Comparability: Difference between revisions

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imported>Doug Williamson
(Typo 'comparability'.)
imported>Doug Williamson
(Update first definition.)
 
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In financial reporting, comparability is one of the "enhancing" qualitative characteristics, considered to further improve the usefulness of financial information that has already achieved both of the fundamental qualitative characteristics of being ''relevant'' and ''faithfully represented.''
In financial reporting under the conceptual framework, comparability is considered to be one of the "enhancing" qualitative characteristics, that further improves the usefulness of financial information that has already achieved both of the fundamental qualitative characteristics of being ''relevant'' and ''faithfully represented.''





Latest revision as of 15:47, 4 March 2022

1. Financial reporting - conceptual framework.

In financial reporting, information is more useful if it can be compared with:

  • Similar information about other entities, and
  • Similar information about the same entity for another period, or at another date.


Comparability enables users to identify and understand similarities in - and differences between - items.


In financial reporting under the conceptual framework, comparability is considered to be one of the "enhancing" qualitative characteristics, that further improves the usefulness of financial information that has already achieved both of the fundamental qualitative characteristics of being relevant and faithfully represented.


2. Financial markets - other contexts.

Similar characteristics of information in financial markets more broadly, and other contexts.

Financial measures designed to improve comparability include effective annual rates.


See also


External links