Double Accounting for Goodwill

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Category=KC
Conventional Balance Sheet
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Deloitte
Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu
Double Account
Double Account System
Double Entry
Double Entry Bookkeeping
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General Purpose Financial Reporting
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Goodwill Amortization
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Historical Cost
Identifiable Assets
IIA
Impairment Loss
intangible
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Net Identifiable Assets
Net Tangible Assets
Recoverable Amount
Relevant IFRS
Share Premium Account
sheet
SSAP
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UK Account Standard Board
UK Company Act

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415437486
  • Weight: 610g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 16 Jun 2008
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Goodwill, sometimes purchased but often more significantly internally generated, is the major constituent of the value of many listed companies. Accounting aims to provide users of financial statements with useful information, and more than fifty current International Financial Reporting Standards prescribe accounting disclosure requirements in minute detail. However, these Standards dismiss internally generated goodwill with a single brief provision that it is not to be brought to account at all. The impairment regime now laid down for dealing with purchased goodwill contains severe flaws, while previous methods have also been found to be unsatisfactory.

This book traces the history of the goodwill accounting controversy in detail and demonstrates that it has been a prime example of an issue ‘conceived in a way that it is in principle unsolvable’. It explores the problem of recognising the importance of goodwill as a whole and finding a way of presenting meaningful information regarding it in the context of the financial statements. The author’s proposed solution builds upon research undertaken and uses a Market Capitalization Statement, based on a modification of nineteenth century ‘double accounting’ in a modern context. Examples show that the proposed Market Capitalization Statement has the potential to provide significant information not currently available form conventional financial statements, which in turn are freed to present clearer information.

Martin Bloom is a Chartered Accountant who has been in public practice for over forty years and is currently a Director in the Sydney office of Deloitte, a global network of accounting, consulting and business advisory firms.

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