In their archival study, Roy and Spraakman (1996) found that the Hudson’s Bay Company had developed extensive management accounting techniques by the 1820s. However, they did not concern themselves with the origins of the management accounting techniques employed in the 1820s. Based on the Company’s archives for 1670 to 1820, it is clear that the basic components of the management accounting techniques were in place from the Company’s beginnings or by 1700. These practices were changed significantly in 1810 as the Company grappled with declining profits and the need for new management accounting techniques that allowed for efficiency in inland trading. This trading had different requirements than trading from a few posts with easy ocean acc...