Sunday, January 26, 2020
Indian Accounting Standards: Barriers and History
Indian Accounting Standards: Barriers and History Introduction In the year 2005, European Union made it mandatory for all the companies which were listed have to comply with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) requirements when presenting their financial statements. This marked the beginning when International Accounting standard Board (ISAB) was professed as ââ¬Å"legitimateââ¬â¢Ã¢â¬â¢. Ever since then IFRS has spread swiftly across the world. Initially there were few hindrances like by the end of year 2004 ââ¬Å"full text of endorsed IFRS was not even available in several EU languagesââ¬â¢Ã¢â¬â¢. This research examines the evolution and obstacles to convergence of Indian Accounting Standards to IFRS starting 1st April 2011 when all the listed companies in India, will be required to present their financial statements in accordance with IFRS regulations. This research also highlights the need for the country like India, to converge their Local GAAP to IFRS. American Writer Mark Twain once commented onà India and saidà ââ¬Å"the cradle of the human race ,the birthplace of human speech ,the mother of history ,the grandmother of legend, and the great grandmother of human speech of the tradition.ââ¬â¢Ã¢â¬â¢ India is now seen as one of the fastest growing economies in the world. The increase of number of Indian companies being listed at various stock exchanges may it be NASDAQ, NYSE or LSE, the takeovers of companies like Corus by TATA or the exponential increment of Foreign Direct Investment in the country does indicate that India is now the destination where everyone wants to be a part of it. The strong economic growth, technological advancements, inflows of foreign exchange and the ever-increasing interest of almost every nation to be a part of this growth embraces the requirement of a common language in financial statements. (Purvis, gernon, and Diamond [1991]). Various studies done by researchers have concluded that ââ¬Å"principle based standards are better enforced than rule basedâ⬠and this becomes one of the reasons why harmonisation is becoming more and more essential. As far as advantages and disadvantages in adhering a common accounting rule there are still concerns within a country leave apart the issue of international convergence (Ray Ball, 2006). Only time will tell whether this convergence really serve the purpose or it was just a decision made in haste to be a part of so called IFRS ââ¬Å"brand namesââ¬â¢Ã¢â¬â¢ countries. IFAC Compliance Programme IFAC was founded in 1977 with New York as its Headquarters. Its initial purpose was ââ¬Å"the development and enhancement of a coordinated worldwide accounting profession with harmonised standardsâ⬠(brennan,1979). Presently it is ââ¬Å"a global organisation for the accountancy professionâ⬠and as at 10th August 2009 IFAC has 158 members from 122 countries representing 2.5 million accountants. ââ¬Å"Its formal mission is stated as being ââ¬Å"To serve the public interest,IFAC will continue to strengthen the worldwide accountancy profession and contribute to the development of strong international economies by establishing and promoting adherence to high quality professional standards ,furthering the international convergence of such standards and speaking out on public interest issues where the professionââ¬â¢s expertise is most relevant. To carry out this mission ,we work closely with our member bodies and regional accountancy organisations and obtain the input of regulators, standard-setters, governments and others who share our commitment to creating a sound global financial architectureâ⬠(IFAC,2006). IFAC does not set International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRSs) are not set by IFAC rather these are set by International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) . The IFAC Board formed ââ¬Å"the Member Body Compliance Programâ⬠to ensure that all the members adhere to the standards set by IFAC for its membership. The primary objective of which was to encourage members and strive for improvement in this area of compliance. The IFAC Compliance program is overseen by the Compliance Advisory Panel. The primary objective of Compliance Advisory panel is to make sure that the IFAC compliance program is properly implemented as well as properly operated by the staff members of IFAC. Statements of Membership Obligations The IFAC Board through its Statement of Membership Obligations (SMOs) issue guidelines for the members to assist in implementation of ââ¬Å"International standardsâ⬠which are issued by IFAC and International Accounting Standard Board (IASB). The motto of SMOs is to provide pre-requisites for ââ¬Å"quality assuranceâ⬠and to investigate any disciplinary actions against any members. All the IFAC members also have to participate in a program which is in three parts. The main purpose of this programme is that it ââ¬Å"seeks to understand whether and how the SMO requirements are being fulfilledâ⬠.