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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
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Introduction
Purpose and Status
1. This Framework sets out the
concepts that underlie the preparation and presentation of
financial statements for external users. The purpose of the
Framework is to:
(a) assist the Board of IASC in
the development of future International Accounting Standards
and in its review of existing International Accounting
Standards;
(b) assist the Board of IASC in
promoting harmonisation of regulations, accounting standards
and procedures relating to the presentation of financial
statements by providing a basis for reducing the number of
alternative accounting treatments permitted by International
Accounting Standards;
(c) assist national
standard-setting bodies in developing national standards;
(d) assist preparers of financial
statements in applying International Accounting Standards and
in dealing with topics that have yet to form the subject of an
International Accounting Standard;
(e) assist auditors in forming an
opinion as to whether financial statements conform with
International Accounting Standards;
(f) assist users of financial
statements in interpreting the information contained in
financial statements prepared in conformity with International
Accounting Standards; and
(g) provide those who are
interested in the work of IASC with information about its
approach to the formulation of International Accounting
Standards.
2. This Framework is not an
International Accounting Standard and hence does not define
standards for any particular measurement or disclosure issue.
Nothing in this Framework overrides any specific International
Accounting Standard.
3. The Board of IASC recognises
that in a limited number of cases there may be a conflict
between the Framework and an International Accounting
Standard. In those cases where there is a conflict, the
requirements of the International Accounting Standard prevail
over those of the Framework. As, however, the Board of IASC
will be guided by the Framework in the development of future
Standards and in its review of existing Standards, the number
of cases of conflict between the Framework and International
Accounting Standards will diminish through time.
4. The Framework will be revised
from time to time on the basis of the Board's experience of
working with it.
Scope
5. The Framework deals with:
(a) the objective of financial
statements;
(b) the qualitative
characteristics that determine the usefulness of information
in financial statements;
(c) the definition, recognition
and measurement of the elements from which financial
statements are constructed; and
(d) concepts of capital and
capital maintenance.
6. The Framework is concerned
with general purpose financial statements (hereafter referred
to as "financial statements") including consolidated financial
statements. Such financial statements are prepared and
presented at least annually and are directed toward the common
information needs of a wide range of users. Some of these
users may require, and have the power to obtain, information
in addition to that contained in the financial statements.
Many users, however, have to rely on the financial statements
as their major source of financial information and such
financial statements should, therefore, be prepared and
presented with their needs in view. Special purpose financial
reports, for example, prospectuses and computations prepared
for taxation purposes, are outside the scope of this
Framework. Nevertheless, the Framework may be applied in the
preparation of such special purpose reports where their
requirements permit.
7. Financial statements form part
of the process of financial reporting. A complete set of
financial statements normally includes a balance sheet, an
income statement, a statement of changes in financial position
(which may be presented in a variety of ways, for example, as
a statement of cash flows or a statement of funds flow), and
those notes and other statements and explanatory material that
are an integral part of the financial statements. They may
also include supplementary schedules and information based on
or derived from, and expected to be read with, such statements.
Such schedules and supplementary information may deal, for
example, with financial information about industrial and
geographical segments and disclosures about the effects of
changing prices. Financial statements do not, however, include
such items as reports by directors, statements by the chairman,
discussion and analysis by management and similar items that
may be included in a financial or annual report.
8. The Framework applies to the
financial statements of all commercial, industrial and
business reporting enterprises, whether in the public or the
private sectors. A reporting enterprise is an enterprise for
which there are users who rely on the financial statements as
their major source of financial information about the
enterprise.
Users and Their Information Needs
9. The users of financial
statements include present and potential investors, employees,
lenders, suppliers and other trade creditors, customers,
governments and their agencies and the public. They use
financial statements in order to satisfy some of their
different needs for information. These needs include the
following:
(a) Investors. The providers of
risk capital and their advisers are concerned with the risk
inherent in, and return provided by, their investments. They
need information to help them determine whether they should
buy, hold or sell. Shareholders are also interested in
information which enables them to assess the ability of the
enterprise to pay dividends.
(b) Employees. Employees and
their representative groups are interested in information
about the stability and profitability of their employers. They
are also interested in information which enables them to
assess the ability of the enterprise to provide remuneration,
retirement benefits and employment opportunities.
(c) Lenders. Lenders are
interested in information that enables them to determine
whether their loans, and the interest attaching to them, will
be paid when due.
(d) Suppliers and other trade
creditors. Suppliers and other creditors are interested in
information that enables them to determine whether amounts
owing to them will be paid when due. Trade creditors are
likely to be interested in an enterprise over a shorter period
than lenders unless they are dependent upon the continuation
of the enterprise as a major customer.
(e) Customers. Customers have an
interest in information about the continuance of an enterprise,
especially when they have a long-term involvement with, or are
dependent on, the enterprise.
(f) Governments and their
agencies. Governments and their agencies are interested in the
allocation of resources and, therefore, the activities of
enterprises. They also require information in order to
regulate the activities of enterprises, determine taxation
policies and as the basis for national income and similar
statistics.
(g) Public. Enterprises affect
members of the public in a variety of ways. For example,
enterprises may make a substantial contribution to the local
economy in many ways including the number of people they
employ and their patronage of local suppliers. Financial
statements may assist the public by providing information
about the trends and recent developments in the prosperity of
the enterprise and the range of its activities.
10. While all of the information
needs of these users cannot be met by financial statements,
there are needs which are common to all users. As investors
are providers of risk capital to the enterprise, the provision
of financial statements that meet their needs will also meet
most of the needs of other users that financial statements can
satisfy.
11. The management of an
enterprise has the primary responsibility for the preparation
and presentation of the financial statements of the enterprise.
Management is also interested in the information contained in
the financial statements even though it has access to
additional management and financial information that helps it
carry out its planning, decision-making and control
responsibilities. Management has the ability to determine the
form and content of such additional information in order to
meet its own needs. The reporting of such information, however,
is beyond the scope of this Framework. Nevertheless, published
financial statements are based on the information used by
management about the financial position, performance and
changes in financial position of the enterprise.
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