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Impact of IFRS on the Financial Statements of Select IT Companies in India


Affiliations
1 Adjunct Faculty, Department of Commerce, Christ University, Bangalore - 29, India
2 Professor in Finance & Associate Director, Centre for Research – Projects, Christ University, Bangalore - 29, India

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Globalization of economies and shift in financial environment from the traditional bank based one to a market based one necessitated a uniform financial reporting language across countries to facilitate comparisons. This resulted in the establishment of International Accounting Standard Board (IASB) which issued International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), a global standard for company financial statements. More than 120 countries, including European Union, Australia, Canada have already adopted IFRS. India was expected to converge with IFRS from April 2016 for listed and unlisted companies with a net worth of more than ` 500 crores. However, few Indian companies listed internationally are voluntarily reporting IFRS. The present study aimed to understand the effect of this voluntary reporting of IFRS on key financial ratios of four selected IT sector companies. The study compared 12 major financial ratios under IFRS and Indian Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (IGAAP) as reported in their financial statements for a period of 5years from 2009-10 to 2013-14. For the purpose of the study, financial ratios representing four key dimensions of companies namely liquidity, leverage, profitability, and efficiency were considered. To understand the statistical significance of the difference between the ratios, Wilcoxon signed rank test, a non parametric test was used. Of the 12 ratios analyzed, 10 were found to be statistically significant. Further, the study explained the financial statement items which cause the difference in the ratios of these companies. The results indicated current liability and shareholder's equity to be significant at the 10% level, thus explaining the difference in financial statement items under IFRS.

Keywords

International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), Financial Markets, Convergence

F65, F36, M41, M48

Paper Submission Date : April 7, 2016 ; Paper sent back for Revision : October 20, 2016 ; Paper Acceptance Date : February 22, 2017.

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  • Impact of IFRS on the Financial Statements of Select IT Companies in India

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Authors

Vidya Chandrasekar
Adjunct Faculty, Department of Commerce, Christ University, Bangalore - 29, India
D. N. S. Kumar
Professor in Finance & Associate Director, Centre for Research – Projects, Christ University, Bangalore - 29, India

Abstract


Globalization of economies and shift in financial environment from the traditional bank based one to a market based one necessitated a uniform financial reporting language across countries to facilitate comparisons. This resulted in the establishment of International Accounting Standard Board (IASB) which issued International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), a global standard for company financial statements. More than 120 countries, including European Union, Australia, Canada have already adopted IFRS. India was expected to converge with IFRS from April 2016 for listed and unlisted companies with a net worth of more than ` 500 crores. However, few Indian companies listed internationally are voluntarily reporting IFRS. The present study aimed to understand the effect of this voluntary reporting of IFRS on key financial ratios of four selected IT sector companies. The study compared 12 major financial ratios under IFRS and Indian Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (IGAAP) as reported in their financial statements for a period of 5years from 2009-10 to 2013-14. For the purpose of the study, financial ratios representing four key dimensions of companies namely liquidity, leverage, profitability, and efficiency were considered. To understand the statistical significance of the difference between the ratios, Wilcoxon signed rank test, a non parametric test was used. Of the 12 ratios analyzed, 10 were found to be statistically significant. Further, the study explained the financial statement items which cause the difference in the ratios of these companies. The results indicated current liability and shareholder's equity to be significant at the 10% level, thus explaining the difference in financial statement items under IFRS.

Keywords


International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), Financial Markets, Convergence

F65, F36, M41, M48

Paper Submission Date : April 7, 2016 ; Paper sent back for Revision : October 20, 2016 ; Paper Acceptance Date : February 22, 2017.




DOI: https://doi.org/10.17010/ijf%2F2017%2Fv11i5%2F114244