à The information from this program helps the compliance committee to evaluate whether the members have prudently adhered to all the SMO requirements. These responses by the Members are taken on a periodical basis. Any changes in ââ¬Å"legal and regulatory environmentâ⬠or any other development made by any member is to be informed to this committee. This information is also updated in a questionnaire which is available online, by allà the members and if there are any changesà than the members are supposed to informà the compliance committee which publishes these updated responses on IFAC website. Part 1 of this questionnaire is ââ¬Å"Assessment of the Regulatory and Standard-Setting Frameworkâ⬠.à This Questionnaire provides informationà from its members about their ââ¬Å"regulatory and standard-setting framework in their jurisdictionâ⬠. Part 2 is ââ¬Å"SMO Self Assessmentâ⬠which requires members to fillà up a ââ¬Å"self assessment questionnaireâ⬠which indicates how the members have incorporated orà implementedà international standards which are issued by IFAC and the IASB. This questionnaire also helps the committee to know whether all the members have adhered to professional standards set by the governing bodies. Part 3, of the questionnaire is about ââ¬Å"Action Plansâ⬠. This questionnaire requires that members to ââ¬Å"to develop action plans, including identifying tools, resources, and regulatory changes to address areas identified through the Part 2 self-assessmentâ⬠. Part 1, Part 2 and Part 3 questionnaires are accessible to public at large. Literature Review ââ¬Å"Harmonization, standardization, and uniformity are all terms used in the literature and in previous researchâ⬠(Iordanis N.Floropulos, 2006). According to Van derà Tas (1988): ââ¬Å"Materially measurable harmonization is an increase in the degree of comparability and means that more companies in the same circumstances are applying the same accounting method to an event or giving additional information in such a way that the financial reports of more companies can be made comparable.ââ¬â¢Ã¢â¬â¢ Harmonisation can be understood as a procedure by which the gap between different accounting practices are reduced (Doupnik,1987). Sir David Tweedie, Chairman of International Accounting Standards Board said ââ¬Å" If they all use the same methods and the accounting for one transaction is the same in Sydney, as in Seattle, as in Strasburg, and in Sheffield , then they will know where they are, and there is a demand for that type of certainty.â⬠(FEI 2001). Mark T.Bradshaw and Gregory S.Miller(2007) also reiterated the same and argued that the evidences are in favour of a single set of Accounting Standards which will ââ¬Å"increase the comparability of accounting information across the countries that differ economically, politically ,and culturallyâ⬠. Emphasising the need for a ââ¬Å"common set of accounting standardsâ⬠IASB, laid three broad objectives: a)à Improvement : Improvement in existing standards, b)à Convergence : Reducing the gap between different accounting standards followed in different geographical regions, c)à Leadership : Addressing issues not resolved and developing new standards( Geoffrey Whittington,2005) ââ¬Å"The principles behind the adoption of International Accounting Standards by different countries have always been the subject of controversy in accounting literatureâ⬠(D.Zeghal, K.Mhedhbi, 2006).Indiaââ¬â¢s decision to converge to IFRS is perceived by many researchers as premature decision. Although harmonisation of accounting standards not only enhances the quality of financial reporting, increases the comparability of financial statements but without considering of ââ¬Å"country specific environment factorsâ⬠the logic/reasons for such convergence will be forfeited. Talaga and Ndubizu (1986) insisted ââ¬Å"that a countryââ¬â¢s accounting principles must be adapted to its local environmental conditionsâ⬠. In fact, Perera(1989a) went much ahead and stated that ââ¬Å"the accounting information produced according to developed countries is not relevant to the decision models of less developed countriesâ⬠. Case studies by different researchers with respect to developing countries have not reached any consensus whether the convergence or so called ââ¬Å"follow the Bandwagon approachâ⬠for IFRSââ¬â¢s