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1. USGAAP, IFRS, IGAAPASSOCHAMSeptember 30, 2005
2. Accounting Principles & Policies Imagine that you are a business owner and you take copies of your financial records (‘books’) to four different accountants. You ask each one to calculate your profit for the year. A fortnight later they provide you with their answers.
3. “.. based on cash in your bank at end December compared to prior year, you pretty much break even in 2005.” Accounting Principles & Policies
4. Accounting vsCooking
5. Most Dreaded Accounting Document
6. The Balance sheet
7. THE CORPORATE BIKINI
8. Accounting “Accounting is an art of recording, classifying, and summarising in a significant manner and in terms of money, transactions and events, which are in part at least of a financial character and interpreting the results thereof”.
American institute of CPA
The process of identifying, measuring, and communicating economic information to permit informed judgements and decisions by users of the information.
AAA
The function of accounting is to provide quantifiable information, primarily financial in nature, about economic entities, that is intended to be useful in making economic decisions.
Accounting Principles Board of AICPA
9. Basic Accounting Concepts Business entity concept
Money measurement concept
Historical cost concept
Revenue realisation concept.
Accounting period
Matching
Going concern
Accrual
Conservativeness
10. Methods of Accounting Accruals or mercantile basis
Cash basis
Hybrid system
11. Level of “judgement”.
Consistency between time periods.
Comparability between companies.
Reliability of financial information.
Risk of financial controls/ surprises.
Need for Accounting Standards
ISSUES
12. Accounting Standards “Accounting standards codify the generally accepted accounting principles. They lay down the norms of accounting policies and practices by way of codes or guidelines to direct as to how the items appearing in the financial statements should be dealt with in the books of accounts and shown in the annual reports. They present the general principles to be put to application using professional judgement. They bring about uniformity of assumptions, rules and policies adopted in financial reporting and thus ensure consistency and comparability.
13. Plethora of GAAPs US GAAP
IFRS/ UK GAAP
Indian GAAP
Country specific accounting standards
14. BURNING ISSUEHARMONISATION OF ACCOUNTING STANDARDS OF VARIOUS COUNTRIES/ ECONOMIC REGIONS
15. WHY Globalisation – opening of economies/ tariff barriers
GLOCAL companies/ MNCs
Access to international capital markets
Global listings/ overseas operations
Need for global accounting fraternity to communicate in one language, without having to acquire newer skill sets
16. WHAT DO WE DO Understand the prominent GAAPs/ structures
Try and draw comparable Accounts
Understand the differences; Reason them out
Build the Opinion
Represent to the Institute
Institute to take steps on harmonisation
Represent to global bodies wherever we have a point
Slow but Global Harmonisation is Possible
17. STRUCTURE - IGAAP Accounting Standards are issued by the ASB of ICAI
29 Accounting Standards so far – Effective 28
Other governing statutes – Companies Act/ SEBI guidelines/ Govt circulars
Broadly – IGAAP is close to IFRS
18. STRUCTURE - USGAAP
FASB – designated body to issue accounting standards (FAS) in the private sector
Recognised by SEC/ AICPA
Various other bodies/ pronouncements/ hierarchy also exist
Separate Accounting Standard Board for Govt. companies (GASB)
19. STRUCTURE - IFRS International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) are issued by IASB from 2001 onwards
Uptill 2000 – International Accounting Standards Committee (IASC) would issue IAS.
IASB adopted all the 41 IAS from 2001 onwards.
EU has made it mandatory for all the listed companies on a European Stock exchange to use IFRS by 2005.
Non compliance of IFRS may lead to delisting
Various Countries are in the process of aligning their Accounting Standards to IFRS
Steps towards harmonisation of USGAAP/ IFRS have been taken.
20. VISION
GLOBAL
ACCOUNTING
MARKET
PLACE
21. Reason for us to be here
22. FORECASTING
23. Forecasting of Sales
Forecasting of Costs
24. Financial Controls
25. Financial Controls
26. THE END