The Trustees of the IASC Foundation issued a letter earlier this week to participants of the upcoming G20 meeting on 15 November in Washington, D.C.
The letter is quite long, so I am only providing the first section, the whole letter can be read here.
Dear Mr President
On behalf of the Trustees of the IASC Foundation, the oversight body of the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB), I am writing to you as the host of the upcoming meeting of leaders of G20 countries on 15 November in Washington.
We respectfully request that the meeting secretariat circulates this letter to other participants in advance of the meeting.
The purpose of this letter is to inform the leaders of G20 countries of the role that the IASB, the independent body charged with developing a single set of high quality, global accounting standards, is playing in addressing issues emanating from the credit crisis.
The Trustees understand that the issues of accounting standards and the credit crisis and the governance of our organisation may be on the meeting’s agenda.
The Trustees understand that the issues of accounting standards and the credit crisis and the governance of our organisation may be on the meeting’s agenda.
Accounting standards and the credit crisis
The need for a global response to the credit crisis, a global problem, is evident and has been emphasised by world leaders. International co-operation is already well advanced in the field of accounting standard-setting. International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRSs), set by the IASB, are now used in more than 100 countries.
The need for a global response to the credit crisis, a global problem, is evident and has been emphasised by world leaders. International co-operation is already well advanced in the field of accounting standard-setting. International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRSs), set by the IASB, are now used in more than 100 countries.
Most of the world’s developed and emerging economies - including nearly all of the G20 members - have made commitments to IFRSs. The IASB has been actively engaged in promoting common standards over the world and in particular in ensuring convergence among major economies. The success so far achieved should not be compromised by actions that would weaken the independence of the standard-setting process.
The role of fair value accounting in the credit crisis has received much scrutiny. The Trustees support the IASB’s efforts to establish accounting standards aimed at providing transparent and comparable financial information. To respond to the crisis, the IASB has taken urgent action to improve the application of fair value principles, where necessary, and is committed to working with the US Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) to ensure globally consistent solutions.
The use of fair values has received support from both banking supervisory and investor communities. Christian Noyer, President of the Banque de France, wrote in the Banque de France’s October 2008 Financial Stability Review, “In parallel, the move to mark-to-market accounting in financial reporting has fostered transparency and a more timely recognition of risk exposures, and has contributed to sharpening market discipline.”
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