will have or is having any positive effect on economic growth. It is yet to be seen that whether India will adopt IFRS or will converge its accounting standards to IFRS. Larson (1993) studied the economic growth effect of African countries with and without these standards. His results show a positive correlation in economic growth rate with adoption of IFRSââ¬â¢s when adapted with ââ¬Å"countryââ¬â¢s local conditionâ⬠. But Woolley (1998) researched the effect of such convergence or adoption of IFRSââ¬â¢s in Asian countries and he concluded that there are ââ¬Å"no significant differences in the economic growth ratesâ⬠. This again emphasises the fact that researchers have distinct opinion on whether IFRS adoption results in better economic growth or does not have any significant role. Researchers like Wolk, Francis ,and Tearney (1989) argued that ,harmonisation of accounting standards is ââ¬Å"beneficial for developing countries because it provides them with better-prepared standards as well the best quality accounting framework and principlesâ⬠. Chamisa (2000) studied the ââ¬Å"usefulness of IASââ¬â¢Ã¢â¬â¢ for developing countries. In his case study of Zimbabwe, he argued that these standards do have a positive impact on the emerging financial markets in the developing countries. ââ¬Å"Economic conditions are a major determinant in the development of a countryââ¬â¢s accounting systemâ⬠D Zeghal, K Mhedhbi (2006). No doubt with the present economic growth in Indiaà which is presuming better than in any other developing nation, IFRS will definitely boost this growth. India, by adopting IFRS gives a platform for itself where the financials can be compared easily with the peers across the globe.à According to Alhashim and Arpan (1992), who argued that ââ¬Å"environmental forces influencing accounting are economic forces, social forces, the legal system, culture, and the political systemâ⬠.à Though the legal structure or political system or culture might have an impact of financial reporting but there are other factors which have greater impact than these. One of these can be the education standards of the professionals in a country. As IFRS are more principle based so lots of prudence will be required from the professionals .à Cooke and Wallace (1990) added to these and argued that factors such as Size of business, education level, history of country, level of wealth, their development of financial markets may have influence on accounting standards. Accounting standards are governed by economics and politics( Watts,1977 ; Watts and Zimmerman,1986) so convergence has more or less enhanced integration of markets and politics across the borders (Ball,1995). D Zeghal, K Mhedhbi (2006) gave five hypotheses on the basis of these environmental forces. In his first Hypothesis he argues that if the country economic growth increases then the chances of adoption of the International Accounting Standards increases. This hypothesis correlates with the present status of a country like India which is exponentially growing. To maintain this growth rate it needs to be in line with global standards which will increase it ââ¬Å"legitimacyâ⬠. As a result of which the foreign investments will increase. In the second hypothesis he argues that the probability of adoption of IFRS increases with the increase in education level. This simply means that there is a positive relationship between educational level and the competence of the professional accountants. This hypothesis indicates that ââ¬Å"in countries where the educational level is low and expertise is weak, there is a real barrier to the adoption of IASâ⬠.à This infers that if a country wants to adopt IFRS then it needs to strengthen its educational level. This raises few concerns if test this hypothesis with the current situation in India where there is scarcity of experts who have good knowledge of IFRS. In his third Hypothesis which states that if a developing country has ââ¬Å"high degree of external economic openness it will be more inclined to adopt IASâ⬠. India being one of the fastest growing nations with increasing foreign investments is an ideal case for adoption of IFRSââ¬â¢s as per this hypothesis. Sir David Tweedier, IASB Chairman restating uniformity of accounting standards argued ââ¬Å"As the worldââ¬â¢s capital markets integrate, the logic of a single set of accounting standard is evident. A single set of international standards will enhance comparability of financial information and should make the allocation of capital across the borders more efficient. The development and acceptance of international standards should also reduce compliance costs for corporations and improve consistency in audit quality.