Six Capitals, or Can Accountants Save the Planet?: Rethinking Capitalism for the Twenty-First Centur

Six Capitals, or Can Accountants Save the Planet?: Rethinking Capitalism for the Twenty-First Century

By Jane Gleeson-White

A timely and fascinating account of the revolution going on in the world of finance from the acclaimed author of Double Entry .

READ FULL DESCRIPTION

Quantity Price Discount
List Price $26.95  

Quick Quote

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit

Non-returnable discount pricing

$26.95


Book Information

Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
Publish Date: 02/25/2015
Pages: 304
ISBN-13: 9780393246674
ISBN-10: 0393246671
Language: English

What We're Saying

December 02, 2015

We conclude our series of looks "inside the longlist" with a look inside this year's Finance and Economics category. READ FULL DESCRIPTION

November 24, 2015

Ryan Schleicher, who spends his days split between author services, corporate sales, and PR, takes a look inside this year's best Entrepreneurship titles. READ FULL DESCRIPTION

November 03, 2015

These 40 books—five selections across eight distinct categories—make up the 800-CEO-READ Business Book Awards Longlist. READ FULL DESCRIPTION

February 05, 2015

Jane Gleeson-White explains how accountants can save the planet by taking into account more than just financial and manufactured capital. READ FULL DESCRIPTION

Full Description

This is the story of a twenty-first-century revolution being led by the most unlikely of rebels: accountants. Only the second revolution in accounting since double-entry bookkeeping began, it is of seismic proportions, driven by the 2008 financial crash and our ongoing environmental crisis. The changes it will wreak are profound and far-reaching and not only will transform the way the world does business but also will alter the nature of capitalism.

While the wealth of nations and corporations has been vital to the global economy, increasingly the world is coming to realize that such endless growth is limited by the earth's resources and comes at a huge price to the planet and to human well-being. It simply cannot be sustained.

This revolution demands that we go beyond merely accounting for traditional financial and industrial capital and take account of the benefits and detriments to the natural world and society. It urges us to include four new categories of wealth: intellectual (such as intellectual property), human (skills, productivity, and health), social and relationship (shared norms and values), and natural (environment). Making them part of our financial statements and GDP figures may be the only way to address the many calamities we face.

Just two years ago this revolution seemed idealistic and unlikely. Today it is quickly unfolding. In 2012, the sea-change year, two key initiatives took root: an international movement to transform how corporate accounting is calculated and the rise of incorporating the effects on the environment to the accounting of national and global economies. Six Capitals tells the story of this coming new age in capitalism, evaluating its promise and the disaster that lies ahead if it is not implemented.

About the Author

Jane Gleeson-White is the author of Double Entry: How the Merchants of Venice Created Modern Finance , which won the 2012 Waverley Library Award for Literature.

Learn More

Want to learn more about  our GDPR and cookie policy? Click here to read our full policy.