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BA606 FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING

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Accounting standard setting institutional arrangements in Australia ... Accounting Bulletins (effectively superseded from 1 January 2005) Preparation and enforcement ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: BA606 FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING


1
BA606 FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING
  • Professor Garry Carnegie
  • Lectures 1 2

2
Lecture 1 Standard setting in Australia
  • Introduction
  • Accounting standard setting institutional
    arrangements in Australia
  • The preparation and enforcement of accounting
    standards and UIG interpretations
  • Accounting standard setting in future

3
Introduction
  • Definition of accounting standards
  • a principle that governs current accounting
    practice and that is used as a reference to
    determine the appropriate treatment of complex
    transactions (The Free Dictionary)
  • principle a rule or standard of good
    behaviour

4
Introduction
  • Main sources of regulation
  • Government legislation
  • Australian Securities Exchange (ASX) Listing
    Rules
  • Accounting Standards

5
Introduction
  • Government legislation
  • The Corporations Act 2001 requires the
    preparation of financial reports by all
    disclosing entities, all public companies, all
    large proprietary companies and all registered
    schemes (sec 292)
  • These financial reports are to comply with
    accounting standards and present a true and fair
    view (sec 296 and sec 297)

6
Introduction
  • ASX Listing Rules
  • Publicly listed companies are required to comply
    with the ASX Listing Rules
  • The Listing Rules specify detailed financial
    disclosure requirements such as relating to
    continuous disclosure, periodic disclosure and
    additional reporting requirements for mining
    companies and others

7
Introduction
  • Accounting Standards
  • The Australian Accounting Standards Board (AASB)
    has the power to make accounting standards (sec
    334)
  • Authority is provided to AASB accounting
    standards under the Corporations Act 2001 (sec
    296)

8
Accounting standard setting
  • Early developments in institutional arrangements
  • Establishment of the Accounting Standards Review
    Board (ASRB)
  • Establishment of the AASB
  • Present standard setting arrangements

9
Accounting standard setting
  • Early developments
  • Accounting methods were the responsibility of the
    accounting profession
  • Formation of Australian Accounting Research
    Foundation (AARF) in 1966
  • Formation of the Public Sector Accounting
    Standards Board (PSASB) in 1983
  • Attempts to adopt a common set of accounting
    standards in public and private sectors

10
Accounting standard setting
  • Establishment of ASRB
  • Created in 1984
  • Response to the inability of professional
    accounting bodies to enforce accounting standards
  • Applicable approved accounting standards were
    accounting standards that had been approved by
    the ASRB

11
Accounting standard setting
  • Establishment of AASB
  • Commenced operations on 1 January 1991 and
    replaced the ASRB
  • Responsible for making accounting standards
    that have the force of the law
  • During the 1990s there were two accounting
    standard setting boards AASB and PSASB and two
    sets of accounting standards (AASB and AAS
    series)

12
Accounting standard-setting
13
Accounting standard setting
  • Present standard setting arrangements
  • Financial Reporting Council (FRC)
  • http//www.frc.gov.au
  • AASB
  • http//www.aasb.com.au

14
Accounting standard-setting
15
Preparation and enforcement
  • Development of accounting standards and concepts
    statements
  • Due process
  • Issue of discussion paper or accounting theory
    monograph
  • Exposure drafts of proposed pronouncements
  • Public hearings from time to time

16
Preparation and enforcement
  • International Financial Reporting Standards
    (IFRS)
  • In July 2002, the FRC announced its decision to
    adopt Australian equivalents of the International
    Accounting Standards (IAS) of the International
    Accounting Standards Board (IASB) from 1 January
    2005
  • IFRS, while adopted in Australia with little
    modification, were issued using the AASB prefix
    and are commonly referred to AIFRS

17
Preparation and enforcement
  • Other accounting pronouncements
  • Accounting Guidance Releases (Accounting
    Interpretations) (all issued before 1 January
    2005)
  • Urgent Issues Group (UIG) Interpretations
  • Accounting Bulletins (effectively superseded from
    1 January 2005)

18
Preparation and enforcement
  • Authority and enforcement of accounting standards
    and UIG interpretations
  • Accounting bodies (Miscellaneous Professional
    Statement APS 1)
  • Australian Securities and Investments Commission
    (ASIC)
  • Governments

