Mr Hoogervorst spoke about the paradox of standard-setting. Throughout the history of accounting standards, it has often been the most needed improvements to transparency that were the most controversial, and the hardest to drive through. For example, expensing stock options was obviously the right thing to do. But vested interests were so strong that the economic myth that these options basically were for free could be kept up for a very long time.
	At the same time, not all controversy is the result of lobbying by vested interests. After all, most standard-setters have at some time proposed changes that were not sufficiently developed or that had unintended consequences not obvious at the time of proposal. The IASB's due process provides an important quality control mechanism and this is something to cherish. Legitimate technical or practical concerns about IFRS  need to be addressed and that is what the IASB  does.
	The difficulty comes in trying to distinguish between these two. It is not always obvious what is lobbying by vested interests and what is public interest feedback whose purpose is to help the IASB  deliver a high quality standard. More often than not the vested interest is packaged in public interest arguments. Sometimes even users do not want change. Analysts are sometimes so much in love with their own models that they do not want IFRS  to shed light on complex issues.
	Helping the IASB  to make this distinction between legitimate concerns and the conservatism of the status quo is a central role of all standard-setters, including national standard setters. The IASB  needs national standard setters to identify technical and practical flaws in the IASB's proposals. But the IASB  also needs their help in pushing back on vested interests. This is difficult, often unpopular work, but it is essential and the IASB  cannot do it alone. If the IASB  is to deliver standards with the necessary rigour and discipline the IASB  needs all the help it can get.
	This is particularly important in the coming year as the IASB  seeks to finalise the four major projects of insurance, financial instruments, leasing and revenue recognition. In each of these cases, the IASB  will do everything possible to minimise the possibility of unexpected consequences. High quality feedback and field testing is invaluable as the IASB  completes this work. However, the IASB  must also guard against being lobbied off course. Standard-setting is an exercise in change management, and change is rarely popular, even if it is change for the better.
	Full speech
      
      
      
      
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