Research article - Peer-reviewed, 2004
Design of economic information. A pilot study of accounting information in decision-making processes
Öhlmer, Bo; Lönnstedt, LarsAbstract
Accounting information is developed for an analytic decision-making process, whereas many farmers use an intuitive process. The aim is to determine the decisions and parts of the decision-making that farmers use for accounting information, and to what extent accounting information would be more useful if it was designed to fit the decision-making process used. A limited sample of milk producing farmers in Uppsala County, Sweden, was studied. For detecting scale problems, the values of the financial statement were of primary importance and the design of the profit and loss statement was of secondary importance. For detecting efficiency problems, the values of the profit and loss statement were most important, the content of the commentary information was the second most important, and the design of the financial statement was the third most important. Farmers using an intuitive decision-making process perceived problem detection to be easier if the information was designed to fit the intuitive process. However, farmers using an analytic decision-making process did not perceive problem detection to be easier if the accounting information was designed to fit the analytic process. Also they valued the information designed for the intuitive processPublished in
Acta Agriculturæ Scandinavica, Section C - Food Economics2004, volume: 2004, Vol1, number: 4, pages: 222-231
Publisher: Taylor & Francis (Routledge): SSH Titles
Authors' information
Öhlmer, Bo
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Economics
Lönnstedt, Lars
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Forest Products
UKÄ Subject classification
Economics and Business
Social Sciences
URI (permanent link to this page)
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/6058