Financial Accounting and Reporting, Twentieth Edition
Jamie Elliott and Barry Elliott
Contents
Preface
Authors’ acknowledgements
Part 1
INTRODUCTION TO ACCOUNTING ON A CASH FLOW AND
ACCRUAL ACCOUNTING BASIS
1 Accounting and reporting on a cash flow basis
1.1 Introduction
1.2 Shareholders
1.3 What skills does an accountant require in respect of external reports?
1.4 Managers
1.5 What skills does an accountant require in respect of internal reports?
1.6 Procedural steps when reporting to internal users
1.7 Agency costs
1.8 Illustration of periodic financial statements prepared under
the cash flow concept to disclose realised operating cash flows
1.9 Illustration of preparation of statement of financial position
1.10 Treatment of non-current assets in the cash flow model
1.11 What are the characteristics of these data that make them reliable?
1.12 Reports to external users
1.13 Micro businesses
Summary
Review questions
Exercises
Notes
2 Accounting and reporting on an accrual accounting basis
2.1 Introduction
2.2 Historical cost convention
2.3 Accrual basis of accounting
2.4 Mechanics of accrual accounting – adjusting cash receipts
and payments
2.5 Reformatting the statement of financial position
2.6 Accounting for the sacrifice of non-current assets
2.7 Published statement of cash flows
Summary
Review questions
Exercises
Notes
Part 2
PREPARATION OF INTERNAL AND PUBLISHED FINANCIAL
STATEMENTS
3 Preparation of financial statements of profit or loss and
other comprehensive income, changes in equity and
financial position
3.1 Introduction
3.2 Preparing an internal statement of profit or loss from a trial
balance
3.3 Reorganising the income and expenses into one of the
formats required for publication
3.4 Format 1: classification of operating expenses and other
income by function
3.5 Format 2: classification of operating expenses according to
their nature
3.6 Other information to be presented in the profit or loss
section
3.7 Other comprehensive income
3.8 Presentation of non-recurring items and their effect on
operating income
3.9 How decision-useful is the statement of profit or loss and
other comprehensive income?
3.10 Statement of changes in equity
3.11 The statement of financial position
3.12 The explanatory notes that are part of the financial
statements
3.13 Has prescribing the formats meant that identical
transactions are reported identically?
3.14 Fair presentation
3.15 What does an investor need in addition to the primary
financial statements to make decisions?
3.16 IAS 1 ED General Presentation and Disclosures
Summary
Review questions
Exercises
Notes
4 Annual report: additional financial disclosures
4.1 Introduction
4.2 IAS 10 Events after the Reporting Period
4.3 IAS 8 Accounting Policies, Changes in Accounting
Estimates and Errors
4.4 What do segment reports provide?
4.5 IFRS 8 Operating Segments
4.6 Benefits and continuing concerns following the issue of
IFRS 8
4.7 Discontinued operations – IFRS 5 Non-current Assets Held
for Sale and Discontinued Operations
4.8 Held for sale – IFRS 5 Non-current Assets Held for Sale
and Discontinued Operations
4.9 IAS 24 Related Party Disclosures
Summary
Review questions
Exercises
Notes
5 Statements of cash flows
5.1 Introduction
5.2 Development of statements of cash flows
5.3 Applying IAS 7 (revised) Statement of Cash Flows
5.4 Step approach to preparation of a statement of cash flows
– indirect method
5.5 Additional notes required by IAS 7
5.6 Analysing statements of cash flows
5.7 Approach to answering questions with time constraints
5.8 Preparing a statement of cash flows when no statement of
income is available
5.9 Critique of cash flow accounting
Summary
Review questions
Exercises
Notes
6 Accounting for price-level changes
6.1 Introduction
6.2 Review of the problems of historical cost accounting (HCA)
6.4 The concepts in principle
6.5 The four models illustrated for a company with cash
purchases and sales
6.6 Critique of each model
6.7 Operating capital maintenance – a comprehensive
example
6.8 Critique of CCA statements
6.9 Measurement bases
6.10 The IASB position where there is hyperinflation
6.11 Future developments
Summary
Review questions
Exercises
Bibliography
Notes
Part 3
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK – AN ATTEMPT TO ACHIEVE
UNIFORMITY
7 Financial reporting – evolution of global standards
7.1 Introduction
7.2 Why do we need financial reporting standards?
7.3 Why do we need standards to be mandatory?
7.4 Arguments in support of standards
7.5 Arguments against standards
7.6 The Financial Reporting Council (FRC) as a regulatory body
7.7 The International Accounting Standards Board
7.8 Standard setting and enforcement in the European Union
(EU)
7.9 Standard setting and enforcement in the US
7.10 Advantages and disadvantages of global standards for
publicly accountable entities
7.11 How do reporting requirements differ for non-publicly
accountable entities?
