Conceptual Framework
Conceptual Framework
Purpose
NOTE* Conceptual Framework Cannot overwrite IFRS but IASB can use it to rewrite the IFRS
Financial Reporting – communicating the set of financial statement and other financial information
- why of accounting
- To provide information
3. entity resources (asset) and claims (liability and equity) and changes on it
“accrual accounting means that income is recognized when earned regardless of when received and
expenses is recognized when incurred regardless of when its paid”
- most common
Limitations
Cannot provide all information; primary users is need to consider pertinent (relevant)
information
Not the value of an entity but estimate the value of the entity
Cannot accommodate for every request for information so, they provide common info
Doesn’t have exact depiction and only based on estimate and judgement
- Predicting how management use resources for future net cash flow
CHAPTER 3
2. QUALITATIVE CHARCTERISTICS
1. Relevance
2. Faithful Representation
- related
NOTE* Earning per share is better then Book value per share in attractiveness of an investment
Ingredients of Relevance
Predictive Value – current financial information can determine future outcome of events
NOTE* Financial Position predicts dividends and wage payments and maturing commitment
- quantitative threshold
AISB definition
Obscuring information
a) Languagex
b) Info is scatter
c) Dissimilar items are combined
d) Similar items are not combined
Primary Users
Factors
Size of the item – total of the group to which item is belong (e.g. Cash in Current Asset)
Nature of the item – transaction is material (e.g. X company loans Y in unusual term)
Faithful Representation
Completeness
- results in completeness
Neutrality
- no bias
- to be neutral is to be fair
- Objectivity
Prudence
Conservatism
- “in case of doubt, record any loss and do no record any gain”
- e.g. Inventory cost is either 10,000 or 20,000. Then record the least cost
- not always required since it may cause fraud
Contingent gain – not recognized but disclose only (the expected gains is not added in the amount but
noted or disclose)
Measurement Uncertainty
- estimate is faithful if the amount is clearly and accurate and explain even high level of measurement
uncertainly
Analysis:
Legal form: the day the 12 monthly installment is finished, Y company become an owner
1. Comparability
2. Understandability
3. Verifiability
4. Timeliness
Comparability
Comparability between and across entity – comparison between entities in the same industry
NOTE* Changing an accounting standard to better alternative must be made and must be full disclosure
Understandability
Verifiability
- supported by evidence
- duplicated by measurers (accounting department or teams like internal audit is need for verifiability)
- Principle of Objectivity
Indirect Verification - Evaluating information through secondary evidence (e.g. review documentation)
Timeliness
E.g. X company decide to issue annual financial statement and not quarterly to reduce cost
3. Combined Financial Statements – 2 or more entities not linked by parents and subsidiary relationship
Primary users
- primary users
Reporting Entities
Whom to prepares?
1. Corpo, partnership, and sole proprietorship
2. parent only
5. reportable business segments of an entity ( more than 10% of total asset, revenue, and expenses )
Reporting Period
NOTE* Transaction after end of reporting period may reported if necessary (e.g. sale of asset)
Any subsequent event happen before official issuance date must be record & disclose ( 75-120 day
range after year-end )
Underlying Assumptions
1. Accounting Entity
2. Time Period
3. Monetary Value
Accounting Entity – type of business organization (sole, proprietorship, partnership, and corporation )
Time Period
Monetary Unit
1. Quantifiability
2. Stability of Peso
CHAPTER 5
- broad classes
- quantitative information
Right
a) Cash
b) Goods or Service
c) Exchange economic resources with other party on favorable term (e.g. buying in bundle to
reduce cost
d) Benefit from an obligation of another party if a specified uncertain future event occurs (e.g.
insurance, repairs to new equipment)
2. Rights that are not obligation of another entity. Right to
a) Physical Object
b) Intellectual Property
NOTE* For the Potential to exist, the right must already exist
NOTE* Control can still exist without legal right as long as entity has a way of ensuring it (e.g.
Knowledge)
LIABILITY
a) Has an Obligation
b) obligation to transfer economic resource
c) present obligation that exist as a result of past event
Obligation
Past event
INCOME
- essence is regularity
NOTE* The report may be recycle for another reporting period as long it results to relevant and faithful
represented
EXPENSE
CHAPTER 6
- linked (recognized in one statement require recognition in another) one element affects another
Production Method – recognizing income at the point of or during production (overstated income and
not commonly use)
NOTE* According to IFRS, cash basis is prohibiting to used in most of the business
Expense Recognition
Matching Principle - expenses should be matched to the revenue they helped generate, regardless of
when the cash is actually paid or received. It is a concept that guides Accrual Basis of Accounting
- cost are expensed by allocating them in different accounting period when economic benefit arises from
different time period
- example is depreciation
Immediate Recognition
Measurement
a) Historical Cost
b) Current Value
Historical Cost
- readily verifiable
- Estimate of future cash flows (how much you will benefit from useful life)
In terms of asset
In terms of liability
a) Payment made
b) Increase in value of liability that it becomes onerous
c) Accrual Interest expense
d) Amortization cost measurement in financial liability like bonds
Current Value
Fair Value
NOTE* if FMV cannot be determined then present value of cash flow is used
NOTE* FV is not adjusted for transaction cost (freight in in expense and not asset and liability)
Value in use
PV= CE / (1+r) ^ n
FV=PV × (1+r) ^ n
Fulfillment Value
- present value of the cash flows that an entity expects to incur as it fulfils a liability
Of an Asset- cost of an asset at measurement date including transportation cost (replacement cost)
Of a Liability
- historical cost
CHAPTER 7
Classifying
NOTE* dissimilar items result in less relevant, comparability, understandability and no faithful rep
Other comprehensive income- income and expense items that are not included in the main profit and
loss (P&L) statement.
Revaluation gains/losses
Aggregation- (summarize)