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Comments concerning certain Articles of the Regulation
(EC) No 1606/2002 of the European Parliament and of the
Council of 19 July 2002 on the application of
international accounting standards and the Fourth Council
Directive 78/660/EEC of 25 July 1978 and the Seventh
Council Directive 83/349/EEC of 13 June 1983 on accounting
Preface |
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Financial statements are prepared
and presented for external users by many enterprises around
the world. Although such financial statements may appear
similar from country to country, there are differences which
have probably been caused by a variety of social, economic and
legal circumstances and by different countries having in mind
the needs of different users of financial statements when
setting national requirements.
These different circumstances
have led to the use of a variety of definitions of the
elements of financial statements; that is, for example, assets,
liabilities, equity, income and expenses. They have also
resulted in the use of different criteria for the recognition
of items in the financial statements and in a preference for
different bases of measurement. The scope of the financial
statements and the disclosures made in them have also been
affected.
The International Accounting
Standards Committee (IASC) is committed to narrowing these
differences by seeking to harmonise regulations, accounting
standards and procedures relating to the preparation and
presentation of financial statements. It believes that further
harmonisation can best be pursued by focusing on financial
statements that are prepared for the purpose of providing
information that is useful in making economic decisions.
The Board of IASC believes that
financial statements prepared for this purpose meet the common
needs of most users. This is because nearly all users are
making economic decisions, for example, to:
(a) decide when to buy, hold or
sell an equity investment;
(b) assess the stewardship or
accountability of management;
(c) assess the ability of the
enterprise to pay and provide other benefits to its employees;
(d) assess the security for
amounts lent to the enterprise;
(e) determine taxation policies;
(f) determine distributable
profits and dividends;
(g) prepare and use national
income statistics; or
(h) regulate the activities of
enterprises.
The Board recognises, however,
that governments, in particular, may specify different or
additional requirements for their own purposes. These
requirements should not, however, affect financial statements
published for the benefit of other users unless they also meet
the needs of those other users.
Financial statements are most
commonly prepared in accordance with an accounting model based
on recoverable historical cost and the nominal financial
capital maintenance concept. Other models and concepts may be
more appropriate in order to meet the objective of providing
information that is useful for making economic decisions
although there is presently no consensus for change. This
Framework has been developed so that it is applicable to a
range of accounting models and concepts of capital and capital
maintenance.
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