Ohio River,
the B&O starts using locomotives about 1830.
|
1831
|
Accounting
profession gets recognized. The
Bankruptcy Act of 1831 in Britain
allowed accountants to be appointed "official Assignees", the first
government recongition.
|
1844
|
Incorporation of
business by registration. The
British Companies Act of 1844 established the incorporation of business by
formal registration and required the annual appointment of auditors to
examine the accounts and balance sheet of all public companies.
|
1845
|
Deloitte founded
the first of the Big Eight (now five). William Deloitte opened his London firm, soon to be followed by Samuel
Price and Edwin Waterhouse (1849), William Cooper (1854), and William Peat
(1867).
|
1862
|
First federal
income tax. With the Civil
War raging, sweeping new taxes were passed including an income tax; Office of
Internal Revenue established under the Treasury Department.
|
1882
|
Standard Oil
invest the trust. Standard
Oil used the trust to conduct the oil business across state lines. John D.
Rockefeller became the richest man in America. Rockefeller was trained
as a bookkeeper and became an exceptional entrepreneur.
|
1895
|
First American Big
Five. Haskins & Sells
founded, the first American Big Eight (now Five) firm (now part of Deloitte
& Touche).
|
1887
|
Interstate Commerce
Commission Act provided
federal regulation of railroads, including a uniform accounting system. Given
the interstate (and global) nature of business, states had been unable to
effectively regulate railroads and other businesses, requiring federal intervention.
|
1890
|
First Antitrust
Act. The Sherman Antitrust
Act was established to eliminate predatory price fixing, monopoly pricing,
and other antitrust practices. Presidents Roosevelt and Taft used antitrust
laws to successfully sue major monopolies including Standard Oil early in the
20th century.
|
1890
|
Tabulating
machine. Herman Hollerith
invented the punch card tabulating machine to tally the 1890 U.S. Census and
later founded the Tabulating Machine Co. Under Thomas Watson, Sr. this firm
became International Business Machines (IBM).
|
1902
|
First billion
dollar corporation. J. P.
Morgan formed U.S.
Steel (after buying out Carneigie Steel), the first billion dollar American
corporation. Price Waterhouse appointed the first auditor of the firm.
|
1914
|
Fedeal Reserve created as the nation's central bank. Clayton
Act established the Federal Trade Commission and strengthened anti-trust
laws.
|
1923
|
Modern cost
accounting. Under Controller
Donaldson Brown and Chairman Alfred Sloan, General Motors adopted or developed
the major cost accounting techniques that would be used by big business for
the next half century and beyond. These included return on investment, return
on equity calculations and flexible budgeting.
|
1929
|
Great Depression. The stock market crash lead to the Great
Depression. The result was federal regulation and assistance to save
capitalism. However, the depression didn't end until America's entry in World War
II.
|
1933
|
Roosevelt's New Deal. FDR is
elected president and his First Hundred Days are known for significant
legislation to salvage the banking system, put people to work, and dozens of
federal programs. The Securities Acts of 1933 and 1934 establish the
Securities & Exchange Commission (SEC) to regulate financial markets,
including financial accounting. The basic structure of the New Deal (e.g.,
Social Security, banking insurance, securities regulations) was continued and
expanded throughout the century.
|
1936-8
|
Regulation of
financial accounting. The
Committee on Accounting Procedure (CAP) created; the term "generally
accepted accounting priciples" (GAAP) used for the first time; the SEC
in Accounting Series Release No. 4 delegated authority to establish
accounting standards to the private sector; the CAP assumed this authority
and began to issue Accounting Research Bulletins (ARBs).
|
1941
|
U.S. entered World War II. American became a super power and the leader
of the free world after a brutal four year war. The post war structures
(e.g., United Nations, World Trade Organization) and the confrontation with
the Soviet Union resulted in a 50 year Cold
War.
|
1943
|
Income Tax
withholding. Congress passed
income tax withholding as the only way to collect on high tax rates to fund
World War II. Tax rates would go up and down, but income taxes became the
revenue generator for the expansion of the federal government.
|
1943-6
|
First Computer. Electronic Numerical Integrator &
Computer (ENIAC) developed by Presper Eckert and John Mauchly at the University of Pennsylvania, the first computer with
electronic circuits. Eckert & Mauchly later create the Universal
Automatic Computer (UNIVAC), but sold their company to Remington Rand.
|
1950
|
IBM Computers. IBM begins to develop electronic computers to
add to their line of business equipment; the IBM 702 became available for
accounting use in 1953.
|
1953
|
Computer
Accounting. Arthur Andersen
computerized the payroll of a General Electric plant using a UNIVAC I,
starting the information age for business. The computer revolution became
global and the Big Eight discovered a source of expertise primarily for
consulting.
|
1953
|
First GAAP
Codification. CAP issued ARB
43 which codified all previous pronouncements. The basic concepts of
accounting based on historical cost concepts were developed by the CAP and
many of the basic procedures of financial accounting were based on the CAP
pronouncements.
|
1959
|
APB formed. The Accounting Principles Board (APB)
replaced the CAP for issuing accounting standards. It suffered from many of
the same weaknesses as the CAP, but issued several important opinions.
|
1973
|
FASB formed. Based on the recommendation of the Wheat
Commission, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) was formed to
solve the weaknesses of the APB. It was established as an independent body
(the Financial Accounting Foundation appoints the Board, provides funding and
oversight), seven full-time members, a research staff, and thorough due
process. To date, the FASB has issued about 140 pronouncements.
|
1976
|
First successful
PC. Steve Wozniak and Steve
Jobs built the first Apple computer; the Apple II is introduced two years
later, the first successful personal computer.
|
1979
|
Electronic
spreadsheet. Dan Brinklin and
Bob Frankston wrote VisiCalc for the Apple II, the first electronic
spreadsheet, the most important business application for the PC
|
1981
|
IBM PCs. The IBM PC emerged, getting hardware and
software from other suppliers, establishing a de facto industry
standard. IBM was a major force for only a few years, before the success of
"IBM clones" such as Compaq.
|
1982
|
Nigeria Accounting
Standard Board was born to set standards to guide accounting operations. Members
include Central Bank of Nigeria,
Corporate Affairs Commission, Federal Board of Inland Revenue, Federal
Ministry of Finance, Nigerian Accounting Teachers’ Association, Nigerian
Stock Exchange, The Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria, and so on.
|
Monday, November 19, 2018
GREAT EVENTS IN ACCOUNTING AND BUSINESS HISTORY
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