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Total Number of Subscribers: 464 | |
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Date:13th October 2008 |
Compiled by Mr. M. Sathya Kumar | |
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Accounting for the
World In an exclusive interview with CFO.com, the
chairmen of the International Accounting Standards Board and its parent
organization explain their "huge ambition."
At the
same time that the Securities and Exchange Commission was hosting a
roundtable about the impact of fair value accounting on
For the
past two days, the trustees of the International Accounting Standards
Committee Foundation — the parent of the International Accounting
Standards Board — have been meeting to discuss changes to their
constitution. The topics — how the committee is funded, and how it would
work with a proposed international monitoring group — might seem pretty
arcane internal matters But
they're not. The Securities and Exchange Commission may have recognized
International Financial Reporting Standards for foreign companies listed
in the Under
the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, the SEC can only recognize accounting standards as
"generally accepted accounting principles" if they are set by an
independent organization that has stable funding. Paradoxically, that
means that the SEC must have enough oversight of the group to ensure it is
stable and independent. That
oversight, in turn, hinges on the development of an international
monitoring group of securities regulators that would include the SEC and
that would have substantial input into the appointment of IASC
trustees. During
an interview during a break in their meetings, CFO.com asked IASC Chairman
Gerrit Zalm and IASB Chairman Sir David Tweedie about recent developments
in IFRS, and what they will mean for
First of all, what significance, if any, should be
attached to the fact that this portion of IASC's constitutional review is
being held in What particular developments are you pleased about?
Some of your documents say that it is a "clear
organizational objective" of IASB to become "the world’s accounting
standard-setter." So, that is your official goal? In that case, do you anticipate the SEC announcing a date
for U.S. adoption sometime this summer, as some people have said might
happen? When do you think the
What indications have you received from the SEC that the
monitoring group and funding systems you are now working to set up would
be sufficient for the SEC to accept IFRS as generally accepted accounting
principles and still be in compliance with Sarbanes-Oxley?
A July 5th article in the New York Times reported
that some critics worry that a change to IFRS would "put American
investors at the mercy of overseas regulators who enforce weaker rules and
may treat investment losses as a low priority." What are your thoughts on
that? Interestingly enough, we have been looking at disclosures on IFRS
and U.S. GAAP, just on a sample basis. Actually, you get far more
disclosures under IFRS than you do under U.S.
GAAP. The same article said the rules "give companies greater
latitude in reporting earnings" and say on average companies report higher
earnings using IFRS. How do you respond? We reported recently on the FASB mid-year update in which
FASB member George Batavick said financial statement presentation, lease
accounting, and several of projects have been accelerated, which he said
was being accomplished through "dramatic scope change." For example, he
said the lease accounting project now will focus only on lessee
accounting, not that of lessors. Will you still be able to reduce the
substantial differences between IFRS and
Take
leasing for example: You've got a $600 billion
So while
we are taking about scope change, what we are really doing is pulling it
down to the core of the standard and saying is it worth doing it? The
answer with leasing is an emphatic "yes." And the same with pensions: Get
rid of all the smoothing devices, which has been done in the
The New York Times article also quoted Senator
Carl Levin, a Democrat, as saying that the
Source : The CFO.com, A leading magazine for CFO's | |
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