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This revised International
Accounting Standard supersedes ias 7, statement of changes in
financial position, approved by the board in october 1977. the
revisecame effective for financial statements covering periods
beginning on or after 1 January 1994.
The standards, which have been
set in bold italic type should be read in the context of the
background material and implementation guidance in this
Standard, and in the context of the "Preface to
International Accounting Standards". International
Accounting Standards are not intended to apply to immaterial
items (see paragraph 12 of the Preface).
Objective
Information about the cash flows
of an enterprise is useful in providing users of financial
statements with a basis to assess the ability of the
enterprise to generate cash and cash equivalents and the needs
of the enterprise to utilise those cash flows. The economic
decisions that are taken by users require an evaluation of the
ability of an enterprise to generate cash and cash equivalents
and the timing and certainty of their generation.
The objective of this Standard is to require the provision of
information about the historical changes in cash and cash
equivalents of an enterprise by means of a cash flow statement
which classifies cash flows during the period from operating,
investing and financing activities.
Scope
1. An enterprise should
prepare a cash flow statement in accordance with the
requirements of this Standard and should present it as an
integral part of its financial statements for each period for
which financial statements are presented.
2. This Standard supersedes IAS
7, statement of changes in financial position, approved in
July 1977.
3. Users of an enterprise's
financial statements are interested in how the enterprise
generates and uses cash and cash equivalents. This is the case
regardless of the nature of the enterprise's activities and
irrespective of whether cash can be viewed as the product of
the enterprise, as may be the case with a financial
institution. Enterprises need cash for essentially the same
reasons however different their principal revenue-producing
activities might be. They need cash to conduct their
operations, to pay their obligations, and to provide returns
to their investors. Accordingly, this Standard requires all
enterprises to present a cash flow statement.
Benefits of
cash flow information
4. A cash flow statement, when
used in conjunction with the rest of the financial statements,
provides information that enables users to evaluate the
changes in net assets of an enterprise, its financial
structure (including its liquidity and solvency) and its
ability to affect the amounts and timing of cash flows in
order to adapt to changing circumstances and opportunities.
Cash flow information is useful in assessing the ability of
the enterprise to generate cash and cash equivalents and
enables users to develop models to assess and compare the
present value of the future cash flows of different
enterprises. It also enhances the comparability of the
reporting of operating performance by different enterprises
because it eliminates the effects of using different
accounting treatments for the same transactions and events.
5. Historical cash flow
information is often used as an indicator of the amount,
timing and certainty of future cash flows. It is also useful
in checking the accuracy of past assessments of future cash
flows and in examining the relationship between profitability
and net cash flow and the impact of changing prices.
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