Tuesday, June 1, 2010

International Convergence of Accounting Standards—A Brief History

International convergence of accounting standards is not a new idea. The concept of convergence first arose in the late 1950s in response to post World War II economic integration and related increases in cross-border capital flows. Initial efforts focused on harmonization—reducing differences among the accounting principles used in the world’s major capital markets. By the 1990s, the idea of harmonizing accounting standards was replaced by the concept of convergence—the development of a single set of high-quality, international accounting standards that would be used in at least all major capital markets. (Refer to the FASB website for a chronology of some of the key events in the evolution of the international convergence of accounting standards.)