Boilerplate and Office of the Comptroller of the Currency: Difference between pages

From ACT Wiki
(Difference between pages)
Jump to navigationJump to search
imported>Doug Williamson
(Expand definition.)
 
imported>Doug Williamson
(Create page. Sources: linked pages.)
 
Line 1: Line 1:
1. ''Documentation - contract - law.''
(OCC).


Standard wording that can be incorporated into a draft contract or other document, designed to reduce the expense and delay of extensive negotiations and of errors.
1. ''United States''


The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency is responsible for the regulation of nationally chartered banks in the US, including internet-based banks.


2. ''Documentation - contract - law.''
It issues the national charters and monitors bank performance and loan credit quality ratings.  


Entire standard-worded draft documents produced for similar reasons.


2.


3. ''Information technology.''
Similar governmental functions in other countries.


Abbreviation for ''boilerplate code''.


A section of code that is repeated without modification - or with only minimal modifications - in different places.
==See also==
 
*[[Agrentina]]
 
*[[United States]]
4.  ''Financial reporting - investor relations.''
 
In the context of reporting and communication, ''boilerplate'' can have negative connotations.
 
For example, boilerplate disclosures are standard-worded ones that fail to provide insight into the situations they describe.
 
 
:<span style="color:#4B0082">'''''Avoid boilerplate TCFD disclosures'''''</span>
 
:"The FRC has published its Annual Review of Corporate Reporting...
 
:... the FRC draws attention to the importance of TCFD disclosures, mandatory for the first time for December year end reporters, urging that disclosure should be integrated into the annual report and avoid boilerplate."
 
:''Deloitte Academy - November 2021.''
 
 
:<span style="color:#4B0082">'''''Boilerplate statements not backed up'''''</span>
 
:"Unfortunately, as last year, we continue to see the use of boilerplate or declaratory statements.
 
:These statements are seldom substantiated by actions or examples, and therefore do not offer insight into company governance...
 
:... the vast majority of reporting on outcomes of community engagement remained generic and boilerplate."
 
:''Review of Corporate Governance Reporting - Financial Reporting Council - November 2021, p3 & p30.''
 
 
5.  ''Reporting - standard forms.''
 
A specification of a reporting format.
 
This type of boilerplate is designed to ensure that reporting is complete, easy to receive, and easy to incorporate into other systems, for example by always including - as a minimum - specified important items in the same order.
 
 
6.  ''Origins - engineering.''
 
In engineering, boilerplates are steel that has been rolled out into standardised plates.
 
Steel boilerplates can be used for a number of engineering purposes, including making boilers.
 
By analogy, the term ''boilerplate'' was extended to printed material, in the era when smaller local newspapers incorporated syndicated content supplied in the form of pre-prepared blocks of metal typeset text.
 
 
== See also ==
* [[Annual report]]
* [[Bespoke]]
* [[Clause]]
* [[Contract]]
* [[Deloitte]]
* [[Documentation]]
* [[Financial reporting]]
* [[Financial Reporting Council]]  (FRC)
* [[Governance]]
* [[Information technology]]
* [[Investor relations]]
* [[Law]]
* [[Standard]]
* [[Syndicate]]
* [[Tailor]]
* [[Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures]]  (TCFD)
 
 
==External link==
*[https://www.frc.org.uk/getattachment/b0a0959e-d7fe-4bcd-b842-353f705462c3/FRC-Review-of-Corporate-Governance-Reporting_November-2021.pdf Review of Corporate Governance Reporting 2021 - Financial Reporting Council]
 
[[Category:Accounting,_tax_and_regulation]]
[[Category:The_business_context]]
[[Category:Compliance_and_audit]]
[[Category:Ethics]]

Revision as of 10:43, 21 May 2017

(OCC).

1. United States

The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency is responsible for the regulation of nationally chartered banks in the US, including internet-based banks.

It issues the national charters and monitors bank performance and loan credit quality ratings.


2.

Similar governmental functions in other countries.


See also