â⬠Abdelsalam and Weetman (2003) argued that a factor like ââ¬Å"familiarity and languageâ⬠seems to favour countries which are Anglo-American because of obvious reasons. One being Anglo-American predominantly had a greater influence in the formulation and development of IASB and the other being, English being language of communication. Chamisa (2000) found that he anticipates that the developing countries which have ââ¬Å"Anglo-American cultureâ⬠will find it easier to adopt IFRS. This becomes the Fourth Hypothesis. In his Fifth and final hypothesis D Zeghal and and K Mhedbi states that developing countries which have capital markets are most likely to adopt/converge to IFRS. This hypothesis emphasises the need and why India as a country should adopt IFRS. With the present scenario where all capital markets are hitting new lows, Indian markets are performing far better than any other markets across the globe. But one should always In a recent report by world bank, it has been reported that Asian countries are recovering from the present financial crises.à Research done by Adhikari and Tondkar (1992) showed the similar results, that adoption of a ââ¬Å"particular accounting systemâ⬠is effected by the existence of capital market. Adhikari Tondkar (1992) specifically argued that ââ¬Å"countryââ¬â¢s level of economic growth has a positive effect on the development of accounting system and practicesâ⬠. L.L.Rodrigues, R.Craig(2007) in their research by using ââ¬Å"Hegelian dialectic concept of thesis, antithesis and synthesisâ⬠gaveà innovative approaches for convergence ofà local accounting standards with IFRSââ¬â¢s. They went on to and argued that ââ¬Å"in modern society, the global harmonization of accounting standards might be regarded as uncontroversial, unremarkable, and inevitableâ⬠. Hegel in his ââ¬Å"theory of dialecticâ⬠laid a concept which states that ââ¬Å"contradiction is regarded as the root of all changeâ⬠(hegal, 1969). He argued that change is inevitable and brings in a new structure or a concept( a thesis) which always have contradictions, which is always opposite to what stated (antithesis) but which brings in something new which is in-between both the concepts(synthesis). Referring to this concept L.L.Rodrigues, R.Craig argued that A thesis to be a ââ¬Å"support for globalization of accountingâ⬠and Antithesis can be said to be ââ¬Å"conflict areaâ⬠that means opposing globalization of accounting. As a consequence of thesis and antithesis another view is generated this is referred as synthesis. They outlined few proposals which arose due to thesis and antithesis.à In one of the proposals they argued that all the companies should follow their national accounting standards and prepare their financial statements accordingly. At the same time these companies should also enclose few annexure in the form of reconciliation with the International accounting standards (hoarau, 1995). In their second proposal they argued that countries should ââ¬Å"seek regional harmonization of accounting standardsâ⬠(European Union or ASEAN countries). Analysing the ââ¬Å"regional paradigmâ⬠of harmonisation of accounting standards, Saudagaran and Diga (1997, p.2,16-7) claims that in 1997 European Union supported the idea of regional harmonisation and also in the year 1992-1993 AFA ââ¬Å"pursued regionalà harmonization as a policy objectiveâ⬠. Referring to The Accounting and Auditing Organization for Islamic Financial Institutions (AAOIFI) which is an ââ¬Å"an Islamic international autonomous non-for-profit corporate body that prepares accounting, auditing,à governance, ethics andà shariââ¬â¢a standards for Islamic financial institutions and the industryâ⬠. These standards ââ¬Å"are either mandatory or used as guidelines by the regulators in.the kingdom of Bahrain, Dubai International financial centre ,Jordan, Lebanon, Qatar, Sudan and Syria (http://www.aaoifi.com/overview.html). These arguments are in favour of ââ¬Å"dual standardsâ⬠. Also many countries have adopted IFRS but not for all companies rather they have two tier system. One for big corporate houses and the other for small and medium-sized entities (SMEs). Because it is the cost factor which is bothering these smaller entities. But this view is not supported by the big international accounting firms, who caution that ââ¬Å"a two standard system, where some companies continue to use national GAAP ,may be difficult to maintain in the long run.