Contabilidad de activos con enfoque NIIF para las pymes


Book Description

En el área de la contabilidad el activo se define como un recurso controlado por la empresa, del cual se busca obtener flujos de beneficios futuros. Los activos se clasifican en corrientes o no corrientes de acuerdo con su facilidad de conversión a efectivo, su administración eficiente en obligaciones, inversiones y transacciones es esencial para todo tipo de empresas sin importar el tamaño. Desde las micro, pequeñas y medianas empresas (mipymes) -que según la Cepal son el 99 % de las empresas en América Latina- hasta las multinacionales necesitan tener los conocimientos mínimos sobre activos que les permitan tomar decisiones operativas, financieras y de inversión acertadas. Contabilidad de activos es una guía básica para el registro, medición y presentación contable de activos empresariales en mipymes con base en las Normas Internacionales de Información Financiera (NIIF) -también conocidas por sus siglas en inglés como IFRS, International Financial Reporting Standards- y el grupo de normas colombianas que deberán manejarse hasta el 2019. Esta tercera edición explica cómo medir, analizar, presentar y revelar diferentes tipos de activos como efectivo, deudores, inventarios, propiedades e intangibles, entre otros. Es, además, el segundo de tres libros del mismo autor (junto con Contabilidad de Patrimonio y Contabilidad de Pasivos) sobre los componentes de la ecuación básica de la contabilidad.




IFRS/NIIF para pymes


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Time Series Analysis


Book Description

An authoritative, self-contained overview of time series analysis for students and researchers The past decade has brought dramatic changes in the way that researchers analyze economic and financial time series. This textbook synthesizes these advances and makes them accessible to first-year graduate students. James Hamilton provides comprehensive treatments of important innovations such as vector autoregressions, generalized method of moments, the economic and statistical consequences of unit roots, time-varying variances, and nonlinear time series models. In addition, he presents basic tools for analyzing dynamic systems—including linear representations, autocovariance generating functions, spectral analysis, and the Kalman filter—in a way that integrates economic theory with the practical difficulties of analyzing and interpreting real-world data. Time Series Analysis fills an important need for a textbook that integrates economic theory, econometrics, and new results. This invaluable book starts from first principles and should be readily accessible to any beginning graduate student, while it is also intended to serve as a reference book for researchers.




Effective Date of IFRS 15


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Japanese Cost Management


Book Description

This book deals with the systems of cost reduction that originated in Japan. These are mostly new systems that did not exist in western practices before they were utilized in Japan. The book also presents the Japanese ways of carrying out the globally popular cost reduction practices.(1) It describes the strategic cost management conducted by top management through alliances between companies and/or between government and industry.(2) It shows the functional cost reduction systems along the various phases of the product life cycle, as follows: R&D ? Product development ? Manufacturing ? Administration and indirect operations(3) It conducts some humanistic or behavioral aspects of Japanese cost reduction systems.




The Credit Rating Industry


Book Description

This study provides a comprehensive analysis of credit rating economics and draws conclusions on the nature of regulation. It starts with an overview of the credit rating industry and introduces a framework that structures multiple rating agency functions. At the heart of the credit rating business model lies the reputation mechanism, which is analyzed in detail. After analyzing the reputation mechanism, the study takes a wider look at the industry and identifies the forces behind credit rating supply and demand. From an industrial organization perspective competition in the credit rating industry is limited. A comprehensive review of potential reasons for regulating the credit rating industry, however, reveals that there are only few compelling arguments. The regulatory approaches of the EU under the Capital Requirements Directive of 2005 and the USA under the Credit Rating Agency Reform Act of 2006 are contrasted against an optimal regulatory regime.