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Financial accounting and reporting PDF

905 Pages·2017·12.941 MB·English
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FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING AND REPORTING FINANCIAL ‘Clear, up-to-date and understandable coverage of important issues from the international perspective. Overall, an excellent text.’ Suzanne McCallum, University of Glasgow ACCOUNTING AND The 18th edition of this market-leading text provides a comprehensive overview of financial accounting and reporting, with the aim of ensuring you are able to prepare and also critically discuss IFRS-compliant financial statements. With balanced coverage of theoretical principles and up-to-date practical application of current international standards, the authors provide essential knowledge for advancing your studies and career. REPORTING New to this edition: (cid:127) Updated and revised exercises (cid:127) To aid logical progression through the text, Chapters 1 and (cid:127) Fully updated coverage of IFRS and IAS including the A F latest IFRS 9 and 16. I 2 now form Part 1 and provide a basic introduction to the N (cid:127) Inclusion of potential Brexit implications where N BARRY ELLIOTT subject, and Chapters 9 to 11 on the Regulatory Frame- work have been brought forward to follow Chapters 3 to 5 appropriate D A (cid:127) Chapter 14 ‘Financial instruments’ (IFRS 9) and Chapter 18 ‘Leasing’ (IFRS 16) have been rewritten Key features: R N JAMIE ELLIOTT (cid:127) Chapter 30 ‘An introduction to digital financial reporting’ (cid:127) Exercises of varying difficulty including questions from past E C examination papers of professional accounting bodies has been expanded to assist readers who might wish to (cid:127) Illustrations taken from real-world international company P I delve deeper into the access and use of XBRL company A data reports and accounts O (cid:127) Chapter 32 ‘Integrated reporting: sustainability, (cid:127) Extensive references included at the end of chapters L R environmental and social’ has been rewritten to reflect the (cid:127) For lecturers, complete solutions to all exercises in the A growing interest in and importance of integrated reporting book are available on the Pearson website T I C About the authors N C Barry Elliott is a training consultant. He has extensive teaching experience at undergraduate, postgraduate and professional G O levels in China, Hong Kong, New Zealand and Singapore. He has wide experience as an external examiner in higher education and at all levels of professional education. U Jamie Elliott is a director with Deloitte. Prior to this, he lectured on undergraduate degree programmes and as Assistant N Professor on MBA and executive programmes at the London Business School. T MyAccountingLab (cid:127) An eText for quick reference I (cid:127) Case studies to help you apply what you’ve learned N Join over10 million students benefi ting from Use the power of MyAccountingLab to accelerate your learning. You need G Pearson MyLabs both an access card and a course ID to access. This title can be supported by MyAccountingLab, an online homework MyAccountingLab: and tutorial system designed to test and build your understanding. 1. Is your lecturer using MyAccountingLab? Ask your lecturer for your MyAccountingLab provides a personalised approach, with instant course ID. EE feedback and numerous additional resources to support your learning. 2. Has an access card been included with the book? Check the inside IGL Key features: back cover of the book. L H (cid:127) A personalised study plan 3. If you have a course ID but no access card, go to: http://www. I (cid:127) Usable either following the chapter-by-chapter structure or by learning myaccountinglab.com/ to buy access to this interactive study TO objective programme. ET (cid:127) Worked solutions show you how to solve diffi cult problems E (cid:127) Limitless opportunities to practise NT T& H E E www.pearson-books.com L D L II T O I O T EIGHTEENTH EDITION NT Cover image: PM Images/Getty Images CVR_ELLIOTT_18_62409.indd 1 16/01/2017 15:59 Financial Accounting and Reporting F01 Financial Accounting and Reporting 62409 Contents.indd 1 17/01/2017 14:57 At Pearson, we have a simple mission: to help people make more of their lives through learning. We combine innovative learning technology with trusted content and educational expertise to provide engaging and effective learning experiences that serve people wherever and whenever they are learning. From classroom to boardroom, our curriculum materials, digital learning tools and testing programmes help to educate millions of people worldwide – more than any other private enterprise. Every day our work helps learning flourish, and wherever learning flourishes, so do people. To learn more, please visit us at www.pearson.com/uk F01 Financial Accounting and Reporting 62409 Contents.indd 2 17/01/2017 14:57 Financial Accounting and Reporting EIGHTEENTH EDITION Barry Elliott and Jamie Elliott