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- Title
THE PROBLEM OF IDLE EQUIPMENT.
- Authors
Avery, Harold G.
- Abstract
This paper deals with one class of property, which, under certain conditions, involves an important accounting problem. This special class, referred to as "idle equipment," comprises those assets becoming temporarily idle because operating capacity has fallen below estimated normal requirements. Idle equipment does not entail accounting treatment in the case of a plant using all of its fixed assets under normal circumstances or operating at full service capacity; manifestly there is no idle equipment. It is only when operations temporarily fall below normal capacity output that the problem of idle equipment arises. Idle equipment is not necessarily the result of obsolescence. The industry may be a stable one, the product new, and the equipment of the most recent and modern type; yet the plant may be operating at an exceptionally low capacity output. Idle equipment can be kept in first-class condition by constant trial, maintenance, and repair, and brought into use immediately whenever production returns to normal or full service capacity. Although the expense of maintenance of this nature can be capitalized, and later amortized when the equipment is brought into productive use, there still remains the problem of obsolescence.
- Subjects
INDUSTRIAL equipment; ACCOUNTING; DEPRECIATION; OBSOLESCENCE; CAPITAL; MAINTENANCE equipment; PRODUCTION (Economic theory); ECONOMIC life of fixed assets
- Publication
Accounting Review, 1940, Vol 15, Issue 4, p469
- ISSN
0001-4826
- Publication type
Article