Financial Accounting using IFRS is intended for use in the first financial accountingcourse at either the undergraduate or graduate level at universities that want to teach IFRS (U.S. GAAP is not covered).This book balances the preparationof financial statements with their analysis and interpretation.Thisbook accommodates mini-courses lasting only a few days as well as extended courses lasting a full semester.
As instructors of introductory financial accounting, we recognise that the first financial accounting course serves the general business students as well as potential accounting majors. FinancialAccounting using IFRS embraces this reality. This book balances financial reporting, analysis, interpretation, and decision making with the morestandard aspects of accounting such as journal entries, T-accounts, and the preparation of financial statements.
One primary goal of a financial accountingcourse is to teach students the skills needed to apply their accountingknowledge to solving real business problems. With that goal in mind, You Make the Call boxes in each chapter encourage students to apply the material presented to solving actual business scenarios.
This interactive tutorialis intended for use in programs that either require or would like to offera pre-term tutorial that creates a baseline of accounting knowledge for students with littleto no prior exposureto financial accounting. Initially developedas a pre-term tutorial for first year MBA students, this product can be used asa warm-up for any introductory level financial accounting course. It is designed as an asynchronous, interactive, self-pacedexperience for students.
Professor Wong has taught financial accounting and financial statement analysis to undergraduate and MBA students. He has received several awards for teaching excellence at the Haas School of Business and Rotman School of Management.
Prior to joining MIT, she was a faculty member at the University of Michigan. Professor Hanlon has taught financial accounting to undergraduates, MBA students, executive MBA students, and Masters of Finance students. Professor Hanlon also teaches Taxes and Business Strategy to MBA students. She is the winner of the 2013 Jamieson Prize for Excellence in Teaching at MIT Sloan.
Professor Hanlon has testified in front of the U.S. Senate Committee on Finance and the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Ways and Means about the interaction of financial accounting and tax policy. She served as a U.S. delegate to the American-Swiss Young Leaders Conference in 2010 and worked as an Academic Fellow at the U.S. House Ways and Means Committee in 2015.
Professor Magee teaches financial accounting to MBA and Executive MBA students. He has received several teaching awards at the Kellogg School, including the Alumni Choice Outstanding Professor Award in 2003.
Professor Pfeiffer teaches financial accounting and financial analysis to undergraduate, MBA, and Executive students. He has also taught managerial accounting for MBAs. He has won several teaching awards at both the undergraduate and graduate levels.
Written by EY financial reporting professionals from around the world, this detailed guide to reporting under IFRS provides a global perspective on the application of IFRS. It explains complex technical accounting issues clearly by setting IFRS in a practical context with numerous worked examples, illustrations and extracts from the published financial reports of major listed companies from around the world.
Financial Accounting is the ideal book for anyone with little prior knowledge or who is new to this subject area. The book retains the clear writing style and unique international focus which led to the success of previous editions. This approach enables the teaching of financial accounting in a way that is not country-specific. This fully updated text uses the International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) as its framework to explain key concepts and practices while linking them with contemporary real-life examples from around the world.
Oracle Financial Services Accounting Foundation helps financial institutions streamline current accounting processes and reconcile the general ledger (GL) with instrument or policy ledgers. It does this by providing the accounting platform with detailed event-, transaction-, and instrument-level data from core banking and insurance systems.
While there is growing interest in IFRS within the US, interest outside the US has exploded. Weygandt's fourth edition of Financial Accounting: IFRS highlights the integration of more US GAAP rules, a desired feature as more foreign companies find the United States to be their largest market. The highly anticipated new edition retains each of the key features (e.g. TOC, writing style, pedagogy, robust EOC) on which users of Weygandt Financial have come to rely, while putting the focus on international companies/examples, discussing financial accounting principles and procedures within the context of IFRS, and providing EOC exercises and problems that present students with foreign currency examples instead of solely U.S. dollars.