1 / 18

Chapter 13: Accounting for Inflation & Changing Prices

Chapter 13: Accounting for Inflation & Changing Prices. Inflation Price indexes Inflation accounting Income measurement systems SFAS No. 33. Inflation. The rise in the average price level for all goods and services produced in an economy

gina
Download Presentation

Chapter 13: Accounting for Inflation & Changing Prices

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 13: Accounting for Inflation & Changing Prices • Inflation • Price indexes • Inflation accounting • Income measurement systems • SFAS No. 33

  2. Inflation • The rise in the average price level for all goods and services produced in an economy • Under a historical cost-based system of accounting inflation leads to two basic problems • Many historical numbers are not economically relevant • Historical numbers are not additive

  3. Inflation and Historical Costing • Likely predictive value is diminished • Comparability among financial statements of different firms is restricted • Capital maintenance • Income usually overstated relative to amounts that can be distributed to stockholders • Many dividends are really liquidating in nature

  4. Price Indexes • Is a weighted average of the current prices of goods and services • Averages are related to prices in a base period • Purpose is to determine how much change has occurred • Types of price indexes • Specific price index • General price index

  5. Price Indexes • Paasche-type indexes • Uses current-year quantities • Wholesale Price Index • Consumer price Index • Laspeyres-type indexes • Uses base-year quantities • Less costly to construct

  6. Inflation Accounting • General purchasing power adjustment translates historical dollars into dollars having equivalent purchasing power • Current valuation, also called current cost, attempts to derive the specific value or worth for a particular point ... • Entry values • Exit values

  7. Entry vs. Exit Values • Entry values • Value in use is best represented by replacement costs • Strong argument in support of use • Exit values • Are a form of opportunity costs • The balance sheet becomes the principal financial statement

  8. Purchasing Power Gains & Losses • Arise as a result of holding net monetary assets or liabilities during a period when the price level changes • Monetaryassets and liabilities include cash itself and other assets and liabilities that are receivable or payable in a fixed number of dollars

  9. Purchasing Power Gains & Losses

  10. Holding Gains & Losses • Holding gains and losseson real (nonmonetary) assets can be divided into two parts • monetary holding gains and losses, which arise purely because of the change in the general price level during the period; and • real holding gains and losses, which are the difference between general price-level-adjusted amounts and current values. • Are capital adjustments only; they are not a component of income

  11. The Gearing Adjustment • Somewhat related to the holding gain • Was used in Great Britain as part of that country’s inflation accounting mechanism • Results in gains to equity capital during inflation because debt capital does not have any claim on holding gains • proved to be an extremely confusing concept

  12. Income Measurement Systems • Current Value Approaches • Distributable Income (DI) • Realized Income (RI) • Earning Power Income (EPI) • Methods differ in terms of disposition of real holding gains and the resulting type of capital maintenance measure

  13. SFAS No. 33 • FASB decided to keep nominal historical costs as the basis of primary financial statements • Specified that the effects of changing prices should be presented as supplementary information in annual reports • FASB realized that a consensus could not be obtained on which method of accounting should be adopted

  14. SFAS No. 33 • Not all enterprises had to comply with SFAS No. 33 • For constant dollar reporting, the SFAS required disclosure of • Information on income from continuing operations for the current fiscal year on a historical cost/constant dollar basis . . . • The purchasing power gain or loss on net monetary items for the current fiscal year. .

  15. SFAS No. 33’s Failure • There was a dramatic decline of inflation during the early 1980s • Measurement problems were present • Questions of understandability and usefulness for predictive purposes

  16. SFAS No. 82 issued in 1984 • Eliminated the constant dollar income disclosures that had previously been required by SFAS No. 33 • SFAS No. 33 • information confused users • may have caused “information overload” because of the presence of similar current cost income disclosures

  17. SFAS No. 89 • Two parts of SFAS No. 33 remained in effect; were “encouraged” but not required • current cost income measurement, purchasing power gain or loss, and • holding gain information • FASB beat a hasty retreat from the problem of accounting for changing prices

  18. Chapter 13: Accounting for Inflation & Changing Prices • Inflation • Price indexes • Inflation accounting • Income measurement systems • SFAS No. 33

More Related