7.12 IFRS for SMEs
7.13 Why have there been differences in financial reporting?
7.14 Move towards a conceptual framework
Summary
Review questions
Exercises
Notes
8 Concepts – evolution of an international conceptual
framework
8.1 Introduction
8.2 Different countries meant different financial statements
8.3 Historical overview of the evolution of financial accounting
theory
8.4 Developing the Framework for the Preparation and
Presentation of Financial Statements
8.5 Conceptual Framework for Financial Reporting 2018
8.6 Current developments – concept of materiality
Summary and evaluation of position to date
Review questions
Exercises
9 Revenue recognition
9.1 Introduction
9.2 The issues involved in developing the new standard
9.3 IFRS 15 Revenue from Contracts with Customers
9.4 Five-step process to identify the amount and timing of
revenue
9.5 Disclosures
Summary
Review questions
Exercises
Notes
Part 4
STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL POSITION – EQUITY, LIABILITY
AND ASSET MEASUREMENT AND DISCLOSURE
10 Share capital, distributable profits and reduction of capital
10.1 Introduction
10.2 Common themes
10.3 Total owners’ equity: an overview
10.4 Total shareholders’ funds: more detailed explanation
10.5 Accounting entries on issue of shares
10.6 Creditor protection: capital maintenance concept
10.7 Creditor protection: why capital maintenance rules are
necessary
10.8 Creditor protection: how to quantify the amounts
available to meet creditors’ claims
10.9 Issued share capital: minimum share capital
10.10 Distributable profits: general considerations
10.11 Distributable profits: how to arrive at the amount using
relevant accounts
10.12 When may capital be reduced?
10.13 Writing off part of capital which has already been lost
and is not represented by assets
10.14 Repayment of part of paid-in capital to shareholders or
cancellation of unpaid share capital
10.15 Purchase of own shares
Summary
Review questions
Exercises
Notes
11 Liabilities
11.1 Introduction
11.2 Provisions – a decision tree approach to their impact on
the statement of financial position
11.3 Treatment of provisions
11.4 The general principles that IAS 37 applies to the
recognition of a provision
11.5 Management approach to measuring the amount of a
provision
11.6 Application of criteria illustrated
11.7 Provisions for specific purposes
11.8 Contingent liabilities
11.9 Contingent assets
11.10 Criticisms of IAS 37
11.11 Future progress
Summary
Review questions
Exercises
Notes
12 Financial instruments
12.1 Introduction
12.2 Financial instruments – the IASB’s problem child
12.3 IAS 32 Financial Instruments: Disclosure and
Presentation
12.4 IFRS 9 Financial Instruments
12.5 IFRS 7 Financial Instruments: Disclosure
Summary
Review questions
Exercises
Notes
13 Employee benefits
13.1 Introduction
13.2 Greater employee interest in pensions
13.3 Financial reporting implications
13.4 Types of scheme
13.5 Accounting for defined contribution pension schemes
13.6 Accounting for defined benefit pension schemes
13.7 IAS 19 Employee Benefits
13.8 The asset or liability for pension and other post-
retirement costs
13.9 Changes in the pension asset or liability position
13.10 Comprehensive illustration
13.11 Multi-employer plans
13.12 Disclosures
13.13 Other long-service benefits
13.14 Short-term benefits
13.15 Termination benefits
13.16 IFRS 2 Share-based Payment
13.17 Scope of IFRS 2
13.18 Recognition and measurement
13.19 Equity-settled share-based payments
13.20 Cash-settled share-based payments
13.21 Transactions which may be settled in cash or shares
13.22 IAS 26 Accounting and Reporting by Retirement Benefit
Plans
Summary
Review questions
Exercises
Notes
14 Taxation in company accounts
14.1 Introduction
14.2 Corporation tax