19
Future accounting standard-setting
  • At a public lecture held in Melbourne in the
    second half of 2007, Sir David Tweedie, Chairman
    of the IASB, provided directions for
    international accounting standard-setting,
    stating that standards should
  • - be based on core principles rather than be
    rule-based
  • - contain no exceptions
  • - exhibit no inconsistencies
  • - require interpretation through the application
    of professional judgement (as the hallmark of a
    member of a profession)
  • - provide minimum guidance (i.e. interpretations)

20
Future accounting standard-setting
  • By 2011 is it estimated that 150 countries will
    be applying IAS and that US accounting standards
    i.e. standards of the Financial Accounting
    Standards Board (FASB) will be converged with
    international standards
  • By 2006, 75 countries had mandated (i.e.
    required) the adoption of IAS

21
Lecture 2 Conceptual framework for financial
reporting
  • Introduction
  • Development of accounting thought
  • Australian conceptual framework
  • Scope of financial reporting
  • Subject of financial reporting
  • Objective of financial reporting

22
Introduction
  • Double entry bookkeeping dates back to Italy in
    the 13th and 14th centuries
  • Accounting thought is just as important as
    accounting practice
  • Present day transactions reflect a modern,
    globalising world
  • Complex transactions exist and readily emerge
  • A clear understanding of the nature, purpose and
    methods of financial reporting are required

23
Development of accounting thought
  • Accounting as a University discipline
  • US Stock market crash in 1929 exposed accounting
    as a contributor
  • The US accounting profession responded by seeking
    to codify accounting principles
  • The accounting profession in other parts of the
    world also issued statements of accounting
    principles

24
Development of accounting thought
  • Official or formal conceptual frameworks for
    financial reporting emerged from the mid 1980s
  • What is a conceptual framework?
  • A conceptual framework is a set of interrelated
    concepts that define the nature, purpose and
    broad content of general purpose financial
    reporting.
  • It is the explicit rendition of the thinking of
    the standard-setting body as it lays down the
    requirements for general purpose financial
    reporting (McGregor, 1990, p. 48 as found in
    Charter, December).

25
Australian conceptual framework
  • The following statements of accounting concepts
    (SAC) were issued under the former Australian
    conceptual framework
  • SAC1 Definition of the Reporting Entity
  • SAC2 Objective of General Purpose Financial
    Reporting
  • SAC3 Qualitative Characteristics of Financial
    Information
  • SAC4 Definition and Recognition of the Elements
    of Financial Statements.

26
Australian conceptual framework
27
Australian conceptual framework
  • Structure of the present Australian conceptual
    framework
  • SAC1
  • SAC2
  • Framework for the Preparation and Presentation
    of Financial Statements (as the IASB conceptual
    framework for financial reporting as modified)

28
Scope of financial reporting
  • General purpose financial reporting is otherwise
    known as external reporting
  • Such reports are intended to provide information
    to meet the common needs of a diverse range of
    users who do not have the authority to command
    the information that they may require from an
    organisation
  • Users should be financially literate

29
Scope of financial reporting
  • The scope of general purpose financial reporting
    encompasses
  • Financial statements
  • Notes to the financial statements
  • Supplementary information
  • Voluntary information

30
Subject of financial reporting
  • The conceptual framework is concerned with
    defining and explaining the concept of the
    reporting entity
  • The concept of the reporting entity adopted in
    SAC1 requires that individual reporting entities
    be identified by reference to the existence of
    external users who are dependent on general
    purpose financial reports for information for
    making and evaluating resource allocation
    decisions (para. 12)

31
Objective of financial reporting
  • People have objectives not objects
  • The conceptual framework is an innate object
  • Nevertheless, SAC2 states that the objective of
    general purpose financial reporting is to provide
    information to users that is useful for making
    and evaluating decisions about the allocation of
    scarce resources (para. 26)

32
Objective of financial reporting
  • What financial information do users need?
  • SAC2 proposes that users of financial reports
    need information about the following facets
  • Performance
  • Financial position
  • Financing and investing, and
  • Compliance
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