GAAP VS IFRS
GAAP (US
Generally Accepted Accounting Principles) is the accounting standard used in
the US, while IFRS (International Financial Reporting
Standards) is the accounting standard used in over 110 countries around the
world. GAAP is considered a more “rules based” system of accounting, while IFRS
is more “principles based.” The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is
looking to switch to IFRS by 2015.
What
follows is an overview of the differences between the accounting frameworks
used by GAAP and IFRS. This is at a broad, framework level; differences in
accounting treatments for individual cases may also be added as this gets
updated.
Comparison chart
GAAP
|
IFRS
|
|
Stands
for
|
Generally
Accepted Accounting Principles
|
International
Financial Reporting Standards
|
Introduction
|
Standard
guidelines and structure for typical financial accounting.
|
Universal
financial reporting method that allows international businesses to understand
each other and work together.
|
Used
in
|
United
States
|
Over
110 countries, including those in the European Union
|
Performance
elements
|
Revenue
or expenses, assets or liabilities, gains, losses, comprehensive income
|
Revenue
or expenses, assets or liabilities
|
Required
documents in financial statements
|
Balance
sheet, income statement, statement of comprehensive income, changes in equity,
cash flow statement, footnotes
|
Balance
sheet, income statement, changes in equity, cash flow statement, footnotes
|
Inventory
Estimates
|
Last-in,
first-out; first-in, first-out; or weighted-average cost
|
First-in,
first-out or weighted-average cost
|
Inventory
Reversal
|
Prohibited
|
Permitted
under certain criteria
|
Purpose
of the framework
|
US
GAAP (or FASB) framework has no provision that expressly requires management
to consider the framework in the absence of a standard or interpretation for
an issue.
|
Under
IFRS, company management is expressly required to consider the framework if
there is no standard or interpretation for an issue.
|
Objectives
of financial statements
|
In
general, broad focus to provide relevant info to a wide range of stakeholders.
GAAP provides separate objectives for business and non-business entities.
|
In
general, broad focus to provide relevant info to a wide range of
stakeholders. IFRS provides the same set of objectives for business and
non-business entities.
|
Underlying
assumptions
|
The
"going concern" assumption is not well-developed in the US GAAP
framework.
|
IFRS
gives prominence to underlying assumptions such as accrual and going concern.
|
Qualitative
characteristics
|
Relevance,
reliability, comparability and understandability. GAAP establishes a
hierarchy of these characteristics. Relevance and reliability are primary
qualities. Comparability is secondary. Understandability is treated as a
user-specific quality.
|
Relevance,
reliability, comparability and understandability. The IASB framework (IFRS)
states that its decision cannot be based upon specific circumstances of
individual users.
|
Definition
of an asset
|
The
US GAAP framework defines an asset as a future economic benefit.
|
The
IFRS framework defines an asset as a resource from which future economic
benefit will flow to the company.
|
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