14.3 Corporation tax systems – the theoretical background
14.4 Dividends pre- and post-2016
14.5 Corporation tax systems – avoidance and evasion
14.6 IAS 12 – accounting for current taxation
14.7 Deferred tax
14.8 A critique of deferred taxation
14.9 Value added tax (VAT)
Summary
Review questions
Exercises
Notes
15 Property, plant and equipment (PPE)
15.1 Introduction
15.2 PPE – concepts and the relevant IASs and IFRSs
15.3 What is PPE?
15.4 How is the cost of PPE determined?
15.5 What is depreciation?
15.6 What are the constituents in the depreciation formula?
15.7 Calculation of depreciation
15.8 Measurement subsequent to initial recognition
15.9 IAS 36 Impairment of Assets
15.10 IFRS 5 Non-current Assets Held for Sale and
Discontinued Operations
15.11 Disclosure requirements
15.12 Government grants towards the cost of PPE
15.13 Investment properties
15.14 Effect of accounting policy for PPE on the interpretation
of the financial statements
Summary
Review questions
Exercises
Notes
16 Leasing
16.1 Introduction
16.2 Need for an accounting standard on leasing
16.3 Terms and conditions of a lease
16.4 Leases in the financial statements of lessees under
IFRS 16
16.5 Leases in the financial statements of lessors
16.6 Sale and leaseback transactions
Summary
Review questions
Exercises
Note
17 Intangible assets
17.1 Introduction
17.2 Intangible assets defined
17.3 Accounting treatment for research and development
17.4 Why is research expenditure not capitalised?
17.5 Capitalising development costs
17.6 Disclosure of R&D
17.7 IFRS for SMEs’ treatment of intangible assets
17.8 Internally generated and purchased goodwill
17.9 The accounting treatment of goodwill
17.10 Critical comment on the various methods that have been
used to account for goodwill
17.11 Negative goodwill/badwill
17.12 Brands
17.13 Accounting for acquired brands
17.14 Intellectual capital disclosures (ICDs) in the annual
report
17.15 Review of implementation of IFRS 3
17.16 Review of the implementation of identified intangibles
under IAS 38
Summary
Review questions
Exercises
Notes
18 Inventories
18.1 Introduction
18.2 Inventory defined
18.3 The impact of inventory valuation on profits
18.4 IAS 2 Inventories
18.5 Inventory valuation
18.6 Work in progress
18.7 Inventory control
18.8 Creative accounting
18.9 Audit of the year-end physical inventory count
18.10 Published accounts
18.11 Agricultural activity
Summary
Review questions
Exercises
Notes
19 Construction contracts
19.1 Introduction
19.2 Construction contracts
19.3 IFRS 15 treatment of construction contracts
19.4 Accounting for a contract – an example
19.5 Illustration – loss-making contract using the step
approach
19.6 Public – private partnerships
19.7 Requirements of IFRIC 12 Service Concession
Arrangements
19.8 Worked example of service concession accounting
Summary
Review questions
Exercises
Note
Part 5
CONSOLIDATED ACCOUNTS
20 Accounting for groups at the date of acquisition
20.1 Introduction
20.2 Preparing consolidated accounts for a wholly owned
subsidiary
20.3 IFRS 10 Consolidated Financial Statements
20.4 Fair values
20.5 Illustration where there is a wholly owned subsidiary
20.6 Preparing consolidated accounts when there is a partly
owned subsidiary
20.7 The treatment of differences between a subsidiary’s fair
value and book value
20.8 The parent issues shares to acquire shares in a
subsidiary
20.9 IFRS 3 Business Combinations treatment of goodwill at
the date of acquisition
20.10 When may a parent company not be required to prepare
consolidated accounts?
20.11 When may a parent company exclude or not exclude a
subsidiary from a consolidation?
20.12 IFRS 13 Fair Value Measurement
20.13 What advantages are there for stakeholders from
requiring groups to prepare consolidated accounts?
