View with images and charts A Report On Concept Of Income Economic Concept of income A relatively new group of economists called ''ecological economists'' believe that continuing macro-economic expansion eventually leads to a decline in sustainable economic welfare. Ecological economists have therefore called for a halt to the highgrowth policies being widely adopted by many governments. To support their belief, and to demonstrate how Fisherian income can serve as a useful guide to a nation's macroinvestment policy, a relatively simple formula for calculating Fisherian income is introduced and calculated for Australia for the period 1967–1997. The empirical evidence suggests that Australia may have surpassed its optimal or sufficient macroeconomic scale in the mid-1970s. While, around this time, Australia began a transition to a lower rate of growth that arrested the steep decline in per capita Fisherian income, Australia had reverted back to a high-growth policy by the end of the study period. It chose not to continue the deceleration towards a steady-state economy. By 1997, per capita Fisherian income had increased to mid-1970s levels; however, the recent change in Australia's macro-investment policy is likely to have a detrimental long-term impact on the sustainable economic welfare enjoyed by its citizens. Accounting concepts of income This paper examines how conservative accounting affects the relation between accounting data and firm value. The analysis shows that conservative accounting can be characterized equivalently in terms of book value, earnings, or book rate of return. Furthermore, capitalized earnings generally provide a less biased estimate of equity value than book value does. In addition, firm growth affects the way earnings and book value are combined in valuation. A weighted average of book value and capitalized earnings, with the weight on earnings being an increasing and convex function of growth, yields an asymptotically unbiased estimate of equity value. When growth is positive, the weight on book value is negative. Author Keywords: Capital markets; Conservative accounting; Equity valuation; Book rate of return; Residual income JEL classification codes: M41; G12 How accounting gets more radical in measuring what really matters to investors A corporate balance sheet, prepared according to generally accepted accounting principles, does a reasonable job informing about the physical assets and financial capital employed by a company. But when it comes to the increasingly important intangible assets of corporate enterprises, it provides next to no insight. Usual financial reporting reveal very little that’s meaningful to assess if a corporation is successful or not when it owns a considerable portion of intangible assets. And intangible assets such as the value of the relationship to the people or