Accounting Standards In Accounting

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For many successful businesses operating today, there are accountants hard at work tracking every single incoming and outgoing financial transaction that occurs within a company. Accounting is crucial to a company’s longevity and vital to its survival. Accountants keep a record of all incoming and outgoing financial transactions that happen within a business and are considered to be valuable advisors to business owners and company management where financial matters are concerned. They often advise on current and future financial expenses that may affect a company’s financial well- being. In addition, accountants analyze and produce financial reports, prepare tax reports, as well as, voice their opinions about future financial transactions that …show more content…

So, in an effort to bring harmonization to accounting standards around the globe, the International Accounting Standards Board, or IASB, introduced the International Financial Reporting Standards, commonly referred to as IFRS in 2001. CITATION Sov15 l 1033 (Sovbetov, 2015). The idea behind developing standards that would be indistinguishable from country to country is for accountants to prepare financial statements that are comparable on every relevant level to provide the investor with the most unbiased information as possible for making an investment decision. By preparing the financial statements following the same set of standards that have been laid out by IFRS, accountants around the world can prepare the information in a way that mitigates dissimilarities and makes reading the information easier. CITATION Mar15 l 1033 (Martin, 2015). By requiring that standards placed on the preparation of financial statements are synonymous, a certain quality is lent to the …show more content…

Kargin (2013) defines value relevance as “the ability of information disclosed by financial statements to capture and summarize firm value.” More often, the information disclosed is book value or the value of the company after the total cost of liabilities are subtracted from the value of assets. He goes on to explain how value relevance can be measured, “through the statistical relations between information presented by financial statements and stock market values or returns.” CITATION Kar13 l 1033 (Kargin, 2013). In his study, Kargin (2013) investigates IFRS effects on value relevance for Turkish firms from 1998 to 2011. He determines that IFRS has increased in value relevance by comparing value relevance before (1998 to 2005) and after (2005 to 2011) IFRS implementation in Turkey, and concludes that the biggest improvement was seen in overall book values CITATION Kar13 l 1033 (Kargin, 2013). In addition, in May 2011, The International Accounting Standards Board issued IFRS 13 Fair Value Measurement, which provides a single framework for determining fair value on the sale of an asset, opposed to estimating the value based on the historical cost, which was the standard method of determining value before implementation of IFRS 13.The IFRS defines fair value as, “the price that would be received to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability in an

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