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Innovative Illusion

Creative accounting usually ends up as creative fudging
12:00 AM Apr 28, 2024 IST | Syeda Afshana
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As per Investopedia, a premiere online resource for investment education, the term creative accounting means to “capitalize on loopholes in the accounting standards to falsely portray a better image of the company”. As such, when firms indulge in creative accounting, they often distort the value of the information that their financials provide. That’s why creative accounting is at the root of certain accounting scandals resulting from deviation from the set rules, like that of Enron.

So, creative accounting is a kind of euphemism, wherein a systematic misrepresentation is done. ‘Systematic’ because it is imaginative and unusual. It is a creative play with numbers or say, facts.

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However, it also gives rise to questionable ethics. Is creative accounting an acceptable practice for achieving goal(s)? Well, if creative accounting is aimed for distortion, then creative accounting is not a good tool at all. But the same can be used if the goal entails innovation and a sort of extrapolation for something meaningful.

For instance, in any piece of research, especially empirical, creative accounting can help in blending observations and data to reach a new understanding or creating knowledge per se. Creative accounting can also be used in deriving meaning out of numbers through ingenious convergence. Like statistics, which is one of the means to augment creative accounting. Or psephology, through which figures are put up in a constructive style.

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Yet, creative accounting usually ends up as creative fudging. It turns into fabrication that is insubstantial and unbelievable. From research, academics down to media, creative accounting has met misapplication. Many researchers fudge numbers to create a dataset. Certain academicians use stats to manipulate facts. Many media houses use creative accounting to misrepresent reality for their own advantage.

In 2012, Barack Obama’s Administration presented an employment report which cited the unemployment rate as 8.2 percent. This unemployment number had relied on bogus methods and removed a huge segment of unemployed Americans from the data. In fact, no one defined by the Bureau of Labor Statistics as “Persons Not in the Labor Force” had been counted as “unemployed”. This group of unemployed “persons” made up almost 88 million individuals -- none of whom counted towards Obama’s unemployment figures. After the real unemployment figures were analyzed, it was found that the actual unemployment rate was 14.9 percent (Fudging the numbers, editorial in Times Free Press-,2012).

In its editorial comment The Washington Times wrote, “On main street America, ‘for lease’ signs have replaced grand opening signs. Many malls are vacant and warehouses empty. Middle-class Americans see shrinking paychecks and a rising cost of living. A single massaged, distorted and misleading government datum doesn’t change any of that” (Oct.,2012). If such creative fudging is not an unthinkable practice in the world’s most powerful nation, the same can be no shocker in the rest of the world.

In 2015, Volkswagen admitted to using illegal software in their diesel vehicles to cheat emissions tests. This software detected when the car was undergoing emissions testing and adjusted the performance to meet the required standards. As a result, the actual emissions on the road were much higher than reported, leading to widespread environmental damage.

In 2018, the infamous “predatory journals” scandal came to light, revealing widespread fraudulent practices within the academic publishing industry. Predatory journals, often posing as legitimate scientific journals, exploit the open-access publishing model by charging exorbitant fees from researchers to publish their work without proper peer review.

It is but a known fact that some researchers usually offer dodgy practices as significant claims. They expound unrelated data as a linkage by relying on acute prevalence of statistics misuse or even through so-called “extrasensory perception” (ESP)! It’s like following the proverbial “Lies, damned lies, and statistics”.

As for media, the fact-fudging has normally underlined its coverage/reportage of certain sensitive and serious issues. Even media fudges their viewer/reader/user numbers to gain commercial interest or popularity leverage. The TRP mess for instance.

Its creative fudging that is much predominant and profound. And people from all walks of life perhaps find it easier to follow than scrupulous creative accounting wherein no-nonsense minds are more required than numbnuts.

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