For thousands of years,
those who controlled and monitored society's finances-accountants-were often the
most powerful, respected, and influential members of the community. From the collectors at
communal granaries in the ancient Middle East to the scribes who monitored Queen Victoria's
Exchequer, the accountant's role has been to preserve the integrity of financial
systems.
In the United States,
twentieth-century accountants played a vital role in shaping the transparency of U.S.
capital markets, counseling the Allies on financial matters in both world wars, advising
Congress on the creation of the federal income tax, and inventing the concept of the gross
national product.
Yet by 2003, the reputation
of the public accountant was in tatters. How did the accounting profession in America
squander its legacy of public service? What happened to the accountants that presidents,
senators, and captains of industry turned to for advice? Why did auditors stop looking for
fraud? How did this once revered profession find itself in this unlikely and humiliating
state?
MIKE BREWSTER is the
coauthor of King of Capital: Sandy Weill and the Making of Citigroup,
also published by Wiley, and a former sportswriter in upstate New York. Formerly the
editor of LeadersOnline, Brewster spent seven years as the communications director at
KPMG. He is a graduate of the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism.
Table of Contents
My Introduction to
Accounting.
Chapter 1: The First
Accountants.
Chapter 2: The Birth of
an American Profession.
Chapter 3: Accountants Earn
a Public Trust.
Chapter 4: The Quest
for Growth.
Chapter 5: Cracks in the
Facade.
Chapter 6: The End of the
Audit.
Chapter 7: The Fight of His
Life.
Chapter 8: Enron and the
Fall of Andersen.
Chapter 9: Accounting 101.
Chapter 10: The Future of
Accounting.
Notes.
Bibliography.
Index.
328 pages
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