Summary
Review questions
Exercises
Notes
21 Preparation of consolidated statements of financial
position after the date of acquisition
21.1 Introduction
21.2 Uniform accounting policies and reporting dates
21.3 Pre- and post-acquisition profits/losses
21.4 The Bend Group – assuming there have been no inter-
group transactions
21.5 Inter-company transactions
21.6 The Prose Group – assuming there have been inter-
group transactions
Summary
Review questions
Exercises
Notes
22 Preparation of consolidated statements of profit or loss,
changes in equity and cash flows
22.1 Introduction
22.2 Eliminate inter-company transactions
22.3 Preparation of a consolidated statement of profit or loss
– the Ante Group
22.4 The statement of changes in equity (SOCE)
22.5 Other consolidation adjustments
22.6 A subsidiary acquired part-way through the year
22.7 Published format statement of profit or loss
22.8 Consolidated statements of cash flows
Summary
Review questions
Exercises
Notes
23 Accounting for associates and joint arrangements
23.1 Introduction
23.2 Definitions of associates and of significant influence
23.3 The treatment of associated companies in the financial
statements of the investor
23.4 The Brill Group – group accounts with a profit-making
associate
23.5 The Brill Group – group accounts with a loss-making
associate
23.6 The acquisition of an associate part-way through the
year
23.7 Joint arrangements
23.8 Disclosure in the financial statements
Summary
Review questions
Exercises
Notes
24 Introduction to accounting for exchange differences
24.1 Introduction
24.2 How to record foreign currency transactions in a
company’s own books
24.3 Boil plc – a more detailed illustration
24.4 IAS 21 Concept of Functional and Presentation
Currencies
24.5 Translating the functional currency into the presentation
currency
24.6 Preparation of consolidated accounts
24.7 How to reduce the risk of translation differences
24.8 Critique of the use of presentational currency
24.9 IAS 29 Financial Reporting in Hyperinflationary
Economies
Summary
Review questions
Exercises
Notes
Part 6
INTERPRETATION
25 Earnings per share
25.1 Introduction
25.2 Why is the earnings per share figure important?
25.3 How is the EPS figure calculated?
25.4 The use to shareholders of the EPS
25.5 Illustration of the basic EPS calculation
25.6 Adjusting the number of shares used in the basic EPS
calculation
25.7 Rights issues
25.8 Adjusting the earnings and number of shares used in the
diluted EPS calculation
25.9 Procedure where there are several potential dilutions
25.10 Exercise of conversion rights during the financial year
25.11 Disclosure requirements of IAS 33
25.12 Enhanced disclosures
Summary
Review questions
Exercises
Notes
26 Review of financial ratio analysis
26.1 Introduction
26.2 Overview of techniques for the analysis of financial data
26.3 Ratio analysis – a case study
26.4 Introductory review
26.5 Financial statement analysis, part 1 – financial
performance
26.6 Financial statement analysis, part 2 – liquidity
26.7 Financial statement analysis, part 3 – financing
26.8 Peer comparison
26.9 Report based on the analysis
26.10 Caution when using ratios for prediction
Summary
Review questions
Exercises
27 Analysis of published financial statements
27.1 Introduction
27.2 Alternative performance measures
27.3 EBITDA
27.4 EBITDAR
27.5 EBITDARM
27.6 Regulators’ reaction to use of an alternative
management performance measure (APM)
27.7 Use of ratios as thresholds
27.8 Predicting corporate failure
27.9 Investor-specific ratios
27.10 Published financial statements – their limitations for
interpretation purposes
27.11 Improvement of information for shareholders
27.12 Valuing shares of an unquoted company – quantitative
process
27.13 Valuing shares of an unquoted company – qualitative
process
27.14 Possible effects of a pandemic (Covid-19)
27.15 Possible effects of Brexit
Summary
Review questions
Exercises
Notes
Part 7
ACCOUNTABILITY
28 Corporate governance
28.1 Introduction
28.2 A systems perspective
28.3 Different jurisdictions have different governance
priorities
28.4 The effect on capital markets of good corporate
governance
28.5 Risk management
28.6 The role of internal control, internal audit and audit
committees in corporate governance
28.7 External audits in corporate governance
28.8 Detection of fraud
28.9 The Regulator’s approach to promoting improved
disclosures
28.10 International perspective (IFIAR)
28.11 The future of audit
28.12 Executive remuneration in the UK
28.13 Corporate governance – ways to make directors
accountable
Summary
Review questions
Exercises
Notes
29 Ethical behaviour and implications for accountants
29.1 Introduction
29.2 The meaning of ethical behaviour
29.3 The accounting standard-setting process and ethics
29.4 The International Code of Ethics for Professional
Accountants 2018
29.5 Implications of ethical values for the principles – versus
rules-based approaches to accounting standards
29.6 Ethics in the accountant’s work environment – a
research report
29.7 Implications of unethical behaviour for stakeholders
using the financial reports
29.8 The increasing role of whistle-blowing
29.9 Legal requirement to report – national and international
regulation
29.10 Why should students learn ethics?
Summary
Review questions
Exercises
Notes
30 Integrated reporting: sustainability, environmental and
social
30.1 Introduction
30.2 Environmental and social disasters, the adverse
consequences that can follow and the lessons to be
learnt
30.3 Management accountability for environmental and social
responsibility
30.4 Integrated reporting concepts
30.5 The historical context of the evolution of integrated
reporting including the drivers of this movement
30.6 The seriousness of current threats: sustainability –
climate change and pollution
30.7 The efforts on which integrated reporting builds
30.8 The contribution of accountants
30.9 Integrated reporting – its impact on the future
development of financial reporting and accounting
30.10 Reporting to stakeholders to account for stewardship
30.11 Reporting to stakeholders to assist decision making
30.12 Real-time reporting
30.13 Other means of communication with stakeholders
30.14 The way forward for improved sustainability disclosure
Summary
Review questions
Exercises
Notes
Publisher’s acknowledgements
Index