Harlow, England • London • New York • Boston • San Francisco • Toronto • Sydney • Dubai • Singapore • Hong Kong Tokyo • Seoul • Taipei • New Delhi • Cape Town • São Paulo • Mexico City • Madrid • Amsterdam • Munich • Paris • Milan F01 Financial Accounting and Reporting 62409 Contents.indd 3 17/01/2017 14:57 Pearson Education Limited Edinburgh Gate Harlow CM20 2JE United Kingdom Tel: +44 (0)1279 623623 Web: www.pearson.com/uk First published 1993 (print) Second edition 1996 (print) Third edition 1999 (print) Fourth edition 2000 (print) Fifth edition 2001 (print) Sixth edition 2002 (print) Seventh edition 2003 (print) Eighth edition 2004 (print) Ninth edition 2005 (print) Tenth edition 2006 (print) Eleventh edition 2007 (print) Twelfth edition 2008 (print) Thirteenth edition 2009 (print) Fourteenth edition 2011 (print) Fifteenth edition 2012 (print and electronic) Sixteenth edition 2013 (print and electronic) Seventeenth edition 2015 (print and electronic) Eighteenth edition 2017 (print and electronic) © Pearson Education Limited 2000, 2011 (print) © Pearson Education Limited 2012, 2013, 2015, 2017 (print and electronic) The rights of Barry Elliott and Jamie Elliott to be identified as authors of this work have been asserted by them in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. The print publication is protected by copyright. Prior to any prohibited reproduction, storage in a retrieval system, distribution or transmission in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, recording or otherwise, permission should be obtained from the publisher or, where applicable, a licence permitting restricted copying in the United Kingdom should be obtained from the Copyright Licensing Agency Ltd, Saffron House, 6–10 Kirby Street, London EC1N 8TS. The ePublication is protected by copyright and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased, or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the authors’ and the publisher’s rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly. ISBN: 978-1-292-16240-9 (print) 978-1-292-16243-0 (PDF) 978-1-292-16242-3 (ePub) British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data A catalogue record for the print edition is available from the British Library Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 18 17 16 15 14 Front cover image: PM Images/GettyImages Print edition typeset in 10/12 pt Ehrhardt MT Std by SPi Global Printed and bound in Malaysia NOTE THAT ANY PAGE CROSS REFERENCES REFER TO THE PRINT EDITION F01 Financial Accounting and Reporting 62409 Contents.indd 4 17/01/2017 14:57 Brief contents Preface xxi Publisher’s acknowledgements xxvii Part 1 IntRoDuCtIon to ACCountIng on A CAsh FLow AnD ACCRuAL ACCountIng BAsIs 1 1 Accounting and reporting on a cash flow basis 3 2 Accounting and reporting on an accrual accounting basis 21 Part 2 PREPARAtIon oF IntERnAL AnD PuBLIshED FInAnCIAL stAtEmEnts 31 3 Preparation of financial statements of comprehensive income, changes in equity and financial position 33 4 Annual report: additional financial disclosures 70 5 Statements of cash flows 102 Part 3 REguLAtoRy FRAmEwoRk – An AttEmPt to AChIEvE unIFoRmIty 129 6 Financial reporting – evolution of global standards 131 7 Concepts – evolution of an international conceptual framework 155 8 Ethical behaviour and implications for accountants 173 Part 4 InComE AnD AssEt vALuE mEAsuREmEnt systEms 199 9 Income and asset value measurement: an economist’s approach 201 10 Accounting for price-level changes 220 11 Revenue recognition 253 F01 Financial Accounting and Reporting 62409 Contents.indd 5 17/01/2017 14:57 vi • Brief contents Part 5 stAtEmEnt oF FInAnCIAL PosItIon – EquIty, LIABILIty AnD AssEt mEAsuREmEnt AnD DIsCLosuRE 277 12 Share capital, distributable profits and reduction of capital 279 13 Liabilities 303 14 Financial instruments 326 15 Employee benefits 359 16 Taxation in company accounts 386 17 Property, plant and equipment (PPE) 410 18 Leasing 443 19 Intangible assets 465 20 Inventories 493 21 Construction contracts 519 Part 6 ConsoLIDAtED ACCounts 543 22 Accounting for groups at the date of acquisition 545 23 Preparation of consolidated statements of financial position after the date of acquisition 565 24 Preparation of consolidated statements of income, changes in equity and cash flows 579 25 Accounting for associates and joint arrangements 601 26 Introduction to accounting for exchange differences 627 Part 7 IntERPREtAtIon 649 27 Earnings per share 651 28 Review of financial ratio analysis 677 29 Analysis of published financial statements 713 30 An introduction to digital financial reporting 755 Part 8 ACCountABILIty 779 31 Corporate governance 781 32 Integrated reporting: sustainability, environmental and social 817 Index 853 F01 Financial Accounting and Reporting 62409 Contents.indd 6 17/01/2017 14:57 Contents Preface xxi Publisher’s acknowledgements xxvii Part 1 IntRoDuCtIon to ACCountIng on A CAsh FLow AnD ACCRuAL ACCountIng BAsIs 1 1 Accounting and reporting on a cash flow basis 3 1.1 Introduction 3 1.2 Shareholders 3 1.3 What skills does an accountant require in respect of external reports? 