Guide: Accounting Theory –
Conceptual Issues in a
Political and Economic
Environment (9th Edition)
Executive Preface: The Candidate's
Strategic Toolkit
This comprehensive research report and examination guide is architected for the advanced
candidate preparing for assessment on the 9th Edition of Accounting Theory: Conceptual Issues
in a Political and Economic Environment by Wolk, Dodd, and Rozycki. Unlike intermediate
accounting texts that prioritize the mechanical application of standards (the "how"), this volume
and the ensuing examination require a mastery of metatheory—the philosophy, economics, and
political dynamics that drive the standard-setting process (the "why").
To succeed, the candidate must shift their cognitive framework from technical compliance to
critical analysis. The Wolk-Dodd-Rozycki text is distinct in its relentless emphasis on the political
economy of accounting. Standards are not viewed merely as technical solutions but as the
,outcomes of complex power struggles between regulators (SEC), standard setters (FASB), and
constituents (corporations, auditors, investors). The examination will test your ability to
deconstruct these struggles, identify the underlying theoretical frameworks, and predict the
economic consequences of accounting choices.
The "Wolk-Dodd-Rozycki" Lens: Three Pillars of Mastery
The candidate must view every question through three distinct theoretical lenses:
1. The Political/Economic Nexus: Every accounting standard has economic
consequences (e.g., the impact of lease capitalization on debt covenants) and political
origins (e.g., Congressional intervention in Oil & Gas accounting). You must be able to
trace a technical rule back to its economic incentive and political pressure points.
2. Theory Classification: You must rigorously distinguish between Normative theory
(prescriptive: what should be) and Positive theory (descriptive: predictive of what is or will
be). The text transitions historically from the normative "Golden Age" (1960s) to the
positive era (Rochester School, Watts & Zimmerman) and finally to the mixed landscape
of the FASB Conceptual Framework.
3. The Asset-Liability Ascendancy: A critical theme in modern theory—and this text—is
the paradigmatic shift from the Revenue-Expense view (matching principle dominance) to
, the Asset-Liability view (balance sheet dominance). This shift explains recent changes in
revenue recognition, leases, and pensions.
Visual Integration Strategy: The "Theory-to-Standard" Funnel
Candidates should visualize the subject matter not as a collection of isolated chapters, but as a
funnel process.
● Input (Top of Funnel): Theoretical Inputs (Postulates, Principles, Economics, Political
Pressure).
● Processing (The Neck): The Standard Setting Mechanism (FASB, Due Process,
Conceptual Framework).
● Output (The Base): Specific Standards (Leases, Pensions, Taxes) and Financial
Statements.
● Feedback Loop: Capital Markets Research (EMH, Ohlson Model) measuring the utility of
the Output, feeding back into the Input.
This guide follows that structure, analyzing the theoretical inputs before examining the specific
outputs.
Part I: The Metatheory of Accounting (Chapters 1
& 2)
1.1 Accounting as an Academic Discipline:
Art vs. Science
The debate over whether accounting is an art or a science is foundational to understanding
research methodologies. Wolk, Dodd, and Rozycki posit that while the practice of accounting
involves artistic judgment, the research into accounting strives for scientific rigor.
Accounting as Art: The "Art" perspective views accounting as a craft relying on the
practitioner's judgment, estimation, and creative interpretation of broad principles. For example,