Susan F. Haka
Professor
Ernst & Young Professor of Accounting
Accounting and Information Systems
Phone: (517) 432-2920
Email: haka@bus.msu.edu
PhD University of Kansas
Vita
Course
- ACC 844: Planning and Control in a Global Environment
- ACC 341: Cost Accounting
- MBA 812: Managerial Accounting Strategies
Research interests/Areas of expertise
- Managerial accounting topics including the effect of accounting methods and information on negotiations, trust, team outcomes, capital budgeting choices, and in international settings.
Bio(s)
- Sue Haka is the Ernst & Young Professor of Accounting in the Eli Broad College of Business at Michigan State University. Dr. Haka has over twenty years of teaching experience at the University of Kansas, University of Glasgow, University of Technology Sydney and Michigan State University. She is the recipient of several awards including the Michigan State University Distinguished Faculty Award and the MSU Teacher-Scholar Award. Dr. Haka’s research focuses on the role of accounting systems in business processes. Professor Haka has published in numerous academic and practitioner journals, is the co-author of two textbooks and serves on multiple editorial boards and has been Editor of Behavioral Research in Accounting. Dr. Haka is an active consultant and served on the Board of Directors of Simpson Industries, Inc., and is honored to have recently served as President of the American Accounting Association, the largest association for academic accountants in the world.
Books
- J. Williams, S. Haka, M. Bettner, and J Carcello. (2010). Financial and Managerial Accounting: The Basis for Business Decisions. McGraw/Hill Irwin.
- J. William, S. Haka, M. Bettner, and J. Carcelo. (2010). Financial Accounting. McGraw/Hill Irwin.
Articles
- A. Drake and S. Haka. (2008). Does ABC Exacerbate Hold-up Problems?. The Accounting Review January:
- S. Haka. (2006 December). A Review of the Literature on Capital Budgeting and Investment Appraisal: Past Present, and Future Musings. Handbook of Management Accounting Research; A Two-Volume Set, edited by C. Chapman, A. Hopwood, and M. Shields, Elsevier Publishing, B.V.: North Holland, 2006. Volume 2:
- S. Haka and R. Krishnan. (2005). Budget Type and Performance: The Moderating Effects of Uncertainty. The Australian Accounting Review 15: 1. 3-13.
The Eli Broad College of Business | Michigan State University | East Lansing, MI 48824 | 517-355-8377
