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John A. Tracy

Author of How to Read a Financial Report

19 Works 1,031 Members 6 Reviews

About the Author

John A. Tracy, CPA, is professor of accounting, emeritus, at the University of Colorado in Boulder. Earlier in his career, he was a staff accountant with Ernst Young. Ccile Laurin, CPA, CA, is a professor of accounting at Algonquin College of Applied Arts and Technology in Ottawa. She has been show more chief financial officer for three engineering firms and a law firm. show less

Works by John A. Tracy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Other names
Tracy, John Alvin
Birthdate
1934-11-08
Gender
male

Members

Reviews

6 reviews
The best book on a dull but necessary subject for all investors and businesses. A short and easy read for the dry subject matter, and you'll never read the financial page the same way again.
Welcome to the incredible world of Accounting! Yay! Accounting for Dummies is a book in the series that introduces Accounting practices to the layman. It discusses the differences between Bookkeeping and Accounting, a point that I had forgotten or overlooked. The author makes it a point to differentiate between the two of them. For instance, while a person that does Bookkeeping might use software and enter data into a computer program, an Accountant would choose between the different brands show more of accounting software and get to make specialized decisions. In general, the Accountant is the boss or manager of the Bookkeeper.

While I had taken a College Course in Accounting, that is already a story that is over a decade old. I didn’t particularly enjoy the class since it was dry, dull, and overly technical. Not that I expected something exciting, but I figured it would at least be interesting. I was wrong in that sense. Perhaps I wanted to test the Accountant waters and see what it was like.

I had hoped to brush up on some of the Accounting Jargon and maybe refresh my memories of what exactly Accounting is. In that vein, this book didn’t disappoint me. It contains a lot of information that pertains to Accounting; from the fact that you don’t need to be a CPA to be an accountant(it helps though), to the fact that there is no international Accounting Standard in place as of the printing of this book. The major parts of importance discuss how to read Financial Statements and other forms of Financial Reports. For instance, while profit is reported, it is not an independent account. It isn’t even consistently called profit. Sometimes it goes by Net Earnings or Earnings.

So it does put a large amount of effort into raising your Financial Literacy. It even goes into ‘Cooking the Books,’ stressing the fact that this is illegal. However, I suppose if you know what to look for, you can find it better in your own business or personal life. So the book is really useful. I only have one problem with the book itself. Accounting For Dummies has no workable problems. I suppose that this isn’t a huge deal since the mathematics involved with accounting is pretty basic. It isn’t like it would be for Actuarial Science or something along those lines.

In any case, this book was still good. It talks about developing an active reading stance for financial reports and so on. I would say it is pretty invaluable.
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Great book! Distinguishes between profit (sales revenue minus expenses) and cash flow - and explains how your company can make a profit, and still have no cash. And it is CASH that allows the business to stay afloat. So - many words to the wise in this excellent introduction to cash flow/accrual accounting help keep your company in business.

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Statistics

Works
19
Members
1,031
Popularity
#24,977
Rating
½ 3.4
Reviews
6
ISBNs
110
Languages
4

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