Published by:
Harvard Business Publishing
Length: 15 pages
Share a link:
https://casecent.re/p/48345
Write a review
|
No reviews for this item
This product has not been used yet
Abstract
In practice, management makes debt-capacity decisions by drawing on advice from external sources. This method of decision making fails to assess how much risk is actually involved for an individual company. Management must formulate an approach to the measurement of risk applicable to individual corporations. Expressing the limits of long-term borrowing in terms of an income statement of data, rather than the conventional balance sheet relationship between long-term debt and the total of all long-term sources, provides a more meaningful ratio for internal formulation of policy. This article, first published in 1962, is reprinted to include a retrospective commentary by the author.
About
Abstract
In practice, management makes debt-capacity decisions by drawing on advice from external sources. This method of decision making fails to assess how much risk is actually involved for an individual company. Management must formulate an approach to the measurement of risk applicable to individual corporations. Expressing the limits of long-term borrowing in terms of an income statement of data, rather than the conventional balance sheet relationship between long-term debt and the total of all long-term sources, provides a more meaningful ratio for internal formulation of policy. This article, first published in 1962, is reprinted to include a retrospective commentary by the author.