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Grant Thornton Welcomes New Global IFRS Standard For Privately Held

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  • Grant Thornton Welcomes New Global IFRS Standard For Privately Held

    GRANT THORNTON WELCOMES NEW GLOBAL IFRS STANDARD FOR PRIVATELY HELD BUSINESSES

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    30.10.2009 10:36 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ After recent amendments in Armenian legislation,
    since January 2009 and 2010 certain organizations are required to
    prepare their financial statements in accordance with IFRS, among
    which are the banks, insurance and credit organizations. Other
    organizations, to which the requirement does not apply, may choose
    to shift from local standards to IFRS voluntarily, press office of
    the Grant Thornton reports.

    The new international financial reporting standard for small and
    medium-sized entities (IFRS for SMEs) could transform the way
    privately held businesses around the world prepare their accounts,
    said Grant Thornton, as it welcomed the publication of the global
    standard by the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB). The
    global accounting organisation believes the new standard offers a
    unique opportunity to create a standardised accounting framework for
    privately held businesses throughout the world.

    IFRS for SMEs provides a substantially simplified set of
    internationally recognised accounting principles for privately held
    businesses. Based on the full IFRSs, which were developed primarily for
    listed companies, the new standard will particularly benefit businesses
    that operate internationally. Individual countries will now consider
    the new standard, consult with local stakeholders and decide whether
    and when it should be used in their jurisdiction. Individual countries
    will also have discretion over which entities the new standard will
    apply to.

    Emil Vassilyan, Partner at Grant Thornton Amyot, explains, "Unlisted
    businesses around the world who currently have to comply with full
    IFRS will be pleased to find that the new standard is about one tenth
    of the length of full IFRS and that the number of potential disclosure
    items will be nearer to 300 than the current 3,000."

    Grant Thornton believes the case for adopting IFRS for SMEs will
    require more detailed assessment in those countries where PHBs still
    use local accounting standards. In the EU, for example, there are
    currently around 55 different SME financial reporting systems.

    Converting to new accounting principles always involves some degree
    of financial and resource cost. Businesses and their advisers will
    have to learn new terminology and accounting techniques and make
    changes to their accounting software. Despite these challenges,
    Grant Thornton believes the short term disruption will be outweighed
    by the longer term benefits for many PHBs around the world.

    Alex MacBeath, global leader of privately held business services for
    Grant Thornton International explains, "The potential of this new
    standard is that we move to a situation where lenders and investors
    are able to assess company performance from financial statements that
    use directly comparable, authoritative, internationally recognised
    principles, regardless of the country of origin of the company itself.

    This could improve access to capital and help decision-making on
    cross-border deals, quite apart from reducing the administrative
    burden on PHBs."
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