Financial information has several qualities that make it useful. These qualities are outlined in Chapter 3 of the Conceptual Framework for Financial Reporting, approved by the International Accounting Standards Board [IASB].
Fundamental Qualitative Characteristics
1. Relevance
Relevant information is capable of making a difference in the decisions made by users. Relevance requires financial information to be related to an economic decision. Otherwise, the information is useless.
Financial information is useful if it has predictive value and confirmatory value. Predictive value helps users in predicting or anticipating future outcomes. Confirmatory value enables users to check and confirm earlier predictions or evaluations.
Materiality is an aspect of relevance which is entity-specific. It means that what is material to one entity may not be material to another. It is relative. Information is material if it is significant enough to influence the decision of users. Materiality is affected by the nature and magnitude [or size] of the item.
2. Faithful Representation
The financial information in the financial reports should represent what it purports to represent. Meaning, it should reflect what really happened, with the correct financial values.
There are three characteristics of faithful representation: 1. Completeness [adequate or full disclosure of all necessary information], 2. Neutrality [fairness and freedom from bias], and 3. Free from error [no inaccuracies and omissions].
Enhancing Qualitative Characteristics
1. Comparability
Comparable information enables comparisons within the entity and across entities. When comparisons are made within the entity, information is compared from one accounting period to another. For example: income is compared for the years 2019, 2020, and 2021. Comparability of information across entities enables analysis of similarities and differences between different companies.
2. Verifiability
Verifiability helps to assure users that information represents faithfully what it purports to represent. Financial information is supported by evidence and independent individuals can check them to see whether such information is faithfully represented. In other words, information is verifiable if it can be audited.
3. Timeliness
Timeliness means providing information to decision-makers in time to be capable of influencing their decisions. It shouldn't be significantly delayed or else it will be of little or no value.
4. Understandability
Understandability requires financial information to be understandable or comprehensible to users with reasonable knowledge of business and economic activities. To be understandable, information should be presented clearly and concisely. However, it is improper to exclude complex items just to make the reports simple and understandable.
Key Takeaways
Fundamentally, financial statement information needs to be 1] relevant and 2] faithfully represented. Faithful representation means that information is complete, neutral, and free from bias.
The quality of financial statements is enhanced by comparability, verifiability, timeliness, and understandability.
Web link
APA format
Qualitative characteristics of financial information
[2022]. Accountingverse.
//www.accountingverse.com/financial-accounting/introduction/qualitative-characteristics.html
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