Contingent Liabilities: Issues and Practice; Aliona Cebotari; imf working Paper 08/245; October 1, 2008
Annex I. Accounting/Statistical Standards and Contingent Liabilities
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Contingent Liabilities Issues and Practice
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- Box A1. Accounting Standards and Standard Setters
Annex I. Accounting/Statistical Standards and Contingent Liabilities
Accounting standards are generally concerned only with those liabilities that are based on explicit obligations based on contracts or laws, limiting them to some contingent liabilities and social benefits. The standards include requirements and guidelines on when these liabilities should be: (i) “recognized,” meaning formally recorded in the financial statements of the government as a liability or expense, or (ii) “disclosed,” meaning reported in notes or narratives that are regarded as an integral part of the financial statement. This section discusses the requirements for recognition and disclosure of contingent liabilities under internationally recognized standards in accounting (IPSAS for the public sector and IFRS for the private sector; Box A1) and statistical reporting (the Government Finance Statistics Manual, GFSM 2001). It also discusses the issues related to the measurement of these liabilities under these standards. Box A1. Accounting Standards and Standard Setters There are two main internationally-recognized accounting standards: one for the private sector companies called International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) and one for the public sector, developed on the basis of the IFRS, called International Public Sector Accounting Standards (IPSAS). • The IFRS, the set of international accounting standards and interpretations for the private sector, were developed by the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) and has now replaced local standards in many countries, including those in the European Union. Many of the standards forming part of the IFRS are known by the older name of International Accounting Standards (IAS). The IASs were issued between 1973 and 2001 by the IAS Committee, which was reconstructed in early 2001 into the IASB. In April 2001 the IASB adopted all IASs and continued their development, calling the new standards IFRS. • IPSAS is a set of accounting standards for the public sector based on IFRS that is issued by the International Federation of Accountants (IFAC), and more specifically by one of its standard-setting Boards (IPSAS Board). The U.S. is perhaps the only major country that has not adopted the international standards (or standards mostly consistent with these) for either the private or the public sector. The U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (U.S. GAAP) are perhaps the most fully developed, comprehensive set of standards available, and they may do the best job of capturing the costs and risks of guarantees and other commitments, although they are not very dissimilar to IFRS. In 2002, the IASB and the U.S. Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) agreed to work towards bringing the IFRS and U.S. GAAP closer to each other (the Norwalk Agreement). In February 2006, the IASB and FASB issued a Memorandum of Understanding including a program of topics on which the two bodies will seek to achieve convergence by 2008. Download 1.26 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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