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CHAPTER 1

QUALITATIVE CHARACTERISTICS
QUALITATIVE CHARACTERISTICS
• Are the qualities or attributes that make the
financial accounting information useful to the users.
CLASSIFICATION OF QUALITATIVE
CHARACTERISTICS
FUNDAMENTAL QC ENHANCING QC

• Relate to the content or • relate to the presentation or


form of the financial
substance of the financial information.
information
• COMPARABILITY
• RELEVANCE
• UNDERSTANDABILITY
• FAITHFUL REPRESENTATION
• VERIFIABILITY
• TIMELINESS
RELEVANCE INGREDIENTS
-it is the capacity of information
to influence a decision.
• PREDICTIVE
-The financial information must VALUE
be capable of making a
difference in the decisions made
by the users. • CONFIRMATORY
VALUE
-Information that does not bear
on an economic decision is
useless. • MATERIALITY
PREDICTIVE VALUE
• predict future outcome
CONFIRMATORY VALUE
• provides feedback about previous
evaluations to help users confirm or correct
earlier expectations.

• “FEEDBACK VALUE”
MATERIALITY
• practical rule in accounting which dictates that strict adherence to
GAAP is not required when the items are not significant enough to
affect the evaluation, decision and fairness of the financial
statements.
- also known as the doctrine of convenience

• materiality is a relativity
– materiality of an item depends on its relative size

– depends on good judgment, professional expertise and common


sense.

– an item is material if knowledge of it would affect or influence the


decision of the informed users of the FS.

• factors of materiality
– Size of the item
– Nature of the item
FAITHFUL
REPRESENTATION INGREDIENTS
•Used instead of reliability
Completeness
•Means that financial reports
represent economic phenomena or Neutrality
transactions in words and numbers.
Free from error

•Means actual effects of the


transactions shall be properly
accounted for and reported in the
financial statements.
COMPLETENESS
• requires that relevant information should be
presented in a way that facilitates
understanding and avoids erroneous
implication.
• it is the result of the adequate disclosure
standard or the principle of full disclosure
• to be complete, the FS shall be
accompanied by notes to financial statements.

• the purpose of the notes is to provide the


necessary disclosures required by PFRS
STANDARD OF ADEQUATE
DISCLOSURE
• Means that all significant and relevant
information leading to the preparation of
financial statements shall be clearly reported.

• The rule is that the accountant shall disclose a


material fact known to him which is not
disclosed in the FS but disclosure of which is
necessary in order that the statements would
not be misleading.
NEUTRALITY

a neutral depiction is without bias in


the preparation or presentation of
financial statements.
NEUTRALITY
*to be neutral, the information contained in the FS must be
free from bias.

*the financial information should not favor one party to the


detriment of another party.

*the information is directed to the common needs of many


users, and not to the particular needs of specific users.

*Synonymous with the all-encompassing “principle of


fairness”

*To be neutral is to be fair


FREE FROM ERROR
• means there are no errors or omissions in the
description of the phenomenon or
transaction, and the process used to produce
the reported information has been selected
and applied with no errors in the process.
SUBSTANCE OVER FORM
• TRANSACTIONS MUST BE ACCOUNTED FOR IN
ACCORDANCE WITH THEIR SUBSTANCE AND REALITY
NOT MERELY THEIR LEGAL FORM.

• NOT CONSIDERED AS SEPARATE COMPONENT FROM


FAITHFUL REPRESENTATION BECAUSE IT WOULD BE
REDUNDANT.

• FAITHFUL REPRESENTATION INHERENTLY REPRESENTS


THE SUBSTANCE OF AN ECONOMIC TRANSACTION
RATHER THAN MERELY REPRESENTING ITS LEGAL
FORM.
CONSERVATISM
• when alternatives exist, the alternative which has the
least effect on equity should be chosen.

• possible errors in measurement be in the direction of


understatement rather than overstatement of net
income and net assets.

• In case of doubt, record any loss, and do not record


any gain

• contingent loss is recognized as a provision if


probable and measurable

• contingent gain is not recognized but disclosed only.


PRUDENCE
• is the desire to exercise care and caution
when dealing with uncertainties in the
measurement process such that assets or
income are not overstated and liabilities or
expenses are not understated.
EXPRESSIONS OF CONSERVATISM OR
PRUDENCE

• “ANTICIPATE NO PROFIT AND PROVIDE FOR


PROBABLE AND MEASURABLE LOSS.”

• “DON’T COUNT YOUR CHICKS UNTIL THE


EGGS HATCH.”
ENHANCING QUALITATIVE
CHARACTERISTICS
- RELATE TO THE PRESENTATION OR FORM OF
THE FINANCIAL INFORMATION.

- ENHANCING QC’S ARE:


• COMPARABILITY
• UNDERSTANDABILITY
• VERIFIABILITY
• TIMELINESS
COMPARABILITY
• THE ABILITY TO BRING TOGETHER FOR THE
PURPOSE OF NOTING POINTS OF LIKENESS
AND DIFFERENCE.
IMPLICIT IN THE QC
COMPARABILITY IS THE
PRINCIPLE OF CONSISTENCY
CONSISTENCY
• REQUIRES THAT THE ACCOUNTING METHODS
AND PRACTICES SHOULD BE APPLIED ON A
UNIFORM BASIS FROM PERIOD TO PERIOD.

• THE UNIFORM APPLICATION OF


ACCOUNTING METHOD FROM PERIOD TO
PERIOD WITHIN AN ENTITY.

• THE UNIFORM APPLICATION OF


ACCOUNTING METHOD BETWEEN AND
ACROSS ENTITIES IN THE SAME INDUSTRY.
UNDERSTANDABILITY
• REQUIRES THAT FINANCIAL INFORMATION
MUST BE COMPREHENSIBLE OR INTELLIGIBLE
IF IT IS TO BE MOST USEFUL.

• FINANCIAL REPORTS ARE PREPARED FOR


USERS WHO HAVE A REASONABLE
KNOWLEDGE OF BUSINESS AND ECONOMIC
ACTIVITIES AND WHO REVIEW AND ANALYZE
THE INFORMATION DILIGENTLY.
VERIFIABILITY
• MEANS THAT DIFFERENT KNOWLEDGEABLE AND
INDEPENDENT OBSERVERS COULD REACH
CONSENSUS, ALTHOUGH NOT NECESSARILY
COMPLETE AGREEMENT, THAT A PARTICULAR
DEPICTION IS A FAITHFUL REPRESENTATION.

• THE FINANCIAL INFORMATION IS VERIFIABLE IN THE


SENSE THAT IT IS SUPPORTED BY EVIDENCE SO THAT
AN ACCOUNTANT THAT WOULD LOOK INTO THE
SAME EVIDENCE WOULD ARRIVE AT THE SAME
ECONOMIC DECISION OR CONCLUSION.

• VERIFIABLE FINANCIAL INFORMATION PROVIDES


RESULTS THAT WOULD BE SUBSTANTIALLY
DUPLICATED BY MEASURERS USING THE SAME
MEASUREMENT METHOD.
VERIFICATION
DIRECT VERIFICATION INDIRECT VERIFICATION
• - MEANS VERIFYING AN • - MEANS CHECKING THE
AMOUNT OR OTHER INPUTS TO A MODEL,
REPRESENTATION FORMULA OR OTHER
THROUGH DIRECT TECHNIQUE AND
OBSERVATION. RECALCULATING THE
INPUTS USING THE SAME
• - EXAMPLE (CASH METHODOLOGY.
COUNT)

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