What is IFRS?
IFRS is short for
International Financial Reporting Standards. IFRS is the international
accounting framework within which to properly organize and report financial
information. It is derived from the pronouncements of the London-based
International Accounting Standards Board (IASB). It is currently the required
accounting framework in more than 120 countries.
It requires businesses to
report their financial results and financial position using the same rules;
this means that, barring any fraudulent manipulation, there is considerable
uniformity in the financial reporting of all businesses using IFRS, which makes
it easier to compare and contrast their financial results.
IFRS is used primarily by
businesses reporting their financial results anywhere in the world except the
United States. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles, or GAAP, is the
accounting framework used in the United States. GAAP is much more rules-based
than IFRS. IFRS focuses more on general principles than GAAP, which makes the
IFRS body of work much smaller, cleaner, and easier to understand than GAAP.
IFRS covers a broad
array of topics, including:
ü Presentation
of financial statements
ü Revenue
recognition
ü Employee
benefits
ü Borrowing
costs
ü Income
taxes
ü Investment
in associates
ü Inventories
ü Fixed
assets
ü Intangible
assets
ü Leases
ü Retirement
benefit plans
ü Business
combinations
ü Foreign
exchange rates
ü Operating
segments
ü Subsequent
events
ü Industry-specific
accounting, such as mineral resources and agriculture
There are several working
groups that are gradually reducing the differences between the GAAP and IFRS
accounting frameworks, so eventually there should be minor differences in the
reported results of a business if it switches between the two frameworks. There
is a stated intent to eventually merge GAAP into IFRS, but this has not yet
occurred.
There will be a reduced
cost for companies once the two accounting frameworks are more closely aligned,
since they will not have to pay to have their financial statements restated to
show results under the other framework in cases where they need to report their
results in locations where the other framework is required.
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