Our Least Important Asset, Peter Cappelli
Our Least Important Asset, Peter Cappelli
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Our Least Important Asset
Why the Relentless Focus on Finance and Accounting is Bad for Business and Employees

Author: Peter Cappelli

Narrator: Tom Perkins

Unabridged: 7 hr 52 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Ascent Audio

Published: 08/29/2023


Synopsis

Real wages have stagnated or declined for most workers, job insecurity has increased, and retirement income is uncertain. Why have jobs gotten so much worse?

As Peter Cappelli argues, these issues and others stem from the logic of financial accounting and its fundamental flaws in dealing with human capital. Financial accounting views employee costs as fixed costs that cannot be reduced and fails to account for the costs of bad employees and poor management. The simple goal of today's executives is to drive down employment costs, even if it raises costs elsewhere.

In Our Least Important Asset, Cappelli argues that the financial accounting problem explains many puzzling practices in contemporary management—employers' emphasis on costs per hire over the quality of hires, the replacement of regular employees with "leased" workers, the shift to unlimited vacations, and the transition of hiring responsibilities from professional recruiters to more expensive line managers. In the process, employers undercut all the evidence about what works to improve the quality, productivity, and creativity of workers. Drawing on decades of experience and research, Cappelli provides a comprehensive and insightful critique of the modern workplace where the gaps in financial accounting make things worse for everyone, from employees to investors.

About Peter Cappelli

Peter Cappelli is the George W. Taylor Professor of Management at the Wharton School and the director of Wharton's Center for Human Resources. Peter is the author of several books, including Why Good People Can't Get Jobs, and his work has been featured and reviewed in Time magazine, the Wall Street Journal, the New Yorker, the Atlantic, and the Harvard Business Review.


Reviews

Goodreads review by David on October 07, 2023

Not my bailiwick, so I either didn't know or hadn't thought about relevance of accounting principles to a lot of the phenomena he was mentioning. And.....couldn't quite follow all of it either, but I did get the point that accounting treats workers and a company's obligations to them as liabilities......more

Goodreads review by Brad on July 30, 2023

A sound review of the emerging pivot on the reporting horizon. I only wish Professor Cappelli was not so reserved with his reflections.......more