ACCOUNTING TECHNIQUES IN KOREA: 18TH CENTURY ARCHIVAL SAMPLES FROM A NON-PROFIT ASSOCIATION IN THE SINITIC WORLD

Citation
Ho Jun, Seong et B. Lewis, James, ACCOUNTING TECHNIQUES IN KOREA: 18TH CENTURY ARCHIVAL SAMPLES FROM A NON-PROFIT ASSOCIATION IN THE SINITIC WORLD, Accounting historians journal , 33(1), 2006, pp. 53-87
ISSN journal
01484184
Volume
33
Issue
1
Year of publication
2006
Pages
53 - 87
Database
ACNP
SICI code
Abstract
Little is known about pre-1900 East Asian accounting techniques. A double-entry method of accounting may date from the 1 lth century in Korea, but extant commercial ledgers are no older than 1854. However, extensive accounts of cooperative associations survive from the early 18th century. The Mun Clan Association accounts are examined to reveal their organizing principles and accuracy. The accounts demonstrate a highly accurate system that was intermediate between single-entry and double-entry accounting. While they are not from a commercial house, the accounts display sophisticated bookkeeping techniques designed to maximize rationality within a Confucian moral economy.