Financial Accounting and Reporting 02
Financial Accounting and Reporting 02
Financial Accounting and Reporting 02
Accounting Standards
Accounting Standards are authoritative statements of how particular types of transaction
and other events should be reflected in financial statements. Accordingly, compliance with
accounting standards will normally be necessary for the fair presentation of financial
statements.
DUE PROCESS
International Accounting Standard Committee (IASC) prepares International Financial
Reporting Standards (IFRS) in accordance with due process. For each standard, the Board
may publish Draft Statement of Principles of other discussion documents that set out the
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various possible requirements for the Standard and the arguments for and against each
other.
Subsequently, the Committee publishes an Exposure Draft for public comment, and it then
examines the arguments put forward in the comment process before deciding on the final
form of Standard. An Exposure Draft and final Standard can be issued only when nine out of
the fourteen IASC members have voted in favor of the release.
STANDARDS
IASC publishes its Standards in series of pronouncements called International Financial
Reporting Standards. It has also adopted the body of Standards issued by the Board of
International Accounting Standards Committee. Those pronouncements continue to be
designed “International Accounting Standards”.
THE NEED FOR INTERNATIONAL ACCOUNTING STANDARDS
At present, financial reports prepared for owners or shareholders and other users involve
principles and procedures that can vary widely from country to country, and sometimes
even within a country. Accounting reports, therefore, can lack comparability. From the
viewpoint of company management, this is highly unsatisfactory because:
It can cause preparation costs for financial reports that are much higher than
necessary - a multinational company may have to prepare different reports on its
operations for use in different countries.
Business will want to have a uniform system for assessing financial performance in
their operations in different countries. They will also want their external reports to
be consistent with internal assessments of performance.
International Accounting Standards are also great usefulness for developing countries or
other countries, which do not have a national standard-setting body or do not have
resources to undertake the full process of preparing accounting standards.
The preparation of accounting standards involves considerable cost and quite apart from
the advantages uniformly, it would no be economic for each country have a separate
process.
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Auditing
Auditing is the most important branch of accountancy. Once accounts have been prepared,
they may have check in order to ensure that they do not present a distorted information.
The checking of accounts and the reporting on them is known as auditing. Business have
their accounts audited as a legal requirements.
Auditors are usually trained accountants who specialize in checking accounts rather
preparing them.
External auditors come in from outside the organization to examine accounting and
financial records and provide an independent opinion on these records. Law
requires that all public companies have their financial statements externally audited.
Internal auditors work for the organization as internal employees to examine
records and help improve internal processes such as operations, internal controls,
risk management, and governance.
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The role of the external auditors in sustaining good corporate governance is widely
acknowledged. Cadbury (1992) declared that “the annual audit is one of the cornerstone of
corporate governance.
The audit provides an external and objective check on the way in which the financial
statements have been prepared and presented...”(p.36). Through the role of external
auditor, the shareholders monitor and control the management and this helps to enhance
transparency in a company (Solomon, 2011).
Basically, the statutory role of the external auditors is to issue audit report of his opinion
on financial statements.
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