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3.3.1: Financial Statement Differences Between IFRS and ASPE

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    100394
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    The core financial statements shown above illustrate the types of statements required for IFRS companies. They are the following:

    • a statement of income
    • a statement of comprehensive income
    • a worksheet-style statement of changes in equity with all the equity accounts included
    • a statement of financial position
    • a statement of cash flows
    • notes to the financial statements

    IFRS requires the comparative previous year amounts be reported as well as disclosure of the earnings per share. ASPE does not require these disclosures. IFRS requires the statement of comprehensive income (or a combined statement of income and comprehensive income), whereas ASPE only requires a statement of income because comprehensive income does not exist. The statement of changes in equity required by IFRS shown in the Wellbourn example above now becomes a more simplified statement of retained earnings for ASPE, where only the details for retained earnings are reported (though any changes in shareholder equity accounts must be disclosed in the notes to the financial statements). The remaining equity accounts such as common shares and contributed surplus are reported as ending balances directly in the balance sheet for ASPE (called the statement of financial position for IFRS companies).


    3.3.1: Financial Statement Differences Between IFRS and ASPE is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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