Friday, January 27, 2012

A brief history of the ACCA



The Association of Chartered Certified Accountants (ACCA) is the global body for professional accountants with 147,000 members and 424,000 students in over 170 countries. It also has a network of 83 offices and centres across the world.

In 1904, eight people formed the London Association of Accountants. Their aim was to provide more open access to the accountancy profession than the two existing accountancy organizations. ACCA went through a number of mergers and amalgamations over the years. In 1984, it became the Chartered Association of Certified Accountants to reflect the fact that it had been granted a Royal Charter of Incorporation. In 1996, it began to use the current name, the Association of Chartered Certified Accountants.

For a brief history of the ACCA from 1904 to the present time, refer to the ACCA website section on "Our History."

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Setting accounting and auditing standards in Canada - 1978


The article “Setting Accounting and Auditing Standards” was originally published in the September 1978 issue of CAmagazine. At that time, R.D. Thomas, FCA, was the CICA General Director of Research.

This article provides a detailed review of the existing standard-setting process. It notes that: “While the Research Department makes continual efforts to keep the 27,000 CICA members and over 13,000 other subscribers to the CICA Handbook informed on its projects in process, relatively few people appreciate the wide diversity of experience that those responsible bring to bear in the setting of Accounting and Auditing Recommendations, and the care they take in doing so."

"It’s important that those affected by these Recommendations know this background for at least two reasons:

(1) With the advent of the National Securities Administrators’ National Policy 27 and recent corporate legislation, Handbook Recommendations now have “authority” attached to them by federal and provincial government bodies, in addition to the support that has been given to them through the provincial institutes’ / order’s Rules of Professional Conduct.

(2) With the steady increase in the number and complexity of the subjects being dealt with by our research groups and with the resulting increasing demands on the time of volunteer members of these groups, a major study is now to be undertaken to see how our procedures can be improved. After reviewing the following highlight summary of the issues involved, any comments or suggestions you may have on present or prospective procedures and personnel will be very useful to the in-depth review which will be starting shortly.”

(For more information, refer to the CICA Special Committee on Standard-Setting (SCOSS), Report to the CICA Board of Governors on December 19, 1980.)

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Report of the CICA Special Committee on Standard-Setting (SCOSS) - 1980



On December 19, 1980, the CICA Special Committee on Standard-Setting (SCOSS) presented its Report to the CICA Board of Governors. This comprehensive 158-page report states (pages 9-10) that: “If one is to consider the means by which accounting and auditing standards are to be set and maintained, one should first have a clear understanding of what is, or should be, the appropriate role, nature and scope of those standards.”

According to the SCOSS report: “A brief history of the standard-setting function in Canada and the way the nature and role of standards have evolved may help to set the stage. This history will essentially be that of accounting standards, since accounting standards as such have been in existence for much longer than auditing standards and they are, besides, much more in the public domain than auditing standards.

There have been accounting standards in Canada for a very long time. At no time in the past century would it have been possible for a preparer of financial statements to make up his own accounting practices without considering conventional usage, even though the accepted conventional practices may not have been published anywhere. Although our main concern today is for the development of published standards, it should not be forgotten that there are, even now, many accounting standards that are generally accepted and universally followed but have not yet been published. For example, there is no requirement in the CICA Handbook to depreciate fixed assets or to follow the matching principle generally.

The CICA published its first accounting standard in 1946. It was published in the form of a Bulletin, which continued to be the form of publication for more than twenty years. Twenty-six Bulletins were published between 1946 and 1967. Of these, six were published in the years 1965-67. In 1967, as a result of the report of a committee such as ours, the CICA Handbook came into existence and the Bulletins then in force were incorporated into it. The bulk of the material in the present Handbook has been added since 1968. The pace of standard-setting has clearly accelerated, and continues to do so.

It is difficult to generalize about the thought processes involved and the purposes behind projects carried out by standard-setters in the past. Nevertheless, it appears that the early Bulletins were essentially attempts to codify best existing practices rather than to change existing practice generally. In most cases the early Bulletins were non-controversial and the best practice was fairly clearly recognized. Their purpose was to discourage less desirable practices that were being followed in a minority of cases. Over time, however, the Bulletins, and later the Handbook, became progressively more innovative in the sense of changing practices generally rather than merely eliminating minority practices.

The trend away from codifying consensus to establishing new practice was due, in part, to the 1967 Report of the Study Group on Methods of Work and Organization (chaired by P.H. Lyons, FCA) which stated: “The Research Committee, to a much greater extent than it has in the past, should engage in initiating and overseeing basic research at the frontiers of our profession rather than gathering together to record the best current practice.”

Recent accounting standards, such as those on segmented reporting, accounting for leases and disclosure of transactions with related parties, have clearly changed the accounting and disclosure practices of the majority of Canadian enterprises rather than merely imposing on a stubborn minority accounting and disclosure practices already adopted by the majority. It is not always easy to categorize a particular standard as being essentially a codification of consensus on the one hand or a changing of the rules on the other – but, in general, the trend from the former approach to the latter seems indisputable. Moreover, the history of the process makes it apparent that this attitudinal change was primarily internally generated rather than forced on the profession from outside.

Undoubtedly, the most important development in the standard-setting arena since the Handbook came into existence is the conferring of quasi-legislative status on the Handbook. This process began with National Policy #27 adopted by the Canadian Securities Administrators in 1972. Since then, various federal and provincial statutes (and regulations thereunder) have come to require that financial statements prepared pursuant to those statutes must comply with the CICA Handbook.

The impact of this development on the perceived authority of the Handbook and the additional responsibilities it may, or may not, impose on standard-setters will be discussed later. However, while it is not possible to tell whether standards issued since the acquisition of this quasi-legislative status would have been different if such status had never been granted, it is possible that they might have been affected by the existence of this factor, and that future standards may be affected. The Handbook in its present form might be said to be largely a professionally- oriented set of standards with some of the latest (and future) additions perhaps being legislatively oriented. There could be conflicts in this potentially dual character of the Handbook.”

In addition to the above-noted discussion on the evolution of Canadian standards, the SCOSS report (pages 11-14) discusses the need for professional judgment in standard-setting, taking a principles-based approach, using principles rather than detailed rules, and clearly stating the role of professional judgment in the CICA Handbook. Although the report was issued more than 30 years ago, the observations and views of the Special Committee appear to be equally valid today. (For a review of the discussion on professional judgment, refer to the four-part series posted in the blog on Professional Judgment Matters.)


Sunday, January 1, 2012

Update on the Social Science Research Network



The Social Science Research Network (SSRN) has grown substantially during the last 12 months. The SSRN eLibrary currently has 375,000 paper abstracts from over 175,000 authors and has received 60,000 new submissions during the year. The eLibrary recently delivered its 50 millionth full-text paper download. This is a significant milestone.

During the last year, SSRN changed its server architecture to improve the speed of searches, enhance overall stability and provide the infrastructure required to meet the continued growth. In recent tests, the average eLibrary search time has decreased from 4.5 seconds to less than 1 second. In addition, SSRN's Citereader project with ITX Corp. has extracted 7.4 million references, 4.7 million citations, and 7.7 million footnotes from 306,000 full text papers.

In 2012, SSRN plans to continue expanding its interdisciplinary growth in the social sciences and humanities by creating research networks in Sustainability, Innovation, Rhetoric, Anthropology and Hebrew.