‘Money does not stink’ – Accounting and slavery

IF 1.7 Q3 BUSINESS, FINANCE
Daniel Tinkelman
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This article supplements the multidisciplinary effort sparked by the New York Times's 1619 Project to focus attention on institutions and practices that supported American slavery. Managerial and financial accounting practices support many types of endeavours. Accounting is usually done for managers, investors, and creditors. Accounting practices supported investment in, and management of slavery, a fundamentally immoral and destructive practice. Accounting served the interests of the enslavers, not the enslaved. Accounting practices helped investors in slave voyages and absentee plantation owners overcome agency problems, facilitating investment. Plantations used accounting to track enslaved people's productivity. Accounting terms and reports dehumanised enslaved men and women, classifying them as assets and as loan collateral. Accounting forms and statements treated slave ownership and the use of slave labour as routine. In these ways, accounting statements helped normalise and legitimise the practice of slavery and helped distance investors and lenders from its brutal reality.
钱不臭"--会计与奴隶制
本文是对《纽约时报》"1619 项目 "所引发的多学科努力的补充,旨在关注支持美国奴隶制的机构和做法。管理和财务会计实践支持多种类型的工作。会计通常是为管理者、投资者和债权人服务的。会计实务支持对奴隶制的投资和管理,而奴隶制从根本上说是一种不道德和破坏性的做法。会计服务于奴役者的利益,而不是被奴役者的利益。会计实践帮助奴隶航行的投资者和缺席的种植园主克服了代理问题,促进了投资。种植园利用会计来跟踪被奴役者的生产力。会计术语和报告将被奴役的男女非人化,将他们归类为资产和贷款抵押品。会计表格和报表将奴隶所有权和使用奴隶劳动视为例行公事。通过这些方式,会计报表帮助奴隶制做法正常化和合法化,并帮助投资者和贷款人远离奴隶制的残酷现实。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Accounting History
Accounting History BUSINESS, FINANCE-
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
20.00%
发文量
45
期刊介绍: Accounting History is an international peer reviewed journal that aims to publish high quality historical papers. These could be concerned with exploring the advent and development of accounting bodies, conventions, ideas, practices and rules. They should attempt to identify the individuals and also the local, time-specific environmental factors which affected accounting, and should endeavour to assess accounting"s impact on organisational and social functioning.
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