Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
IAS 1 sets out the purpose of financial statements as the provision of useful information on the financial position, financial performance and cash flows of an entity, and categorizes the information provided into assets, liabilities, income and expenses, contributions by and distribution to owners, and cash flows.
January 1, 1976: IAS 3: Consolidated Financial Statements 1976 January 1, 1977: January 1, 1990: IAS 27 and IAS 28: IAS 4: Depreciation Accounting 1976 January 1, 1977: July 1, 1999: IAS 36: IAS 5: Information to Be Disclosed in Financial Statements 1976 January 1, 1977: July 1, 1998: IAS 1: IAS 6: Accounting Responses to Changing Prices 1977 ...
IFRS 1 has been cited by Association of Chartered Certified Accountants (ACCA) as having "great practical significance" in jurisdictions that are adopting the IFRSs. [2] The standard has been endorsed by the European Commission for use in the European Union , [ 3 ] with the Commission Services finding in 2009 that the latest version of IFRS 1 ...
Comprehensive income (IAS 1: "Total Comprehensive Income") is the total non-owner change in equity for a reporting period. This change encompasses all changes in equity other than transactions from owners and distributions to owners.
The IASC Foundation changed its name to IFRS Foundation on 1 July 2010. During the first twenty years of activity, the IASB was the IFRS Foundation's dominant standard-setting body. In 2021, the IFRS Foundation created a second standard-setting board, the International Sustainability Standards Board .
IAS 17 Accounting for Leases (1982) required the capitalization of finance leases, a practice that was as yet unusual or unknown outside the United States. [ 9 ] In 1987, the IASC adopted a new strategy of strengthening its standards to make them a suitable basis for financial reporting by companies seeking cross-border stock market listings ...
IFRS 9 began as a joint project between IASB and the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB), which promulgates accounting standards in the United States. The boards published a joint discussion paper in March 2008 proposing an eventual goal of reporting all financial instruments at fair value, with all changes in fair value reported in net income (FASB) or profit and loss (IASB). [1]
IAS 1 requires a business entity to present a separate statement of changes in equity (SOCE) as one of the components of financial statements. The statement shall show: (IAS1.106) total comprehensive income for the period, showing separately amounts attributable to owners of the parent and to non-controlling interests