[and] governments and national setters [should] develop formal convergence plans to eliminate these dual standardsâ⬠(Larson and Street ,2004,p.113). L.L. Rodrigues and R.Craig also argued that companies might think full adoption of IFRS but practically it will more like to have ââ¬Å"ostensible complianceâ⬠that is ââ¬Å"in the form of window dressing to appease capital markets or other users of financial informationâ⬠. Chand (2005) throws a caution on Developing countries who are tempted to be a part of so called IFRS compliance members without evaluation the ââ¬Å"cost and benefit involved in implementing IFRSâ⬠. He also emphasises the need to ââ¬Å"improve the level of professional expertise in IFRSâ⬠before adoption or convergence to IFRS. Similar caution was advised by Shyam Sunder (2009) in his commentary ââ¬Å"IFRS and the Accounting Consensusâ⬠stating ââ¬Å"Get aboard if you do not wish to be left behind on the platformâ⬠cannot be a reason to converge or adopt IFRS. He argues that the standards should be developed not just as rules but rather it should be restricted to principles. Secondly a single set of accounting standards should be applied to companies especially those which are traded as it helps investors/stakeholders to compare them with their peers across the globe. Further he argues that there should be a body which must be consisting of professionals and experts which can act as a regulatory just as Securities Exchange Commission (SEC) does in United States. He emphasis the need of educating professional to a level that they can interpret IFRSââ¬â¢s in a prudent manner. Financial Accounting Standard No. 157 (FASB 2006) which states that the companies can value their assets in any one of the three methods given in this standard. These methods are mark-to-market or mark-to-model or mark-to-judgement. The last method gives liberty to companies to value ââ¬Å"as they deem fitâ⬠. Warren Buffet called this as ââ¬Å"mark-to-mythâ⬠. Clarifications on such concept of ââ¬Å"fairâ⬠valuation are needed as it gives an opportunity for accountants to mislead the users of the financial statements. He argues that the standard setters should minimize this ââ¬Å"need for judgementâ⬠by properly responding to the queries/objections/sug gestions raised by the professionals on these standards. Shyam Sunder (2009) also stated a practical reason as far implementation of IFRSââ¬â¢s goes. He states any professional anywhere across the globe ââ¬Å"who has been drilled to memorize the specifiesâ⬠of their own national accounting standards will find it quite difficult to now thoroughly understand and cope up with the clauses of IFRSââ¬â¢s. Also there is only one language in these internationally acceptable accounting languages and that is English only. So those nations like China, Japan or say Italian or German would not find exact version of these standards. And we are talking about a common language of Financial Reporting. One of the past presidents of The Institute of Chartered Accountants (ICAI) states ââ¬Å"people who invest overseas naturally want to be able to keep track of the financial health of the securities issuers. Convergence of accounting standards is the only means to achieve this. Only talking the same language one can understand each other across bordersâ⬠. N.C.Shil (2009) argues that though harmonisation will give an effect in the form of ââ¬Å"global community as a single entityâ⬠. But there are major concerns when it comes to adoption of IFRSââ¬â¢s in United States where US GAAP is still functional. And it is yet to be seen as how far they will converge or they will just adopt. Secondly, different countries have ââ¬Å"different legal, economic, social and cultural environmentsâ⬠and it is very essential to analyse these differences as they just cannot be written off just to make sure that we are in line with internationally acceptable reporting standards. Thirdly, they emphasised the need of implementation not just adoption. It is quite a tedious task to implement without adequateà regulatory authority. IFRSââ¬â¢s are principle based standards so again load of prudence will be required by the professionals who were implementing rules based accounting standards till date. Another issue which is inevitable is the scarcity of skilled manpower in developing countries. China has reported a ââ¬Å"shortfall of 300,000 qualified accountants and is likely to require a further three millionâ⬠in times to come (N.C.Shil, 2009). More or less the same is the condition if we talk about India. At present with the current state of affairs ââ¬Å"The ROC Mumbai has over 150,000 registered companies out of which approximately 50 percent file their documents. Over 5,000 new companies are registered every year.ROC Mumbai has 4 staff who are employed to scrutinize these fillings, none of them of whom are Chartered Accountant or Company Secretariesââ¬â¢Ã¢â¬â¢.