Publication Date
Fall 1993
Abstract
Paul F. Grady is recognized in accounting history as a practitioner, a researcher, a scholar, and a public servant, (Previts, September, 1986); indeed, he epitomized the accounting professional. Grady began his professional career in 1923 and served as a partner in Arthur Andersen & Company (1932-1942) and Price Waterhouse & Company (1944-1960). During his career in public accounting, Grady served on many committees of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (Institute). He chaired the committee on auditing procedure (1944-1948) which developed and published Generally Accepted Auditing Standards: Their Significance and Scope and Internal Control: Elements of a Co-Ordinated System and Its Importance to Management and the Public Accountant.
Recommended Citation
Slocum, Elliott L. and King, Teresa T.
(1993)
"Paul F. Grady and the debate on the authority of the APB,"
Accounting Historians Notebook: Vol. 16:
No.
2, Article 6.
Available at:
https://egrove.olemiss.edu/aah_notebook/vol16/iss2/6