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The Accounting Paradox - by Jeremy Nicholls
About this item
Highlights
- About the Author: Jeremy Nicholls has spent his career addressing inequality.
- 220 Pages
- Business + Money Management, Green Business
Description
About the Book
Think accounting is dull? Think again. What we accept as 'true and fair' in businesses' accounts is the key to a more just, sustainable future for all of us. Here's how we make the change.
From the Back Cover
When you think about the tools at our disposal to address the ecological, social and biodiversity challenges we face today, accounting might not immediately come to mind. And yet it is accounting standards, not science and not public policy, that set out how profit is calculated, which in turn drives investment decisions. What if we demanded that those standards reflect the true cost of business and its consequences?
Unless we look again at these fundamental principles, which have gone under the radar for so long, capital markets will continue to contribute to inequality, nature loss and climate change. What's remarkable is that we already have in place everything we need for a more just and complete approach to accounting, and forward-thinking businesses are beginning to recognize that.
Jeremy Nicholls - accountant, sustainability professional, historian and activist - sets out a vision for new way of accounting, and it's one that we can adopt immediately.
About the Author
Jeremy Nicholls has spent his career addressing inequality. He became an accountant to support the Sandinistas in Nicaragua, then spent some years with PWC working with Tanzania Railways. A co-founder and then CEO of Social Value International (SVI), a global community of social accountants with a mission to change the way the world accounts for value, he is now the assurance framework lead for the UNDP's SDG Impact Standards, designed to support organizations seeking to make a positive contribution to sustainability, and is an ambassador for the Capitals Coalition. He has researched and written widely in the field of impact accounting, including regular contributions to Pioneers Post and several books.