The History of Accounting

The History of Accounting

The Accounting has an wider and enrich history over thousands of years. It has started from simple record keeping to complex, modern accounting practice we use today.

General overview of the history and development of Accounting are given below:

Early development was closely related to writing, counting and money. The early Egyptians and Babylonians created auditing systems, while the Romans had acces to detailed financial information.

1. Beginning period (Ancient Civilizations)

Mesopotamia (circa 3500 BCE): The earliest known form of accounting comes from ancient Mesopotamia, where the Sumerians used clay tablets to record agricultural transactions, trade, and inventories. They developed a form of record-keeping called cuneiform writing, which was used to document everything from grain transactions to livestock and labor.

Ancient Egypt (around 3000 BCE): The Egyptians had strong need of accountancy due to managing agriculture and building structure. They developed a system to truck harvests, taxes and state revenues.

Ancient Greece and Rome: Ancient Greek and Roman civilizations have used advanced accounting by using the double-entry method. Roman accountants, known as “numerati”, recorded debts, credits, and transactions in books called “codices.”

2. Middle Age period (5th to 15th Century)

During this period, trade and commerce became more complex as kingdoms and city-states started to engage in international trade.

The Catholic Church: The Church kept detailed accounts of donations and expenditures, especially with the rise of monasteries. The monks, particularly in Italy, developed sophisticated methods for managing the Church’s wealth, which provided the groundwork for modern accounting.

Italian Merchants (12th–15th century): Italian merchants, especially those in Venice and Florence, needed to manage trade with foreign countries, which required a more sophisticated system of record-keeping.

3. Development period (15th Century)

Modern accunting root comes from Italy.

Luca Pacioli: It was in 1494, An Italian mathematician Luca Pacioli, first described the system of double-entry bookkeeping. He developed his book named Summa de Arithmetica, Geometria, Proportioni et Proportionalita, and which was published in 1494. Pacioli was the first person to describe the system of debits and credits in journals and ledgers that is still the basis of today’s accounting systems.

Venetian Merchants: The method of double-entry bookkeeping was widely used by merchants in Venice and spread throughout Europe. This was the foundation of modern financial accounting.

4. The Industrial Revolution (18th–19th Century)

Accounting Professionals and Accounting Standard has started to governed Financial Reporting globally.

Business expansion: With the rise of large industrial companies and public corporations, accountants were needed to record and manage more complex transactions. Companies were started to issue share, and wide accounting is needed to truck stakeholders’ interests and dividends.

Introduce of Professional Accountant : In 20th century, accounting began to incorporate into organised profession. In 1880, Local professional bodies in England had merged to form the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England.

5. Rising of Modern Accounting: The 20th century

Financial Reporting Standards: In 20th century, we saw the establishment of accounting standards, particularly in the United States with the creation of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) after the Great Depression. The SEC required public companies to file accurate financial statements in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP).

International Accounting Standards: To facilitates general Accounting practice amoung different countries all over the world, International Accoubting Standard have been created. Later, it is replaced by the International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS).

Technological Advancements: Many companies has started to make automated software like QuickBooks, Excel, and Sage to get quick and accurate results.

6. Accounting today

At present, Accounting is a highly prestigious and specialized profession. It has several branches:

Financial Accounting: Recording and reporting on the financial position of a business for external stakeholders.

Management Accounting: Providing internal reports to help managers make business decisions.

Forensic Accounting: Investigating and detecting fraud, fund misappropriation, financial manipulation and financial crimes.

Tax Accounting: Handling matters related to preparation of tax planning, tax return and tax payment.

Auditing: Independent examination of financial statements to ensure accuracy and compliance with regulations.

Summary of Key development:

Double-Entry Bookkeeping

Formation of Accounting Bodies

Technological Advancements

Source Credit
Wikipedia
ACCA Global

Image Credit
Image by FlyFin Inc from Pixabay