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Accounting for Construction follows on from Measuring Construction, edited by the same team. It extends the coverage of some of the material in the first volume and expands the range of related topics to include, inter alia, shadow economies, accounting for informal construction and the treatment of the built environment sector in national accounts. Taken together, the two volumes collate a range of topics that are only addressed, if addressed at all, in occasional academic papers and the publications of bodies such as national statistical offices and the World Bank. Accounting for…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Accounting for Construction follows on from Measuring Construction, edited by the same team. It extends the coverage of some of the material in the first volume and expands the range of related topics to include, inter alia, shadow economies, accounting for informal construction and the treatment of the built environment sector in national accounts. Taken together, the two volumes collate a range of topics that are only addressed, if addressed at all, in occasional academic papers and the publications of bodies such as national statistical offices and the World Bank. Accounting for Construction presents international examples from the UK, Australia and New Zealand and from both academic and professional contributors. This book is essential reading for all researchers and professionals interested in construction economics, construction management, and anyone interested in how the construction industry affects the global economy in ways previously under-represented in the literature.
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Autorenporträt
Rick Best is Associate Professor of Construction Management and Economics at Bond University. He has produced numerous book chapters and papers over a 25-year career as an academic, as well co-editing four books and co-authoring one quantity surveying textbook. He was the founding director of the Centre for Comparative Construction Research. His research over the past 10 years has been focused on the problems associated with making valid comparisons of construction industries across countries and has contributed to the development of a construction data collection project within the International Comparison Program. Jim Meikle has a part-time chair in the economics of the construction sector at the Bartlett School of Construction and Project Management, University College London, and is an adjunct professor at Bond University. He retired as a partner of Davis Langdon LLP in 2005, and since then he has worked as an independent consultant with UK government departments and agencies, foreign governments, international organizations including the EU, the World Bank and the African Development Bank, and private clients. His main interests are international comparisons construction industry policy, construction data, construction productivity and construction professional services.