Challenges to the current accounting model
The CPA Journal; New York; Jan 1997; Swieringa, Robert J;
Volume:
67
Issue:
1
Start Page:
26-32
ISSN:
07328435
Subject Terms:
Accounting policies
Financial reporting
Historical cost accounting
Mark to market accounting
Fair market value
Models
Accounting policies
Financial reporting
Historical cost accounting
Mark to market accounting
Fair market value
Models
Classification Codes:
4120: Accounting policies & procedures
9190: US
Geographic Names:
US
US
Abstract:
The accounting model used today is one developed during the Industrial
Age. The debate
at the FASB has not been whether to use fair value, but when to use
fair value. Estimates
for uncertainties have become increasingly complex and difficult as
exemplified by the
accounting for postretirement health-care benefits and for obligations
for certain closure
or removal costs of long-lived assets such as nuclear plants. The current
accounting
model will be challenged by more flexible and fluid organizational
arrangements, increased
investments in intangible assets, more extensive use of financial instruments
to manage
various risks, and changes in information technology.
Full Text:
Copyright New York State Society of Certified Public Accountants Jan
1997
[Headnote]
Some profound and thoughtFul observations for the next 100 years
We come to an age of technology, information, and global competition
with a financial accounting
model that was fashioned almost 100 years ago. In the early twentieth
century, the balance sheet was
the most important financial statement. Cost was viewed as a practical
and satisfactory basis of
valuation for assets held for use or sale, except that fixed assets
were depreciated and inventories
sometimes were written down to amounts that were below cost.
The historical cost, transaction-based model that emerged in the early
1900s generally has served us
well over the years. But several areas are unclear and continue to
present challenges.
Fair Value
The current accounting model is a mixed- attribute, transaction-based
model. It is often described as
based on historical costs; but the attributes are not limited to historical
costs-current market values, net
realizable values, and present values are used too.
That mixed-attribute model has worked reasonably well over the years.
But some believe the
mixed-attribute model should be replaced with a fair-value model. Fair
value is the price that would be
obtained under normal conditions between a willing buyer and a willing
seller.
The Public Oversight Board of the SEC Practice Section of the AICPA
urged the FASB to study
comprehensively the possibility of fair value accounting. The GAO recommended
the FASB consider
the development of a market value rule for all financial instruments.
However, a top-level government
working group on financial markets that included former Treasury Secretary
Lloyd Benston, Federal
Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, and SEC Chairman Arthur Levitt, urged
the FASB to go slow on
market value rules for financial instruments, and the AICPA Special
Reporting Committee
recommended that the FASB not devote attention to value-based accounting
at this time. The
Association for Investment Management and Research (AIMR) has authorized
a comprehensive study
and report of the opinions of the entire AIMR membership on the role
of market values in financial
reporting.
Most recently, the GAO, in its report, The Accounting Profession's Major
Issues: Progress and
Concerns, stated its concerns about the mixed model and made a pitch
for financial instruments at fair
value and more forward-looking information about opportunities and
risks.
The debate at the FASB has not been about changing to a different model.
Rather, the debate has
been about changing the mix of the attributes in the current model.
The debate has not been whether to
use fair values, but when to use fair values. The debate has focused
on four questions.
Should Fair Value Be Used to Initially Measure Certain Assets? That
debate has taken place in the
context of contributions (FASB Statement No. 116, Accounting for Contributions
Received and
Contributions Made), mortgage servicing rights (FASB Statement No.
122, Accounting for Mortgage
Servicing Rights), and stockbased compensation (FASB Statement No.
123, Accounting for
Stock-Based Compensation). Contributions and stock-based compensation
are required to be
recognized at fair value, but mortgage servicing rights are required
to be recognized at carryover basis.
Should Fair Value Be Used to Re Remeasure Certain Assets if Recorded
Amounts Are Not Likely to
Be Recovered? That debate has taken place in the context of loan impairment
(FASB Statement No.
114, Accounting by Creditors for Impairment of a Loan) and asset impairment
(FASB Statement No.
121, Accounting for the Impairment of LongLived Assets and for Long-Lived
Assets to Be Disposed
of). An assumption inherent in an enterprise's statement of financial
position prepared in accordance
with GAAP is that recorded amounts for assets will be recovered. If
that condition does not hold,
recorded amounts generally are adjusted. But, should those amounts
be adjusted to fair value?
