Vital steps on the road to common global standards.
IAN MACKINTOSH - chairman of the UK's Accounting Standards Board
Financial Times 25/10/2007 - Asia Ed1 - Page 19
(...) Whatever the conflicting views on certain aspects of certain standards, the overriding long-term benefits of convergence have not changed. They include comparability of company performance across borders, reduced compliance costs and the abolition of reconciliations. (...)
But equivalence without a proper basis in financial reporting has dangers. Do the investors really understand the financial position and performance of the capital seeker? Will they receive relevant and reliable information in years to come?
These are dangers that will exist as long as equivalence is accepted and could to a large extent be mitigated by making the vision of a single set of standards real.
(...) But this is a caricature of the debate. History and culture count for a lot and have polarised the debate.
No-one knows all the right answers and it would be better to approach the issues in the spirit of resolving differences rather than defending the status quo.
Differences need to be tackled in an objective way. Participants in the debate should understand the traditions that shape the opinion of others and all points of view need to be considered in a mutually respectful way.
The hard work and determination of the IASB and others is starting to bear fruit. The vision of a single set of high-quality global standards looks achievable, albeit with a lot more work and debate to come. It would be a shame if we let the scale of the task overwhelm the enormity of what we can achieve.
26 outubro 2007
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