terça-feira, 6 de novembro de 2012

«HIGH-QUALITY CORPORATE REPORTING»

 

 
Acabou de ter lugar o encontro do  «Intergovernmental Working Group of Experts on International Standards of Accounting and Reporting, twenty-ninth session» acolhido  na United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD). Pode ver aqui do que esteve em debate. O sumário executivo:
«Over the last three years, UNCTAD’s Intergovernmental Working Group of Experts on International Standards of Accounting and Reporting (ISAR) has been working on an Accountancy Development Toolkit for high-quality corporate reporting with a view to supporting member States in their efforts towards the adoption and implementation of international standards and codes. The two main components of this tool are (a) an accountancy development framework and (b) a set of accountancy development indicators. The Toolkit is built around the core pillars of the accountancy foundation for high-quality corporate reporting: a legal and regulatory framework, an institutional framework, human capacity, and a capacity-building process. In concluding its twenty-eighth session, the Group of Experts proposed to focus its deliberations during the twenty-ninth session on the regulatory and institutional pillars.
This issues note was prepared by the UNCTAD secretariat in order to facilitate ISAR discussions on this topic, to raise awareness of main issues and share good practices in this area in order to assist developing countries and countries with economies in transition in formulating national policies on accountancy development. It provides a general overview of major recent trends in and challenges relating to regulatory and institutional developments at the global, regional and national levels. It highlights such trends as the strengthening of institutional standard-setting at the global level and the growing role of reporting standards in the international financial architecture; the increasing role of international bodies, not only in standards formulation, but also in the area ofenforcement and implementation; the increasing role of national State regulations and institutions, and that of regional organizations. It also discusses some of the major challenges in regulatory and institutional capacity-building, such as the need to develop mechanisms to ensure the consistent application of international standards and monitoring of compliance. Other issues discussed include the higher demand for non-financial reporting, increased pressure for stakeholder coordination at all levels, the need for a coherent strategic approach to building national regulatory and institutional capacity, and issues of sustainability of accounting reforms. The examples given in this note serve to illustrate some of the regulatory and institutional developments of corporate reporting rather than provide a comprehensive list of good practices that could be a subject for further research and discussions». 

Sem comentários:

Enviar um comentário