Title: The context of the contemporary accounting professional
1Chapter 15
- The context of the contemporary accounting
professional
2Environmental changes
- Changes in environmental conditions can be
characterised by the following trends - technical and ideological proletarisation of
accountants in public and private sectors - the institutional capitalism of the new governing
class - the assimilation of academic accountants into a
flawed universal class - the manufactured consciousness of users
3Genesis of emerging structural changes
- Societies are constituted by groups of
protagonists competing for economic and social
power and political authority - Dominant modes of interaction consistently favour
one category over another and result in
exploitation of others - At every societal level, groups of protagonists
face each other over the contradictions that
separate them
4Genesis of emerging structural changes (contd)
- The emerging structural changes in the accounting
environment are contradictions created by the
global conflicts and the emergence of new
protagonists in the accounting and other
environments
5Technical and ideological proletarianisation of
accountants
- The first element in the new-era conflict is the
emergence of new class differences among
accountants - Accountants have become proletarianised, working
according to a division of labour conceived and
monitored by management, following procedural
rules and repertoires created by administrative
processes and/or fiat
6Technical proletariansation
- Has reflected a shift of control towards
employers or management and a loss of the
creative freedom accountants enjoyed as
self-employed professionals - In the process, as theorised by Marx, they have
lost control of both the means and ends of
labour, a phenomenon labelled as technical
proletarianisation
7Ideological proletarianisation
- In addition to technical proletarianistion, the
emergence of the new working class or
professional managerial class has led also to
an ideological proletarianisation, which refers
to the appropriation of control by management for
capital, over the goals and social purposes to
which work is put - The accountant has lost control of the nature of
the total product and may be indifferent to the
outcome of the activities he or she is involved in
8Results of the proletarianisation
- May lead to the accountant losing the knowledge
base as capital restructures through management
the specification of the product and management
restructures the organisation of work - Renders the accountant a mere technician of
functionaries, separate from the major social,
moral and technological issues of his or her
profession - These changes have led to a decrease in the
number and quality of people going into
accounting programs the profession lacks
glamour
9Effects on the accountant
- The accountant may respond by either ideological
desensitisation or ideological cooperation - ideological desensitisation is a denial or
separation of the self from ideological control
of the job, disclaiming either interest or
responsibility for the social uses to which ones
work is put - ideological cooperation is a redefinition of
ones goals to make them consistent with
institutional imperatives - In either case, there is a high likelihood of the
accountant being alienated from his or her work
10Alienation
- Alienation in the domain of work has a fourfold
aspect - a human being is alienated from the objects
he/she produces, and - from the process of production, and
- from him or herself, and
- from the community of his or her fellows
- In this condition, the mindset of accountants,
their consciousness, is to a large extent only
the reflection of the conditions in which they
find themselves and of the position in the
process of production
11Institutional capitalism
- The second element in the new conflictual order
concerns the nature of the governing class in
corporations and accounting firms - the corporate community is characterised by a
socially cohesive national upper class - according to Westergaard and Resler, this
governing class is composed of those who own and
those who control capital on a larger scale
they have a common stake in one overriding cause
to keep the working rule of society capitalist
12Class-wide rationality
- This assumes that the corporate elite is largely
capable of identifying and promoting its common
political objectives - Although corporate rationality still
characterises much of the internal organisation
of accounting firms, class-wide rationality now
characterises its highest circles. Old school
ties and kindred signs of proper breeding greatly
facilitate access to the highest circles of the
CPA firms
13Academic accountants
- The third element in the new conflictual order is
a new class of academic accountants - Gouldner advanced two propositions regarding this
flawed universal class - the rise of a new class comprising humanistic
intellectuals and technical intelligentsia, whose
universalism is badly flawed - the growing dominance of this class as a cultural
bourgeoisie and having monopoly over cultural
capitalism and professionalism from which it
gains its power
14Academic accountants (contd)
- This new class forms one speech community,
sharing a culture of critical discourse. This
concept is defined as - a historically evolved set of rules, a grammar
of discourse which - is conceived to justify its assertions,
- whose mode of justification does not proceed by
involving authorities and - prefers to elicit the voluntary consent of those
addressed solely on the basis of arguments
addressed
15Academic accountants a flawed class
- This new class is flawed because it is considered
elitist and self-seeking and uses its special
knowledge to advance its own interests and power - Gouldner suggests that the new class uses
cultural reproduction to maintain its power just
as economic reproduction is used to serve the
interests of the holders of economic capital - Academic accountants are motivated by
self-interest and the pressing need to publish - Academic accountants have gained a power
associated with their monopoly over the cultural
accounting capital
16Capitalist domination of information
- The capitalist domination of information can be
expressed in three propositions - the class rule of management appropriates the
information product they create - such domination is maintained by the states
enforcement of contractual arrangements,
protection of property rights and maintenance of
public order - information tools at the disposition of
management, such as annual reports and press
releases, allow management to disseminate
information useful for the preservation of its
interests
17The manufactured consciousness of users
- The three propositions amount to three forms of
domination - market exploitation
- legal coercion
- ideological domination
- They allow management to convey its beliefs to
the users and, in the process, shape users
consciousness about the firm - The users acquire a manufactured consciousness
compatible with the expectations of management
18Manufacturing of consciousness
- The manufacturing of consciousness is an obstacle
to the expansion of data that is relevant to the
users - The proper task is to announce the truth, expose
the error, and identify all the constraints that
can impede enquiring, comprehension and efficient
action - A similar approach, the ethical approach to
financial accounting, rests on concepts of
fairness, justice, equity and truth
19Manufacturing of consciousness (contd)
- A user needs to be informed of the wide
dissemination of accounting reports - A better strategy with the attribute of better
informing the user is to expose the user to
various accounting reports from various sources - What may result is a shift in the users
expertise an expansion of the breadth of
knowledge, that the user may acquire a better
sense of what is useful and what is not, and an
evaluation of the different preparers of
accounting information