Impaired loans may be measured at fair value, but impaired long-lived
assets are required to be
measured at fair value.
Should Fair Value Be Used to Account for Certain Assets that Are Readily
Marketable? That debate
has taken place in the context of marketable debt securities (FASB
Statements No.115, Accounting
for Certain Investments in Debt and Equity Securities, and No. 124,
Accounting for Certain
Investments Held by Not-for-Profit Organizations). During an extended
period of reduced interest
rates, financial institutions reported significant amounts of realized
gains while concurrently having
underwater investment portfolios. That behavior was described as gains
trading, cherry picking, or
snacking. Statement No. 115 retains amortized cost for some held-tomaturity
debt securities, but
Statement No. 124 requires that not-for-profit organizations account
for all debt securities at fair
value.
Should Fair Value Be Used to Account for Certain Assets When Underlying
Rights Are Changed or
Unbundled? Loans or receivables can be pooled or packaged into homogeneous
portfolios and
transferred to a trust or special-purpose entity that then issues debt
or equity securities. Through the
securitization process, receivables are changed or unbundled into new
rights and obligations. Should
those rights and obligations be recorded at fair value? FASB Statement
No. 125, Accounting for
Transfers and Servicing of Financial Assets and Extinguishments of
Liabilities, requires that some of
those rights and obligations be recorded at fair value and that some
be recorded at carryover basis.
Uncertainties
Another unclear area under the traditional model is how to deal with
uncertainties. Uncertainties about
valuations are largely avoided by relying on amounts established in
bargained exchange transactions.
Yet, the results of transactions must be classified, and assets and
liabilities represent future benefits or
sacrifices. Some wish to minimize uncertainty by expensing all costs
when incurred, unless there is
clear evidence of future benefit, by requiring a rigorous association
of costs and revenues, or by
minimizing the use of estimates and allocations by sticking as close
to cash accounting as possible.
Accounting tends to be viewed as objective and precise and as reflecting
measures of past
transactions and events. Yet, those measures are based on assumptions
or estimates about future
events. All balance-sheet accounts reflect estimates and assumptions.
Estimates are becoming more prevalent because contractual relationships
are becoming more
prevalent. Accounting for contracts is easy if they are simple, discrete,
and of short duration; if they
reflect limited relations between the parties; if precise measures
exist for objects of exchange; if no
future cooperation is anticipated, and if no sharing relations exist.
Accounting for contracts is difficult if contractual relationships are
complex and of long duration, if they
reflect close relations between the parties, if some objects of exchange
cannot be measured currently,
if some future cooperation is anticipated, if sharing relations exist,
if some troubles are anticipated, and
if interactions are assumed.
Complex contractual relationships exist for parent and subsidiary affiliations,
financial instruments,
contributions, postretirement benefit arrangements, compensation plans,
insurance arrangements,
warranty and service arrangements, regulated enterprises, software
contracts, and so forth.
Accounting for objects of exchange that cannot be measured currently
makes extraordinary demands
on accountants as measurers. Consider postretirement health-care benefits-arrangements
that may
cover up to 80 years. Those benefits are in kind and indexed rather
than fixed, the contracts are not as
well defined as pension contracts are, and contracts are changing as
arrangements evolve.
But, also consider reclamation costs that can cover up to 90 years,
decommissioning costs, and the
costs of significant extended warranties. All of those costs rely heavily
on estimates of uncertain future
events to make initial and subsequent measurements. Accountants are
increasingly making interim
measures of unfolding events. Estimates are diffcult; changes in estimates
are prevalent.
Consider the February 1996 FASB Exposure Draft-Accounting for Certain
Liabilities for Closure or
Removal Costs of Long-Lived Assets. Measuring those liabilities for
long-lived assets such as nuclear
power plants requires estimates of uncertain future events. The amounts
and timing of expected future
payments for closure or removal activities have to be projected over
periods ranging from 40 to 60
years. The payments have to be discounted back to their present value
at an assumed interest or
discount rate to reflect the time value of money, and the discounted
amounts have to be allocated
between current and future accounting periods. Between now and then,
laws and technologies may
change. Actual payments may differ dramatically from expected amounts.
