2013
DOI: 10.1108/jic-12-2012-0107
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Value added intellectual coefficient (VAIC)

Abstract: Purpose -The purpose of this paper is to study, mainly from the point of view of methodological accounting principles, the value added intellectual coefficient (VAIC), introduced by Pulic as a measure of intellectual capital efficiency (ICE). More specifically, the aim of the analysis is to investigate the strengths and weaknesses of the VAIC, primarily from the accounting theory perspective. Design/methodology/approach -The approach to the study of Pulic's contribution is as follows: first the authors submitt… Show more

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Cited by 158 publications
(72 citation statements)
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“…With the awareness that measuring IC performance is still an open question [18], we estimate the financial contribution of IC performance through value-added intellectual capital (VAIC) by Pulic [39], a model that has been widely used as the primary measure of IC (e.g., Reference [31,[40][41][42]). Consistent with Iazzolino and Laise [43] and relative to the indicators that measure value creation from shareholders' perspective, VAIC measures value creation from the stakeholder perspective and clearly accounts for IC.…”
mentioning
confidence: 75%
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“…With the awareness that measuring IC performance is still an open question [18], we estimate the financial contribution of IC performance through value-added intellectual capital (VAIC) by Pulic [39], a model that has been widely used as the primary measure of IC (e.g., Reference [31,[40][41][42]). Consistent with Iazzolino and Laise [43] and relative to the indicators that measure value creation from shareholders' perspective, VAIC measures value creation from the stakeholder perspective and clearly accounts for IC.…”
mentioning
confidence: 75%
“…Although VAIC has been widely employed in the empirical research as a measure of IC efficiency [134], it suffers from several drawbacks (for details see References [133,135]). In spite of this, in their study, Iazzolino and Laise [43] (p. 548) determined that VAIC "is a method that complements those existing and for this reason, it can be usefully included, as an innovative indicator of intellectual capital efficiency".…”
Section: Vaic Measurementioning
confidence: 97%
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“…They asserted two reasons for this situation; firstly, there is a confusion regarding capitalized items and secondly cash flow items used and intellectual capital concepts are mostly misused. Iazzolino and Laise (2013) criticizes VAIC TM model due to the misperception in the meanings of terms such as structural capital (SC) and human capital (HC). They also claimed that VAIC TM is not an alternative to other performance measurement tools, such as Economic Value Added (EVA), instead it measures a different aspect of performance, and therefore it can be a complementary part of performance measurement together with other traditional methods.…”
Section: Vaic Tm and M-vaicmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Guthrie et al (2004) (Appuhami and Bhuyan, 2015;Chang and Hsieh, 2011;Murale et al, 2010). Pulic berpendapat bahwa indikator yang tepat untuk mengukur kinerja pada era knowledge-based economy adalah value added (Iazzolino and Laise, 2013 (Iazzolino and Laise, 2013;Zéghal and Maaloul, 2010). Sehingga, alasan utama digunakannya VAIC sebagai indikator atas intellectual capital karena VAIC menggunakan data dari laporan keuangan dan hal tersebut akan mengurangi adanya kemungkinan subjektifitas atas data yang diperoleh (Chang and Hsieh, 2011).…”
Section: Intellectual Capitalunclassified