Original Article

International Journal of Disclosure and Governance (2009) 6, 4–20. doi:10.1057/jdg.2008.24; published online 4 December 2008

An IFRS for private entities

Paul Pacter1

Correspondence: Paul Pacter, International Accounting Standards Board, 30 Cannon Street, London EC4M 6XH, UK

1is Director of Standards for Private Entities at the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB), London. The goal of his IASB work is to develop an accounting standard that reduces the financial reporting burden on private entities while providing relevant and reliable information that enables private entities to have better access to capital.

Received 3 October 2008; Revised 3 October 2008; Published online 4 December 2008.

Top

Abstract

Increasingly, over the past quarter century, small- and medium-sized entities (SMEs) have expressed concern that the accounting standards they are required to follow are becoming more and more burdensome. Some of that burden is unavoidable. Traditional simple accounting principles just were not designed for the complex transactions that some small companies enter into – for instance, derivatives and hedging, foreign operations, business combinations, asset sales with 'strings attached', pension obligations, and revenue transactions with multiple deliverables. But, certainly, part of that burden has arisen because accounting standards designed for public capital markets are increasingly being 'pushed down' to entities without public accountability, either because their jurisdiction has replaced its national GAAP with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRSs) or has been, little by little, converging its national GAAP with IFRSs. The International Accounting Standards Board (IASB),1 which develops IFRSs, is working on a separate IFRS for Private Entities. As part of that project, in February 2007, the IASB published for comment an exposure draft (ED) of a proposed private entity standard titled IFRS for Small and Medium-sized Entities. During the 3 years, that the IASB worked to develop the proposal, the Board had been using the term SMEs to describe the entities that would be within the scope of the resulting standard. That term is widely used throughout the world, although less so in the United States. For reasons explained later in this article, in May 2008 the IASB decided to replace the term 'SMEs' with 'private entities'. The resulting standard will be titled the IFRS for Private Entities. This article uses the term private entities. The IASB's February 2007 ED is a simplified, self-contained set of accounting principles that are appropriate for smaller, non-listed companies. It is based on full IFRSs, which have been developed to meet the needs of listed companies in public capital markets, with modifications for a private entity environment as explained more fully later in this article. Comments were due by 30 November 2007. By removing choices for accounting treatment, eliminating topics that are not generally relevant to private entities, simplifying methods for recognition and measurement, and omitting many disclosures, the ED reduces the volume of accounting guidance applicable to private entities by more than 85 per cent when compared with the full set of IFRSs. As a result, the ED offers a workable, self-contained set of accounting standards that would allow investors for the first time to compare private entities' financial performance across international boundaries on a like for like basis.

This article discusses:

  • the IASB's reasons for issuing an IFRS for private entities,
  • the types of entities at which it is aimed,
  • what the IASB has proposed in the ED and why,
  • what the IASB has not proposed, and why not,
  • how the IASB reached the conclusions that it did,
  • how the IASB plans to maintain the standard after it is issued,
  • comment letter responses to and field testing of the ED,
  • the IASB's re-deliberations through July 2008,
  • the remaining steps leading to a final IFRS for Private Entities, and
  • plans for training materials.

Keywords:

simplified IFRSs, IFRS for SMEs, private companies, IASB, Big-GAAP, little-GAAP, small business

MORE ARTICLES LIKE THIS

These links to content published by Palgrave Macmillan are automatically generated.

RESEARCH

An IFRS for private entities

International Journal of Disclosure and Governance Original Article

International Diversity in Measuring the Fair Value of Life Insurance Contracts *

The Geneva Papers on Risk and Insurance Issues and Practice Article

XBRL: Improving transparency and monitoring functions of corporate governance

International Journal of Disclosure and Governance Original Article

The effects of SFAS 131 geographic segment disclosures by US multinational companies on the valuation of foreign earnings

Journal of International Business Studies Article

Reporting on the Financial Performance of Life Insurers

The Geneva Papers on Risk and Insurance Issues and Practice Article

See all 26 matches for Research

Extra navigation

.
ADVERTISEMENT