à Analyse the situation of now if India without a proper infrastructure (skilled manpower) adopt or converge to IFRS.à The concern at this hour is whether the adoption is ââ¬Å"merely as a labelâ⬠or there is a serious commitment to it. If the IFRSââ¬â¢s are adopted with such anà intension then this will lead to increase inà transparency , substantiallyà decrease ââ¬Å"information asymmetry, uncertainty and estimation riskâ⬠, and as a will result inà ââ¬Å"lower cost of capital and higher market liquidityâ⬠(Leuz and Verrecchia, 2000; Lambert et al., 2007a). This hypothesis was analysed by H.Daske,L.Hail,C.Leuz and R.Verdi (2007) who examined IFRS adoption by 24 countries between 1988 to 2004à and concluded that these the firms show a substantial decrease in cost of capital and exhibit ââ¬Å"higher market liquidityâ⬠after converting themselves from their Local GAAP to IFRS.à The problem faced even by European countries was the lack of clarity at the time of first-time adoption of IFRS. This issue still persists and there are still no clarifications on ââ¬Å"tra nsactions of specific nature such as pension and other post-retirement benefitsâ⬠(R.K.Larson, D.L.Street 2004). ââ¬Å"The focus tends to be on what the rules say, not on how they are implemented in practiceââ¬â¢Ã¢â¬â¢Ã (Ray Ball, 2006). In practice this has been a major concern even in Europe where implementation is still a major concern. Developing countries like India need to understand that mere restructuring or reorganisation of the standard setting body would not resolve this crisis. But including Government agencies on their board will overcome this tedious task of implementation (Peter Carlson,1997). ââ¬Å"The harmonisation of such standards is regarded to be neither practical nor truly valuableâ⬠(Goeltz, 1991, p.85) possibly because ââ¬Å"investors may have developed adequate coping mechanism so that their financial decisions are not impededâ⬠(Choi and Levich,1991,p.2) Because different users require different information it is difficult to satisfy their financial reporting needs with the constraints of a set of inter national accounting standards. A survey of 112 companies in India ,by Ernst Yong showed 67% of them welcomed the decision of convergence to IFRS. But majority of them were susceptible with the deadline set by the Institute of Chartered Accountants of India and the reasons stated were quite obvious. One being the cost, whether it up gradation of IT software or cost of skilled manpower. The other reason was the jugglery in the statutory laws. The Tax laws, Companies Act 1956à and all other statutory laws are yet to be modified and in a manner that they are in line with the IFRS regulations. Taking a clue from the nations who have already transited to IFRS India as a country needs to analyse the cost benefit ratio before implementing these IFRS regulations. ââ¬Å"UK companies recorded an average of à £ 625,000 for IFRS conversion training in 2005â⬠. Also Securities Exchange commission has reported that ââ¬Å"average US corporation will spend nearly $ 32 million in IFRS adoption costâ⬠. Also there is a mixed feeling of whether India will follow full IFRS regulations or will opt for ââ¬Å"modified country specific versionâ⬠like in European Union ,Singapore, Japan or Australia. Ray Ball(2006) on ââ¬Å"International Financial reporting Standards: Pros and Consâ⬠argued that without any doubts the ââ¬Å"high qualityâ⬠standards have now beenà adopted by more than 100 countries is in itself commendable. On the other side he predicts the problems with the ââ¬Å"fascinationâ⬠of IASB and FASB with ââ¬Å"fair value accountingâ⬠. When market prices are available, for any assets, then the opportunity of manipulation by managers decreases. However there is a flaw that the managers can still manipulate by using ââ¬Å"mark-to-modelâ⬠accounting. This particular clause in IFRS increases gives an opening to managers to fabricate the valuations as per their discretion. However , IASB and FASB are determined to go move ahead with ââ¬Å"fair value accountingâ⬠and FASB member L.Todd Johnson commented ââ¬Å"The Board has required greater use of fair value measurements in financial statements because it perceives that information as more relevant to investors and creditors than historical cost information. Such a measures better facilitate assessing their past performance and future prospects. In that regard, the Board does not accept the view that reliability should outweigh relevance for financial statement measuresâ⬠Ball, Robin and Wu(2003) investigated ââ¬Å"the relationship between accounting standards and the structure of other institutions on the attributes of