4 1.4 Managers 4 1.5 What skills does an accountant require in respect of internal reports? 5 1.6 Procedural steps when reporting to internal users 5 1.7 Agency costs 8 1.8 Illustration of periodic financial statements prepared under the cash flow concept to disclose realised operating cash flows 8 1.9 Illustration of preparation of statement of financial position 13 1.10 Treatment of non-current assets in the cash flow model 14 1.11 What are the characteristics of these data that make them reliable? 15 1.12 Reports to external users 16 Summary 17 Review questions 18 Exercises 18 Notes 20 2 Accounting and reporting on an accrual accounting basis 21 2.1 Introduction 21 2.2 Historical cost convention 22 2.3 Accrual basis of accounting 22 2.4 Mechanics of accrual accounting – adjusting cash receipts and payments 23 2.5 Reformatting the statement of financial position 24 2.6 Accounting for the sacrifice of non-current assets 24 2.7 Published statement of cash flows 27 F01 Financial Accounting and Reporting 62409 Contents.indd 7 17/01/2017 14:57 viii • Contents Summary 28 Review questions 28 Exercises 29 Notes 30 Part 2 PREPARAtIon oF IntERnAL AnD PuBLIshED FInAnCIAL stAtEmEnts 31 3 Preparation of financial statements of comprehensive income, changes in equity and financial position 33 3.1 Introduction 33 3.2 Preparing an internal statement of income from a trial balance 33 3.3 Reorganising the income and expenses into one of the formats required for publication 36 3.4 Format 1: classification of operating expenses and other income by function 37 3.5 Format 2: classification of operating expenses according to their nature 40 3.6 Other comprehensive income 40 3.7 How non-recurring or exceptional items can affect operating income 41 3.8 How decision-useful is the statement of comprehensive income? 43 3.9 Statement of changes in equity 43 3.10 The statement of financial position 44 3.11 The explanatory notes that are part of the financial statements 45 3.12 Has prescribing the formats meant that identical transactions are reported identically? 48 3.13 Fair presentation 51 3.14 What does an investor need in addition to the primary financial statements to make decisions? 52 Summary 56 Review questions 57 Exercises 58 Notes 68 4 Annual report: additional financial disclosures 70 4.1 Introduction 70 4.2 IAS 10 Events after the Reporting Period 70 4.3 IAS 8 Accounting Policies, Changes in Accounting Estimates and Errors 73 4.4 What do segment reports provide? 75 4.5 IFRS 8 Operating Segments 75 4.6 Benefits and continuing concerns following the issue of IFRS 8 79 4.7 Discontinued operations – IFRS 5 Non-current Assets Held for Sale and Discontinued Operations 82 4.8 Held for sale – IFRS 5 Non-current Assets Held for Sale and Discontinued Operations 83 4.9 IAS 24 Related Party Disclosures 85 Summary 90 Review questions 90 Exercises 91 Notes 101 F01 Financial Accounting and Reporting 62409 Contents.indd 8 17/01/2017 14:57 Contents • ix 5 statements of cash flows 102 5.1 Introduction 102 5.2 Development of statements of cash flows 102 5.3 Applying IAS 7 (revised) Statements of Cash Flows 103 5.4 Step approach to preparation of a statement of cash flows – indirect method 106 5.5 Additional notes required by IAS 7 109 5.6 Analysing statements of cash flows 110 5.7 Approach to answering questions with time constraints 116 5.8 Preparing a statement of cash flows when no statement of income is available 118 5.9 Critique of cash flow accounting 120 Summary 120 Review questions 121 Exercises 121 Notes 128 Part 3 REguLAtoRy FRAmEwoRk – An AttEmPt to AChIEvE unIFoRmIty 129 6 Financial reporting – evolution of global standards 131 6.1 Introduction 131 6.2 Why do we need financial reporting standards? 131 6.3 Why do we need standards to be mandatory? 132 6.4 Arguments in support of standards 134 6.5 Arguments against standards 135 6.6 Standard setting and enforcement by the Financial Reporting Council (FRC) in the UK 135 6.7 The International Accounting Standards Board 138 6.8 Standard setting and enforcement in the European Union (EU) 139 6.9 Standard setting and enforcement in the US 142 6.10 Advantages and disadvantages of global standards for publicly accountable entities 144 6.11 How do reporting requirements differ for non-publicly accountable entities? 145 6.12 IFRS for SMEs 146 6.13 Why have there been differences in financial reporting? 146 6.14 Move towards a conceptual framework 150 Summary 151 Review questions 151 Exercises 152 Notes 153 7 Concepts – evolution of an international conceptual framework 155 7.1 Introduction 155 7.2 Different countries meant different financial statements 155 7.3 Historical overview of the evolution of financial accounting theory 156 F01 Financial Accounting and Reporting 62409 Contents.indd 9 17/01/2017 14:57

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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.