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2 HASKINS & SELLS July Quantitative Measurements THE INFLUENCE of economic changes on the financial condition of individual enterprises is nowhere reflected more sharply than in stocks of merchandise. Cash may show an increase or decrease in amount when compared at two different dates and the change may have no secondary significance. Accounts receivable appearing in a lesser amount at the later of two dates indicate, from an economic point of view, that the enterprise at that time has less capital invested in that asset. Changes in inventories have a dual significance. They are stated in terms of dollars, but the dollar must be reinterpreted in the light of current prices. The period from 1921 to 1929 was one of increasing prices. During that period the general price level mounted steadily and generously. The problem constantly presented was one of replacements at higher prices. The same quantities at successively later periods showed increasingly larger numbers of dollars tied up in inventories. The immediate future, from a business viewpoint, was not so troublesome, because the general movement was upward, and there was reasonable prospect of selling goods at increasingly higher prices. Now the situation is reversed. Prices of cattle, for example, have declined to the lowest in twenty-five years. Two years ago, sirloin steak was selling at fifty-one cents a pound. On June 10, 1931, it sold at thirty-five cents a pound. Last year, in June, prime ribs retailed at forty-three cents a pound. Last week the retail price was twenty-three cents. The purchasing power of the retail meat-dollar has increased about eighty-seven per cent. The housewife with forty-three cents to spend for prime ribs of beef, may have almost two pounds now, instead of one pound a year ago. The housewife with twenty-three cents to spend now may have a pound of prime rib roast, whereas last year she might not have been able to buy any because of the high price. The dealer's inventory of one pound of beef last year would have shown forty-three cents invested in that commodity. This year the inventory would show one pound at twenty-three cents. Ostensibly, there has been a reduction of forty-six and one-half per cent. in the inventory. In reality, the inventory has not been reduced. The value of the inventory, based on current prices, has declined. This homely illustration suggests what may be expected in most lines of business, whether the inventory amounts to thousands or to millions of dollars. Prices generally have been following the curve applicable to meats, as may be seen from consulting the various price indices. Weekly average prices of representative commodities for the month of May, 1931, show the purchasing power of the dollar as 140.2, the year 1926 being used as the basis for comparison. For the same month in 1930, the
Object Description
Title |
Quantitative measures |
Author |
Anonymous |
Subject |
Inventories |
Citation |
Haskins & Sells Bulletin, Vol. 14, no. 03 (1931 July), p. 2-3 |
Date-Issued | 1931 |
Source | Originally published by: Haskins & Sells |
Type | Text |
Collection | Deloitte Digital Collection |
Digital Publisher | University of Mississippi Libraries. Accounting Collection |
Date-Digitally Created | 2009 |
Identifier | hs bulletin 14-3-p2 |