Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) is the standard framework of guidelines for financial accounting. It includes the standards, conventions, and rules accountants follow in recording and summarizing transactions, and in the preparation of financial statements.
[edit] OverviewFinancial accounting information must be assembled and reported objectively. Third-parties who must rely on such information have a right to be assured that the data are free from bias and inconsistency, whether deliberate or not. For this reason, financial accounting relies on certain standards or guides that are called "Generally Accepted Accounting Principles" (GAAP). Principles derive from tradition, such as the concept of matching. In any report of financial statements (audit, compilation, review, etc.), the preparer/auditor must indicate to the reader whether or not the information contained within the statements complies with GAAP.
[edit] National GAAPEvery country has its own standard accounting practice version of GAAP with standards set by a national governing body. [edit] IndiaInstitute of Chartered Accountants of India is empowered for issuance of Accounting Standard in India. So far ICAI has issued 31 Accounting Standards and AS-32 is under preparation. CBDT is also empowered to issue AS for appropriate accounting method for taxation. Central Government is in line of thinking to create separate Accounting Standard body for government accounting. [edit] International GAAPMany countries use or are converging on the International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), established and maintained by the International Accounting Standards Board. [edit] See also
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