In addition, 80 jurisdictions now require or permit use of the IFRS for SMEs® Standard—a self-contained Standard specifically designed for small and medium-sized companies without public accountability—which was first issued in 2009.
It also demonstrates that there has been progress towards the adoption of IFRS Standards in Asia over the past year, with three-quarters of jurisdictions in the region now requiring the use of IFRS Standards and several major Asian economies moving closer to IFRS adoption.
The analysis indicates that 74 per cent of jurisdictions in the Asia-Pacific region already require the use of IFRS Standards for domestic publicly accountable entities, and most of the other jurisdictions are progressing toward adoption.
For example, there has been substantial recent progress towards IFRS Standards in three major Asian economies:
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in Japan, voluntary adopters of IFRS Standards and their share of market capitalisation are increasing rapidly. 128 companies, representing a market capitalisation of 27 per cent of the Tokyo Stock Exchange, are using or have publicly announced that they will adopt IFRS Standards. An additional 213 companies (representing 16 per cent of market capitalisation) are considering moving to IFRS Standards. This is a sharp increase from December 2012, when only 10 Japanese companies were using IFRS Standards;
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in China, in November 2015 the IFRS Foundation and the Chinese Ministry of Finance substantially updated the 2005 Beijing Joint Statement and reaffirmed China’s commitment to achieve full convergence with IFRS Standards; and
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in April 2016, the first group of companies in Indiastarted using the new Indian Accounting Standards (Ind AS), a set of accounting standards that are substantially converged with IFRS Standards but with some mandatory and some optional modifications.
Full press release
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