Provide a brief description of the qualitative characteristics of useful information including
relevance/materiality and the cost constraint.
Solution
The framework states that the users should be provided information which is relevant to them.
Too much information should be avoided, and similarly, too little information also may not help
the users. Information provided should be relevant to the decisions the various stakeholders need
to make. Information is considered relevant if it has some predictive or confirmatory value, or
both. The relevance of information is generally determined by its nature (i.e. what type of
information is being provided) and its materiality (discussed further below).
Information is material if omitting it or misstating it could influence the decisions of the users
that the users make on the basis of financial information about a specific reporting entity.
Materiality need not always be assessed in terms of quantum of the amounts involved. For eg. if
Directors remuneration paid is over the limits laid by the concerned corporate law in place even
by a small amount, such information indicates non compliance with the laws of land and hence,
though the amount concerned may not be significant, the information will still be considered to
be material
Faithful representation warrants that the financial statements should reflect information which is
complete, neutral and free from error. Further, the accounting for the particular transaction
should reflect the substance of the transaction, rather than the mere legal form, considering that
IFRS are meant to be principle-based standards.
A complete depiction includes all information necessary for a user to understand the
phenomenon being depicted, including all necessary descriptions and explanations.
A neutral depiction means that information must not be manipulated in any way in order to
influence the decisions of users. The recording and reporting of transactions should be free from
any individual bias.
Free from error means there are no errors or omissions in the description of the phenomenon and
no errors made in the process by which the financial information was produced. It does preclude
any inaccuracies from arising, particularly where estimates have to be made.
Substance over form, as per IASB, is implied in faithful representation of a transaction because
faithful representation is only possible if transactions are accounted for according to their
substance and economic reality.
The primary objective of the financial statements is to enable users to take varied decision. These
decisions often involve selection of one entity among various options available to the decision
maker, for eg. which entity to invest in out of multiple options available. This requires that the
financial statements of various entities must be comparable, i.e. similar items should look similar
and different items must look different.
Consistency, though related, is different from comparability.
Hybridoma Technology ( Production , Purification , and Application )
Provide a brief description of the qualitative characteristics of us.pdf
1. Provide a brief description of the qualitative characteristics of useful information including
relevance/materiality and the cost constraint.
Solution
The framework states that the users should be provided information which is relevant to them.
Too much information should be avoided, and similarly, too little information also may not help
the users. Information provided should be relevant to the decisions the various stakeholders need
to make. Information is considered relevant if it has some predictive or confirmatory value, or
both. The relevance of information is generally determined by its nature (i.e. what type of
information is being provided) and its materiality (discussed further below).
Information is material if omitting it or misstating it could influence the decisions of the users
that the users make on the basis of financial information about a specific reporting entity.
Materiality need not always be assessed in terms of quantum of the amounts involved. For eg. if
Directors remuneration paid is over the limits laid by the concerned corporate law in place even
by a small amount, such information indicates non compliance with the laws of land and hence,
though the amount concerned may not be significant, the information will still be considered to
be material
Faithful representation warrants that the financial statements should reflect information which is
complete, neutral and free from error. Further, the accounting for the particular transaction
should reflect the substance of the transaction, rather than the mere legal form, considering that
IFRS are meant to be principle-based standards.
A complete depiction includes all information necessary for a user to understand the
phenomenon being depicted, including all necessary descriptions and explanations.
A neutral depiction means that information must not be manipulated in any way in order to
influence the decisions of users. The recording and reporting of transactions should be free from
any individual bias.
Free from error means there are no errors or omissions in the description of the phenomenon and
no errors made in the process by which the financial information was produced. It does preclude
any inaccuracies from arising, particularly where estimates have to be made.
Substance over form, as per IASB, is implied in faithful representation of a transaction because
faithful representation is only possible if transactions are accounted for according to their
substance and economic reality.
The primary objective of the financial statements is to enable users to take varied decision. These
2. decisions often involve selection of one entity among various options available to the decision
maker, for eg. which entity to invest in out of multiple options available. This requires that the
financial statements of various entities must be comparable, i.e. similar items should look similar
and different items must look different.
Consistency, though related, is different from comparability. Consistency refers to usage of same
methods for same items, from period to period, within a reporting entity or in a single period,
across entities.
Providing multiple accounting policy choice for similar transactions/balances tends to dilute the
characteristic of comparability. Many countries who adopt IFRS, often tend to reduce the
accounting policy options provided by IFRS to suit their local regulatory and economic
environment.
The information provided in the financial statements should be verifiable. Verifiability means
different knowledgeable and independent observers could reach a reasonable consensus that a
particular piece of information is faithfully depicted in the financial statements.
Verification can be direct or indirect. Direct verification means verifying an amount or other
representation through direct observation, eg. verify cash by counting cash.
Indirect verification means checking the inputs to a model, methodology or other technique used
to calculate the amount.
This usually requires entities to disclose the underlying assumptions, methods of compiling the
information and other information and factors relevant to support the other information, for eg.
carrying amount if inventory is verified by checking the inputs (cost, quantity), and recalculating
the ending inventory using the same cost flow assumption (for eg. first in first out, weighted
average method).
Timeliness is another critical element for decision makers. Financial statements should be
available to the users within a reasonable time frame. Older the information becomes, less useful
and relevant it becomes.
IFRS of course, does not prescribe any timelines for presentation of financial statements
(remember these are principal based standards). Generally, the timelines within which the
financial statements should be available for use to public is prescribed by local lay, typically by
stock exchanges where the entities are listed.
Presenting the information in a clear, concise manner, which includes aggregating and grouping
the information in a systematic manner with proper cross referencing to schedules and disclosure
makes the information understandable.
However, the framework appreciates that some economic phenomena are inherently complex.
3. Even well informed and diligent users may need to seek aid of an advisor for understanding
these. This does not preclude such information from being included in the financial statements as
exclusion of such information would render the financial statements incomplete and potentially
misleading.
Finally, the concept of cost constraints simply states that for providing the relevant information
as outlined above, the cost of gatherint the information should not exceed the benefit derived
from reporting the information, for eg, a company may want to provide division wise
information to certain target users, but as on date, the systems are set up such that the
information is not easily available and my take a significant quantum of time and effort to pull
out, the entity may not choose to put in those costs and efforts, unless it is looking for a huge
funding or investment by a partner.