This white paper gives an overview of the software applications used by university presses to publish digital monographs. In addition, we will look at routes taken by university presses to move from all print to some e-publishing and list the supplemental online content that is typically offered for a fee.
This monograph describes the concept of allocating aggregate costs of logs, wood, and manufacturing to specific products based on those products' relative market values. It includes results of a survey and a general analysis of the issues involved.
During the last five years, interest in productivity-based group incentive plans for mill operations in the forest products industry has increased. In a 1983 monograph in this series titled "Company /Employee Gainsharing Programs," Michael B. McKay anticipated this trend. In that monograph, he defined "gainsharing" as a "group incentive plan."...
This monograph provides an introduction to financing timber and timberland. It is intended to be an overview of credit underwriting for such financing. Primary users would include borrowers and their accountants, attorneys and advisors.
This monograph provides an introduction to the accounting and tax concepts of the forest products industry. It is intended for those unfamiliar with the industry who seek only a general orientation or desire an overview before delving into the detail of specific areas. Users would include bankers, investors, accountants, attorneys,...
Internal controls have often been thought of as specific activities that are performed to ensure accounting transactions have been recorded properly and to ensure security over assets. This definition was supplemented in a previous monograph on internal controls, "Accounting Controls for a Forest Products Firm," published in January 1981 ....
This monograph presents a methodology of allocating raw material and manufacturing costs to specific products based on those product's relative market value. The concept of allocating costs based on inventoriable asset values has been referred to as cost-to-value allocations.