The expanded use of estimates in financial reporting is being driven
by the increased reliance on
contractual relationships and by the increased uncertainty associated
with judgments, assumptions, and
estimates.
A New World
The financial accounting model we bring to the new era was shaped by
the existing corporate
arrangements for large, complex, and more or less permanent business
enterprises that invested
heavily in tangible assets. That model will be challenged by more flexible
and fluid organizational
arrangements, increased investments in intangible or "soft" assets,
more extensive use of financial
instruments to manage various risks, and changes in information technology.
Alliances and Partnerships. There is an increased use of alliances and
partnerships between
telecommunications, entertainment, and information services companies;
between pharmaceutical
companies; between software companies; and between technology companies.
The term "merger lite"
has been used to describe arrangements in which talent and resources
are combined, but each partner
retains the right to link with others and retains its financial and
other resources.
Where some alliances and partnerships reflect well-defined legal boundaries
that are supported by
contractual agreements, others reflect organizational arrangements
that transcend legal boundaries by
using the talent, resources, or governance structure of more than one
entity. A "virtual entity" is formed
to emphasize functional considerations. Highly specific assets are
committed to the new arrangements,
and those assets are integrated to develop and deliver products and
services to the market, but the
ownership of those assets is retained by the partner entities.
Alliances and partnerships essentially decouple decision rights from
access to talent, resources, and
sharing relations. Generally, the equity method is used to account
for investments in alliances and
partnerships, but those investments may represent only one of the many
features of the arrangements.
Other companies are spinning off single-product or single-function companies.
A technology company
(Thermo Electron) that testified at the public hearing about the October
1995 FASB Exposure Draft,
Consolidated Financial Statements: Policy and Procedures, has multiple
public subsidiaries, each with
joint ventures, licensing arrangements, and other links that form and
dissolve in just months or even
weeks. The company spins out certain of its businesses into separate
subsidiaries that then sell a
minority interest to outside investors. As a result of those sales
and similar transactions, the company
records gains in income that represent the company's increased net
investment in its subsidiaries.
Those gains have represented a substantial portion of the net income
reported by the company in
recent years. That company has brought the decoupling of decision rights
and residual claims and the
reporting of those gains to a new art form. Other companies are following
the example of Thermo
Electron.
Intangible or "Soft" Assets. Attention is shifting away from tangible
assets to intangible assets.
Companies that are building soft assets are now among the fastest growing
segments of our economy.
Service companies are investing significant amounts in employee and
other training, technology
companies are making significant investments in intellectual capital
and research and development, and
retailers and others are investing in internallydeveloped brands, customer
loyalty, and satisfaction
levels.
The SEC held a symposium on intangible assets in April 1996. The objective
of the symposium was to
identify specific financial reporting problems and to explore potential
improvements to the financial
reporting model.
The accounting issues about intangible assets are not new. In the late
196Os and early 1970s, there
was a great deal of interest in recognizing investments in research
and development and in human
resources. A subfield called human resource accounting emerged and
flourished. However, a
watershed event was the issuance of FASB Statement No. 2, Accounting
for Research and Develop
ment Costs, in 1974. That statement required that all research and
development costs as defined be
charged to expense when incurred.
In issuing Statement No. 2, the Board expressed concerns about the high
degree of uncertainty about
future benefits of individual research and development projects at
the time the costs are incurred and
the lack of a direct causal relationship between expenditures and benefits.
The Board concluded that
although future benefits from a particular research and development
project could be foreseen, they
generally could not be measured with a reasonable degree of certainty
and therefore failed to satisfy
the suggested measurability test for accounting recognition as an asset.
In March 1996, the FASB received a letter from the Software Publishers
Association that requested
that the Board reconsider FASB Statement No. 86, Accounting for the
Costs of Computer Software
to Be Sold, Leased, or Otherwise Marketed. The letter noted that where
Statement No. 86 was
based on an inventory model approach, sales of software have become
more analogous to services or
subscriptions than to inventoried goods.
The letter observed that the product cycle has shortened from several
years in the mid-1980s to
18-24 months in the mid-1990s to less than 12 months today. Software
development is increasingly
funded by periodic maintenance fees, database software often is updated
on a daily basis, and some
online services charge on a number-of-images-used basis. Software companies
find it increasingly
difficult to meet the "technological feasibility" criteria of Statement
No. 86.
