IFRS Reporter
TAKE A DEEP BREATH – AND THEN GO AHEAD Print E-mail
Written by Greg Millman   
Wednesday, 25 February 2009 20:00

 That's former SEC Chairman David Ruder's message to newly appointed SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro. In a frank interview with IFRS Reporter, Chairman Ruder talked about why IFRS adoption by companies is inevitable. He acknowledged that it may not take place on the timetable laid out in the SEC Roadmap, but insisted that it will take place. Why? The alternative would be to put U.S. companies at a disadvantage in the capital markets. Few major U.S. companies have shown any eagerness to transition to IFRS. But that may change because IFRS often allows companies to report higher earnings than GAAP. There aren't many other ways to report higher earnings in a deepening recession. So IFRS could look better and better to companies as the financial squeeze tightens.

         Listen to the highlights to learn: 

  • How the financial crisis affects the international accounting agenda

  • Why accounting convergence is pointless without auditing convergence--a task that has barely begun.

  • What threats to IASB independence will make the FASB necessary even if the U.S. eventually adopts IFRS

  • How Paul Volcker brought the bacon home for the IASB

A Q&A text and will be available shortly.  The full interview is available here: Part 1, Part 2

Last Updated ( Monday, 14 September 2009 19:18 )
 

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The Editor of IFRS Reporter

Greg Millman

Gregory J. Millman is a contributing editor to Financial Executive Magazine. He has also written for Forbes, Barrons, the Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, and numerous other periodicals He is the author of books of financial journalism including The Floating Battlefield: Corporate Strategies in the Currency Wars; The Vandals’ Crown: How Rebel Currency Traders Overthrew the World’s Central Banks, and The Day Traders: the Untold Story of the Extreme Investors and How They Changed Wall Street Forever. His most recent book is Homeschooling: A Family’s Journey. Prior to making a career shift to journalism, he worked in banking, consulting, and project finance in China.

Webmaster, Associate Editor

Anna Millman is currently a senior in economics at Brown University.