financial reporting systemâ⬠. The study was based on four Asian countries namely Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaysia and Thailand. They argued that these countries have a greater influence towards International Accounting Standards which as a result should produce high quality financial reporting. But the ââ¬Å"institutional structures that provide incentives to issue low quality reportsâ⬠(Robert W. Holthausen, 2003). Hence Ball, Robin and Wu predicted that outcome of such structure will have a negative impact of financial reporting. Researchers are also of the view that the manner in which the European Union is formed, in the same manner Asian Countries can come together and come to a common consensus which allows ââ¬Å"free mobility of capital, Labour and enterprises across the national borders of its member countriesâ⬠.( Peter Carlson, 1997). Inida History and Overview India is a Sovereign, Secular, Democratic Republic country. It has a Government or rather ââ¬Å"Parliamentary system of Governmentâ⬠. The President is the constitutional head .In the states it is the Governor who acts as a representative of the president. There are 28 states and 7 Union territories. Each and every part of the country has a different and unique ââ¬Å"demography, history and culture, dress, festivals, languages etcâ⬠. India is ââ¬Å"seventh-largest country by its geographical area, second most populous country and the most populous democracy in the worldâ⬠. In India, responsibility of maintaining high standards in accounting, auditing and ethical standards are bestowed on the Institute of Chartered Accountants of India (ICAI). The Institute was established in 1949 under an act of Parliament. The headquarters of this accounting body is in New Delhi. The Institute also has five regional offices situated in Mumbai, Chennai, Kanpur, Kolkata, and New Delhi, along with these regional offices the Institute has 117 branches across the country. The Institute has also 19 chapters outside India and an office in Dubai. Presently the Institute has enrolled 350,000 students and 140,000 members. The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India is presently the Second largest accounting Body in the world. The Institute has maintained high standards of applicability of Accounting and Ethical standards in India. Except the recent saga of Satyam Computers no major incidence of this stature had ever been reported from India. Applicability of IFRS in India Under the new system the following companies or entities will have to comply with the IFRS requirements: a)à Companies which are listed in any of the recognised stock exchanges. b)à Banks, Insurance companies and Financial Institutions c)à Companies which in the preceding year had a turnover or more than Rs 1 billion. d)à Companies which in the preceding year had borrowings in excess of Rs 250 million. e)à Holding or subsidiary of any of the above companies At present IFRS is not applicable to SMEââ¬â¢s. Differences between the prsent regime under local GAAP and IFRS There are issues which really putting doubts in the mind of professionals or the users of financial statement which needs immediate attention. Following are few of them: 1)à As per the companies act 1956, there are specified rates for depreciation to be charged to assets by every company. The clause states that every company must charge a minimum rate of depreciation to each and every asset held. IFRS does not recognise this concept of ââ¬Å"minimum depreciationâ⬠. 2)à In India, every amalgamation must be approved by the High Court. There is no such obligation in IFRS regulation. 3)à Clause 41 of the listing agreement clearly states that there should be a separate presentation ofà extraordinary items in the financial reporting of the listed companies whereas IFRS prohibits such presentation of extra-ordinary items. 4)à IFRS conversion will have a direct impact on the reporting of Indian Banks. The transition to IFRS will affect reported net-worth, capital adequacy and available capital for all Indian Banks.à Report on ââ¬Å"IFRS convergence: Challenges and Implementation Approaches for Banks in Indiaâ⬠argues that there will be a ââ¬Å"significant impactâ⬠on the Banking industry in India particularly in the reporting of Financial Instruments, Derivatives and provisions to be made in case of loss on loans and advances. Theâ⬠Financial parametersâ⬠such as Capital Adequacy Ratio (CAR) and ââ¬Å"valuation metricsâ⬠on the basis of which the analysis is done, predictions on future aspects of the company are made will change drastically once IFRS is implemented.
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