The Software Publishers Association believes realization of software
assets has become increasingly
uncertain because of ever increasing volatility in the software marketplace,
compressed product
cycles, increased competition, and diverging technology platforms.
It further believes that capitalized
costs no longer are relevant to most users of financial statements
and that the cost and effort to
develop the information required by Statement No. 86 do not justify
the benefit from recording an
asset. Given the high degree of uncertainty in the product development
cycle of most software, the
association believes that software development costs should be classified
as research and
development expenses and charged to expense when incurred.
Financial Instruments. In the past 20 to 25 years there has been an
increased use of financial
instruments. We have experienced a sea change in finance. Fundamental
changes in global financial
markets have transformed the financial activities of all entities.
Increased volatility in foreign exchange
and interest rates and other market prices have greatly increased market,
credit, and liquidity risks.
Efforts to manage those financial risks, competition, and government
deregulation in financial markets
and services; structural changes in the economies and taxation of different
countries; and technological
advances in computers and information services have stimulated financial
innovation.
The Board's decision to add the project on financial instruments and
off-balancesheet financing to its
technical agenda in May 1986 was, in part, a response to that sea change
in finance. That project was
expected to develop broad standards for resolving accounting issues
raised by financial instruments as
well as those raised by the inconsistent accounting guidance and practice
that had developed for those
instruments over the years.
Where the FASB may have been somewhat ahead of the curve in 198(, it
has fallen behind in the
1990s. After 10 years of effort, the Board has yet to come to grips
with financial instruments. Instead
of developing broad standards, the Board has issued a patchwork of
inconsistent standards for
marketable securities, loan impairment, and other issues. Those standards
have been contentious
because they have raised questions about the continued reliance on
bargained exchanges and
amortized cost.
The debate about financial instruments currently is focusing on derivatives.
There is limited guidance
about how to account for derivatives. The authoritative literature
does not specifically cover many
derivatives, so accounting for them is based on analogy to existing
literature or on what has been done
elsewhere in similar circumstances. Often the accounting depends on
the intended use of the derivative
and what is said to be the economics of the transaction. Derivatives
are accounted for differently
depending on whether they are intended to be used as a hedging instrument.
Some derivatives that
receive hedge accounting treatment may actually increase the enterprise's
exposure to risk.
FASB Statement No. 119, Disclosure About Derivative Financial Instruments
and Fair Value of
Financial Instruments, improved disclosures of information about the
way entities use derivatives. But,
improved disclosures are not likely to be sufficient. The value of
some derivatives can change many
times faster and many times more than that of most traditional assets
and liabilities.
The FASB has been at an impasse about how to account for derivatives
and hedges. The hedge
accounting model currently used for derivatives is the deferral method.
That method, which dates back
to the early 1900s and was developed for simple hedging arrangements,
links changes in the values of
the derivative to a balance or transaction with exposure to market
risk and defers certain unrealized
and realized gains and losses in the interest of "matching." The method
is complex and its effects are
not readily apparent to users of financial statements. The authoritative
literature has limited the use of
that method to specific circumstances. A fundamental issue is whether
that method should be applied
more generally. The FASB Exposure Draft on Accounting for Derivative
and Similar Financial
Instruments and for Hedging Activities was issued in June 1996. While
proposing that all derivatives
be measured at fair value, it maintains many of the concepts of the
historic hedge accounting model.
Crossroads
The existing mixed-attribute, transaction-based financial reporting
model has exhibited incredible
staying power over the years. That model made the transition from farm
to factory, and survived the
challenges of the inflationary 1970s and the financial-institution
crisis of the 1980s. It also is important
to recognize that many of the challenges are at the margin and are
not central to the model.
However, I believe financial reporting faces an important crossroads.
A crossroads is defined as a
place where two or more roads meet, as a place where different cultures
meet, or as a crucial point or
place.
Two very different paths are being advocated at this crucial point.
One path is to delimit financial
reporting. Some believe financial reporting has strayed too far from
the reporting model that emerged
in the early 1900s. Some believe more reliance should be placed on
price aggregates that result from
bargained exchanges and on matching revenues and expenses to measure
income. Concerns have
been expressed about the increased use of fair values, present values,
and estimates in financial
reporting.
