ACCOUNTING STANDARDS AND TRANSLATION
The need for a standard
The question of whether items should be translated at the balance sheet date at the closing rate, or carried at the historical rate, doesn’t just apply to trade debts. The same question arises on any asset or liability denominated in a foreign currency – for example, fixed assets, short or long- term borrowings or investments of various kinds.
A company could:
· translate all its assets and liabilities at the closing rate
· or adopt what is called the temporal method
· or translate current assets and liabilities at the closing rate, and long-term assets and liabilities at the historical rate
· Or translate monetary assets and liabilities at the closing rate, and non-monetary items at the historical rate.
SSAP20 does not apply to small companies that use the Financial Reporting Standard for Smaller Entities (FRSSE). The FRSSE, however, sets out a treatment for foreign currency items that are essentially identical to SSAP20
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