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Borderlines in Private Law

Edited by: William Day, Julius Grower
Price: £90.00

Lord Denning: Life, Law and Legacy



  


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The European Harmonization of National Accounting Rules: The Application of Directive 2013/34/EU in Europe

Edited by: Alberto Incollingo, Andrea Lionzo

ISBN13: 9783031429309
Published: February 2024
Publisher: Springer International
Country of Publication: Switzerland
Format: Hardback
Price: £129.99



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With Directive 2013/34/EU - which replaced the 4th and 7th accounting Directives - a new step towards European accounting harmonization has been taken: accounting rules on private firms have been further standardized and, at the same time, brought closer to IAS/IFRS.

This book develops a comparative analysis of the most relevant issues in the process of preparing the financial statements after the recent transposition of the aforementioned Directive into the local accounting rules and standards.

This book is of interest for several reasons. First, private firms, which are not necessarily small-medium sized companies, are the most prevalent and the engine of growth in all European countries. At the same time, the international academic literature is mainly devoted to listed companies, due to the limited availability of data for private companies and the idea that accounting information is less relevant for this kind of companies.

In addition, the analysis contained in the book is the result of the work of more than 30 European researchers, who contributed to both a vertical analysis of eight countries (Germany, Spain, Italy, France, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, Sweden, and Denmark) and a horizontal analysis of the most relevant cross-cutting issues (fundamental principles, financial statement formats, impairment losses, capital reserves and profit distribution, income taxes, and non-financial reporting).

More specifically, the book aims to examine, from a comparative perspective, the methods of application of the Directive in Europe, in parallel with the evolutionary processes of national GAAPs, in order to verify the impact of both legal regulations and professional rules on the quality and comparability of accounting information, as well as the degree of convergence towards the IAS/IFRS model.

Subjects:
EU Law, Accounting
Contents:
The evolution of accounting regulations in the EU
Germany
United Kingdom
France
Italy
Spain
Denmark
Sweden
The Netherlands
Objectives, overriding principles and relevance
Financial statements layouts
Write-down for impairment losses
Accounting for Capital and Reserves, OCI and Profit Distribution
Income taxes in financial statements
Non-financial reporting in the European Union: current issues and prospects
Private firm accounting in the EU: still an incomplete and fragmented picture