Some are concerned that smaller entities are no longer preparing and
issuing general-purpose financial
statements based on generally accepted accounting principles. Some
also are concerned about the
costs of developing those financial statements and the extensive disclosures
that are included.
Concerns also have been expressed about the usefulness and cost effectiveness
of existing disclosures
and about the increasing volume of disclosures in financial statements.
Some have called for the
elimination of less useful disclosures and for elimination of redundant
requirements that result in
essentially the same information being repeated in various sections
of a financial report.
The other path is to expand financial reporting. Some believe too much
reliance continues to be placed
on bargained exchanges and on matching revenues and expenses to measure
income. Some believe
that value added by productive activity, discovery values, and gains
and losses from price changes and
other changes should be recognized in financial statements.
Some believe financial reports should provide more information about
plans, opportunities, risks, and
uncertainties; should focus more on the factors that create longer-term
value; and should better align
information reported externally with the information reported internally.
I don't know which path will be taken. But the outcome of two recent
initiatives may provide some
indication about the future path of financial reporting.
The first initiative is the February 1996 FASB Invitation to Comment,
Recommendations of the
AICPA Special Committee on Financial Reporting and the Association
for Investment Management
and Research, that solicits views on the recommendations made in the
December 1994 report of the
AICPA Special Committee on Financial Reporting. That report recommended
the development of a
comprehensive model of business reporting that would include financial
and nonfinancial data,
management's analysis of those data, forward-looking information, information
about management and
shareholders, and background about the company.
The Invitation to Comment also solicits views on the recommendations
expressed in the November
1993 position paper of the AIMR. That report describes financial analysis
and discusses globalization
of capital markets, accessibility of computing power, and the increase
in economic activities that do
not "fit" within the historic cost accounting model. That report discusses
the qualitative characteristics
of financial reporting and recommends improvements for financial reporting
issues that the AIMR
believes will be significant during the 1990s and beyond.
The second initiative is the June 1996 FASB Exposure Draft on Reporting
Comprehensive Income.
That proposal can be viewed as a relatively insignificant effort to
tidy up the reporting of certain items
that bypass the income statement and are reported directly in equity.
But that view does not
adequately reflect the potential of reporting comprehensive income.
Many people have strongly resisted attempts to include gains and losses
from price and other changes
in reported earnings. Reporting comprehensive income provides a way
to recognize those gains and
losses outside of earnings. Reported earnings can continue to be transactionbased
and cost-based,
and gains and losses from price and other changes can be recognized
as a component of
comprehensive income and reported in statements of income or financial
performance. Reporting
comprehensive income would
facilitate articulation of financial statements and would make nonowner
changes in equity distinct and
transparent. be consistent with the United Kingdom's "statement of
total recognized gains and losses"
that was introduced as a supplement to the "profit and loss account."
be consistent with the comprehensive statement of activities that is
required by FASB Statement No.
117, Financial Statements of Not-for-Profit Organizations.
be consistent with a growing literature about accounting-based valuation and comprehensive income.
Discussions on these two initiatives will play an important role in
determining the future path of financial
reporting. All the items on the FASB's technical agenda will be completed
or very near completion in a
short period of time. Important decisions will be made in the months
ahead.
[Sidebar]
In Brief
At the Crossroads
The accounting model used today is one developed during the Industrial
Age. It has served us well over the
years, but several areas are unclear and continue to present challenges.
The debate at the FASB has not been whether to use fair value, but
when to use fair value.
Estimates for uncertainties have become increasingly complex and difficult
as exemplified by the accounting
for postretirement health-care benefits and for obligations for certain
closure or removal costs of long-lived
assets such as nuclear power plants.
The current accounting model will be challenged by more flexible and
fluid organizational arrangements,
increased investments in intangible or soft assets, more extensive
use of financial instruments to manage
various risks, and changes in information technology.
Former FASB member Robert Swierenga's observations clearly and thoughtfully
present the challenges for the
next generation of standard setting. As he states, we are indeed at
the crossroads in financial reporting.
[Author note]
Robert J. Swieringa, PhD, a former member of the FASB, is now a professor
in the practice of accounting at
the Yale School of Management.