The Importance of Accountancy
Asish K Bhattacharyya
Initially,
when I started to teach at a reputed business school, I was dismayed by
the fact that an average MBA student who does not want to specialise in
Finance is quite happy if she can obtain a C plus (the minimum pass
grade) in the basic accounting course.
It
is the same with middle-level managers coming to business schools for
executive education. Most of them lack accounting literacy and do not
find the subject interesting. The situation is no different in the
This
phenomenon surprised me because I have always felt that managers should
have a clear understanding of the language in which companies
communicate with investors.
Given
our experience with this group, which is more educated than average
investors, we may not be too wrong to conclude that most retail
investors have no interest at all in understanding the rules for
corporate financial reporting. A little enquiry reveals that the reason
for this lack of interest: the complexity of accounting rules.
Accountancy
is a business language, but not a language that common investors
understand. It has become too technical and complex, too legalistic and
full of jargon. General investors find it difficult to acquire even the
basic knowledge of accountancy.
Investors
who do not have accounting literacy cannot read reports of companies in
which they have invested their savings. Annual financial reports issued
by companies have become so bulky that it is difficult for even an
investor who has some accounting knowledge to find the information that
he wants.
Some
may argue that corporate financial reports are meant for analysts only.
Therefore, efforts of a company to prepare the bulky report is not a
waste. But even analysts are finding corporate financial reports
increasingly irrelevant. The information provided in these reports are
either stale or are already available elsewhere. It is not contextual
and therefore not relevant.
It
has been said that corporate accountants arrange building blocks (raw
data) to build an excellent building and analysts dismantle the same
because they want to see the building blocks. Therefore, it can be
argued that companies should provide raw data and provide narratives to
explain the same.
In
fact, there may not even be any need to circulate the hard copy of the
financial report. With the use of technologies like Extensible Business
Reporting Language (XBRL), it is possible to make the raw data
accessible to stakeholders. With the help of narratives, they can then
themselves construct financial statements to suit their own needs.
But
the requirement to provide narratives will become a rule in the near
future itself. Narratives have become important simply because
businesses are complex and numbers cannot tell the complete story.
Therefore, narratives should be an integral part of the financial
report.
This
year, the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) may add a
project on this topic in its active agenda. Accounting rules can be
simplified if companies provide adequate narratives as an integral part
of their financial reports.
To
make corporate accounting interesting and useful to common investors,
we need to simplify accounting standards. Simplification of accounting
standards is a very difficult task. IAS-39, Recognition and Measurement
of Financial Statements, is an example of how complex an accounting
standard can be. It is a rule based accounting standard. IASB and FASB
of USA are currently attempting to rework it in a joint project aiming
at a principle-based solution.
There
cannot be any argument against the proposal for simplifying standards.
The movement for simplification has just started and it is gathering
momentum fast. `Report Leadership', an initiative that challenges the
established thinking on corporate reporting, was established in the
year 2006. The group has come together to develop simple and practical
ways to improve narrative and financial reporting.
Simplification
of accounting rules will demand a high level of integrity of managers,
accountants, audit committee and auditors. Simplification will relax
control on accounting policy and every company will have a wider choice
in selecting the accounting policy based on its judgement of the nature
and economic consequences of a
transaction
or event. The accounting profession has to raise the bar of ethical
standards to provide assurance to users of financial statements that
the choice of accounting rules is appropriate.
In
Professional
accountants do not join the teaching profession because of the huge
difference between earnings of an accounting teacher and that of an
accounting professional in practice or working in the industry.
This is not the situation in the
It
is the social responsibility of the Institute of Chartered Accountants
of India's to be proactive in strengthening research in the accounting
area and to improve accounting literacy of the country.