INTERNATIONAL
ACCOUNTING
Ø The International
Accounting Standards Board (IASB) is the independent, accounting standard-setting body of the IFRS Foundation.
The IASB was
founded on April 1, 2001 as the successor to the International Accounting Standards Committee (IASC). It
is responsible for developing International Financial Reporting Standards (the new
name for International Accounting Standards issued
after 2001), and promoting the use and application of these standards.
Ø Foundation
On January
25, 2001, the International Accounting Standards Foundation (IASF) was
incorporated as a tax-exempt organization in the US state of Delaware. On February
6, 2001, the International Financial Reporting Standards Foundation was also
incorporated as a tax-exempt organization in Delaware. The IFRS
Foundation is the parent entity of the International Accounting Standards Board
(IASB), an independent accounting standard-setter based in London, England.
On 1 March
2001, the IASB assumed accounting standard-setting responsibilities from its
predecessor body, the International Accounting Standards Committee (IASC).
This was the culmination of a restructuring based on the recommendations of the
report Recommendations on Shaping IASC for the Future.
The IASB
structure has the following main features: the IFRS Foundation is an
independent organization having two main bodies, the Trustees and the IASB, as
well as a IFRS Advisory Council and the IFRS Interpretations Committee
(formerly the IFRIC). The IASC Foundation Trustees appoint the IASB members,
exercise oversight and raise the funds needed, but the IASB has responsibility
for setting International Financial Reporting Standards
(international accounting standards).
Ø
Members
The IASB has
14 Board members (12 are full time members and 2 are part time) each with one
vote. They are selected as a group of experts with a mix of experience of
standard-setting, preparing and using accounts, and academic work. At their
January 2009 meeting the Trustees of the Foundation concluded the first part of
the second Constitution Review, announcing the creation of a Monitoring Board
and the expansion of the IASB to 16 members and giving more consideration to the
geographical composition of the IASB.
The IFRS
Interpretations Committee has 14 members. Its brief is to provide timely
guidance on issues that arise in practice.
A unanimous
vote is not necessary in order for the publication of a Standard, exposure
draft, or final "IFRIC" Interpretation. The Board's 2008 Due Process
manual stated that approval by nine of the members is required.
- Hans Hoogervorst (Chairman), Netherlands, former Minister of Health, Minister of Finance
- Ian Mackintosh (Vice-chairman), New Zealand, former Coopers & Lybrand, Chief Accountant Australian Securities and Investments Commission
- Stephen Cooper, UK, UBS Investment Research
- Phillipe Danjou, France, former Arthur Andersen, AMF (Financial Markets Authority of France)
- Jan Engström, Sweden, former Volvo Group
- Patrick Finnegan, USA, formerly of the CFA Institute
- Amaro Luiz de Oliveira Gomes
- Prabhakar Kalavacherla (‘PK’) (was an audit partner at KPMG LLP in the San Francisco office )
- Dr Elke König (Germany)
- Patricia McConnell, USA, formerly of Bear Stearns
- Takatsugu Ochi (Japan)
- Paul Pacter (US)
- Darrel Scott (South Africa)
- John T. Smith, USA, former Deloitte, FASB
- Zhang Wei-Guo, China, former Professor in Shanghai, China Acc. Standards Committee
Former IASB
members include James J. Leisenring, Robert P. Garnett, Mary Barth, David Tweedie, Gilbert Gélard, Warren McGregor, and Tatsumi Yamada.
Ø
Chairmen
On July 1,
2011, Hans Hoogervorst succeeded David Tweedie as
Chairman. David Tweedie had served as the Board's Chairman since its creation
in 2001.
Ø
Due process
The IASB
Handbook describes the consultative arrangements of the IASB. The Board
also publishes a brief guide on how standards are developed.
Ø
Funding
The IFRS
Foundation raises funds for the operation of the IASB. Most
contributors are banks and other companies which use or have an interest in
promoting international standards. In 2008, American companies gave £2.4m, more
than those of any other country. However, contributions fell in the wake of the
financial crisis of 2007–2010, and a shortfall was reported in
2010.
Ø
History
of
International Accounting
This
paper examines patterns of dissemination in accounting history research.
Empirical evidence supporting this investigation was gathered from:
(i) all
accounting history articles published in three specialised accounting history
journals and in 10 generalist journals in accounting between 1990 and 1999;
(ii) all papers given at the World Congress of Accounting Historians held in
Kyoto (1992) and in Kingston (1996);
(iii) the Societat Italiana di Storia
della Ragioneria and papers given at its biannual meetings during the 1990s,
and
(iv) a number of other secondary sources. Patterns of dissemination in
accounting history research result in a neglect of the majority of accounting
history researchers who are affiliated with non-Anglo-Saxon institutions, conduct
their research in non-Anglo-Saxon settings, and focus on observation periods
other than 1850-1945. It is argued that accounting history research would
benefit from other scholars, settings, and periods of study being reflected in
what are usually referred to as "international" journals. The paper
poses some suggestions that could enhance the international character of
accounting history research.
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