Treasury under fire over IFRS schedule

IFRS timetable raises advisers' irritation as the implementation date changes

Written by Penny Sukhraj

As if the Treasury did not have enough trouble to contend with a little known board of advisers has decided that enough is enough and made plain its clear irritation at the way the implementation of international accounting standards is being handled by government.

At issue is the timetable for introducing IFRS to all government departments. The Financial Reporting Advisory Board, says it was always too tight and if only they had been consulted properly they would have told everyone.

Advertisement

Elwyn Eilledge, chairman of FRAB, said in a recent report: ‘The planned timetable for the implementation of IFRS was always challenging, but the board was not given the opportunity to debate this prior to the Treasury’s announcement.

‘When the board reviewed the progress towards implementing IFRS, including the development of PFI accounting guidance, it concluded that the 2008/09 timetable was not realistic for some major departments, and advised that the implementation date be changed.’

The clash over the IFRS timetable however is rooted in FRAB clashing with government over accounting for PFI.

FRAB’s review of government accounts ended in advice that the Treasury withdraw a technical note which allowed government to keep large amounts of debt at some distance form its balance sheet.

Government did not heed FRAB’s advice and sought to find a way of avoiding the embarrassment of backtracking on its own rules.

This was done by announcing last year a move to IFRS by 2008/09 – without first discussing this with FRAB.

The hasty decision means the timetable is unlikely to be met, Deloitte partner Ken Wilde pointed out. But the Treasury ignored FRAB altogether when it made the announcement in 2007.

‘Given the role of FRAB it would have been sensible to ask us. We might have told them the proposed deadline would be too tight,’ Wilde said.

But FRAB has offered advice on which standards might help with PFI, but warned that there will be inconsistent accounting in the public sector for at least another year.

Something not likely to help government in what is clearly becoming difficult times.

Tags:

Comments

White papers

Related jobs

More Accounting jobs

Spotlight

Andrew Higginson, Tesco Personal Finance

Profile: Andrew Higginson, CEO of Tesco Personal Finance

He’s spent more than a decade at the top of...

Top 30 Accounting Networks and Associations 2008

The race to become the biggest firm on the planet...

Barack Obama Accountancy Age cover October 2008

Obama: asset or liability?

What an Obama presidency could mean for you

Find your next job

Find your next job
Salary Checker

Job of the week

More finance jobs

Newsletters

Sign up here for the very latest news delivered to your inbox. Choose from the following options:

Your next job

Have your say

Will proposed tax cuts help to stimulate the economy?
Yes
No

Advertisement

Search white papers

Search white papers

Advertisement