NOTIFICATION OF ACCOUNTING STANDARDS BY THE CENTRAL GOVERNMENT UNDER THE
COMPANIES ACT, 1956
PRESS RELEASE, DATED 14-5-2008
The Government
recognises the importance of financial reporting in providing essential
financial information about the company to its shareholders and other
stakeholders, as an integral and important part of good corporate governance.
Such information needs to be reliable, free from bias and should enable
comparison on the basis of common benchmarks. This, in turn, necessitates an
appropriate, financial reporting system in the form of accounting standards
that incorporate sound accounting principles and reflect a true picture of the
financial health of the company while ensuring legally enforceable
accountability.
The work of
formulating down accounting standards for the companies operating in India was
initiated when the Institute of Chartered Accountants of India (ICAI), a
statutory body regulating the accounting profession in the country, first took
up this task in 1977. However, the accounting standards prepared and issued by
the ICAI were mandatory only for its members, who, while discharging their audit
function, were required to examine whether the said standards of accounting
were complied with. With the amendment of the Companies Act, 1956 through the
Companies (Amendment) Act, 1999, accounting standards as well as the manner in
which they were to be prescribed, were provided a statutory backing.
Today, in
pursuance of the statutory mandate provided under the Companies Act, 1956, the
Central Government prescribes accounting standards in consultation with the
National Advisory Committee on Accounting Standards (NACAS), also established
under the Companies Act, 1956. NACAS, a body of experts including
representatives of various regulatory bodies and Government agencies, has been
engaged in the exercise of examining Accounting Standards prepared by ICAI for
use by Indian corporate entities, since its constitution in 2001. In this
exercise, it has adapted the international norms established by the
International Financial Reporting Standards issued by the International
Accounting Standards Board.
The Central
Government notified 28 Accounting Standards (AS 1 to 7 and AS 9 to 29) in
December 2006 in the form of Companies (Accounting Standard) Rules, 2006, after
receiving recommendations of NACAS. These Accounting Standards are to be
applied with effect from company financial year 2007-08, the accounts with
respect to which are to be finalised during 2008-09. In notifying the
Accounting Standards, the Government has adopted a policy of enabling
disclosure of company accounts in a transparent manner at par with widely
accepted international practices, through a process of convergence with the
International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) issued by the International
Accounting Standards Board (IASB). In doing so, the requirements of the
companies functioning in the country are being kept in view. The initiative for
harmonization of the Indian accounting standards with IFRS, taken up by NACAS
in 2001 and implemented through notification of accounting standards by the
Central Government in 2006, would be continued by the Government with the
intention of achieving convergence with IFRS by 2011.
Consistent with
international practices, the accounting standards are prepared in India in
context of the issues concerning large publicly held and listed corporate entities
so as to enable the widest possible coverage of financial issues concerning a
corporate entity. Consequently, some of the requirements of accounting
standards may prove to be onerous for Small and Medium Companies (SMCs), who
may not have the necessary resources to apply these requirements and incur
associated compliance costs. Also, users of financial statements of the SMCs
and their information requirements may also have limited requirements. Keeping
this in view, necessary exemptions and relaxations to SMCs have been
incorporated in the accounting standards on the recommendation of NACAS to
enable them to apply the broad framework of the Accounting Standards in a
simple manner.
The accounting and
financial reporting practices need to change and evolve with the changing
business and economic situation. Accounting practices prevailing in the country
would also need to develop likewise. The institutional arrangements under the
Companies Act, 1956 enable such developments through the efforts of NACAS and
with inputs from ICAI and other quarters to meet the requirements of a changing
economy. In this context, ICAI would continue to prepare and hold public
consultation on standards of accounting for general application to various
entities. It may also issue advice and guidance to its members to consider
following certain practices approved by it in pursuance of prudence. The
Government would examine further accounting standards to be followed by
companies, on the basis of the standards proposed by ICAI, subject to the
recommendations of NACAS thereon, for notification in accordance with the
procedure laid down under the Companies Act, 1956. In the process, the approach
of convergence with International Financial Reporting Standards issued by the
International Accounting Standards Board (IASB), being increasingly accepted as
a common standard internationally, would be continued so that the financial
information disclosed by Indian companies compares well with that disclosed by
non-Indian companies in compliance with IFRS. This would not only provide
reliable financial information to investors globally but also lower compliance
costs since the need for restatement of accounts would be obviated for Indian
companies seeking to tap international financial markets.
The Ministry of
Corporate Affairs would, through the reform of accounting standards, continue
to strengthen the corporate financial systems, at par in the best international
practices, in the interest of all stakeholders to meet the requirements of India’s
changing economy.