Week 2 - Lecture 3
Week 2 - Lecture 3
Week 2 - Lecture 3
The financial reporting frame may be seen as the framework or structure establishing and
overseeing external reporting requirements. The financial Reporting Act 1993 is related to this.
Legislative Backing
o legal backing for accounting standards through the Financial Reporting Act require
compliance with financial reporting standards (NZ IFRSs)
IFRS Adoption
o NZ adoption of international financial reporting standards
Consistency
o NZ IFRSs bring consistency in accounting treatments of events; there needs to be
compliance with generally accepted accounting practice (GAAPs)
o a true and fair view of the firm's activities
Economic reality
o events should be accounted for in accordance with their economic effect
Benefit: Cost analysis
o relationship between the benefits derived from financial information and the costs
of providing that information
Acts of parliament
Conceptual Framework
The IASB’s Conceptual Framework for Financial Reporting issued in 2018 (IASB’s Conceptual
Framework) describes the objective of, and the concepts for, general purpose financial reporting.
(a) assist the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) to develop IFRS Standards (Standards)
that are based on consistent concepts;
(b) assist preparers to develop consistent accounting policies when no Standard applies to a
particular transaction or other event, or when a Standard allows a choice of accounting policy; and
ACCTN101 – Lecture 3 notes
The IASB Conceptual Framework aims to provide the foundation for standards that:
Strengthen accountability by reducing the information gap between the providers of capital and the
people to whom they have entrusted their money. Standards based on the IASB’s Conceptual
Framework provide information needed to hold management to account. As a source of globally
comparable information, those Standards are also of vital importance to regulators around the
world.
Contribute to economic efficiency by helping investors to identify opportunities and risks across the
world, thus improving capital allocation. For businesses, the use of a single, trusted accounting
language derived from Standards based on the IASB’s Conceptual Framework lowers the cost of
capital and reduces international reporting costs.
NZ Conceptual Framework
Objective:
o to provide a coherent and co-ordinated body of knowledge for accounting.
In New Zealand, we have the NZ Framework
o New Zealand Equivalent to the IASB Conceptual Framework for Financial Reporting
(NZ Framework)
To provide financial information about the reporting entity that is useful to existing and potential
investors, lenders, and other creditors in making decisions relating to providing resources to the
entity. Those decisions involve buying, selling, or holding equity and debt instruments, and providing
or settling loans and other forms of credit, and exercising rights to vote on, or otherwise influence,
management’s actions that affect the use of the entity’s economic resources.
NZ IAS 1
QUALITATIVE CHARACTERISTICS
Fundamental characteristics
Enhancing characteristics
Comparability
o Comparing information with other entities: Users’ decisions involve choosing
between alternatives
Verifiability
o Verifiability helps assure users that information faithfully represents the economic
phenomena it purports to represent.
Timeliness
o Timeliness means having information available to decision-makers in time to be
capable of influencing their decisions
Understandability
o Classifying, characterising, and presenting information clearly and concisely makes it
understandable.
Assets
o Current Assets
o Non-current Assets
o Investment Assets
o Intangible Assets
Liabilities
o Current Liabilities
o Long-term Liabilities
Owner’s Equity
o Contributed Capital
o Retained Earnings (Profit/Losses and Drawings/Dividends)
o Reserves
Income
ACCTN101 – Lecture 3 notes
o Sales Income
o Services/Fees Income
o Gains
Expenses
o Cost of goods sold
o Administrative expenses
o Selling and Distribution expenses
o Finance costs
GAAP (Generally Accepted Accounting Principles)
Entity Concept
o Identifies the area to be covered by accounting records
o Transactions are recorded from the viewpoint of the entity itself and not from the
point of owners or managers
o Transactions of the owner(s) must be kept separate and distinct from the business
activities
Legal Entity
o Need to be aware of different business structures and the legal entity issue with
regards to:
Sole Trader
Partnership -
Company – can only take belongings from the company not shareholders.
Owner and company are separate entity
Accounting Period Concept
o Economic activities of the entity
are divided into arbitrary time periods for measurement purposes
Quarters (3 months)
Half year (6 months)
Full year (12 months)
Monetary Concept
o Accounting transactions must be expressed in money terms, before they can be
entered in the financial records of a firm
Revenue Recognition
o At what point a firm should recognise revenue as being earned for the firm
Order
Cash
Credit
Double Entry
ACCTN101 – Lecture 3 notes