Originally Posted by
luxor62
Scrappah, as a CPA, I can plug numbers in any way a person wants to calculate future and present values; even with inflation or deflation variables considered in the calculation. Now, I cannot tell you what the exact rate of inflation or deflation is going too be, but one can get fairly close by using historical data in an economic model. There are always variables that cannot be accurately predicted, thus, the reason I say that economics is not an exact subject. As far as accounting, it is very exact, very factual. Therefore, accounting factors and criteria are not "relative" at all.
We're drifting off topic a bit but i don't see the harm as long as we're not bothering anyone else.
I dunno ... see ... i work with all different kinds of people and they do vary. There are folks like yourself, the business oriented kind, who are very good at logic and reason. Sometimes i work with artists. While sometimes lacking in common sense they have a real knack for creativity and abstract thought.
The good businessmen tend to need for things to be in absolutes. It's either black or white, up or down, one thing or another.
The real world isn't like that. The currency inflation data, not to be confused with an increase in the consumer price index, simply isn't made available to the public.
Please trust me on this: If you knew the truth it would shatter your world. I taught a banker up in Canada the abstract concepts. It took about three months because it was so alien to his way of seeing things. Once he could see it for himself, he despised me for turning his world upside down.
Better to just leave it alone and not go down that road.
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