CHINESE EVOLVING
ACCOUNTING SYSTEM
Attracted by its rapid
transformation from a socialist planned economy into a
market economy, economic
annual growth rate of around 12 per cent, and a population in excess of 1.2
billion, Western firms over the past 10 years have favored China as a site for foreign direct
investment. Most see China as an emerging economic superpower, with
an economy that will be as large as that of Japan
by 2000 and that of the US
before 2010, if current growth projections hold true.
The Chinese government sees foreign direct investment as
a primary engine of China’s
economic growth. To encourage such
investment, the government has offered generous tax incentives to foreign firms
that invest in China,
either on their own or in a joint venture with a local enterprise. These tax incentives include a two – year
exemption from corporate income tax following an investment, plus a further
three years during which taxes are paid at only 50 per cent of the standard tax
rate. Such incentives when coupled with
the promise of China’s
vast internal market have made the country a prime site for investment by
Western firms. However, once established
in China, many Western firms
find themselves struggling to comply with the complex and often obtuse nature
of China’s
rapidly evolving accounting system.
Accounting in China has traditionally been rooted
in information gathering and compliance reporting designed to measure the
government’s production and tax goals.
The Chinese system was based on the old Soviet system, which had little
to do with profit or accounting systems created to report financial positions
or the results of foreign operations.
Although the system is changing rapidly, many problems
associated with the old system still remain.
One problem for investors is a severe shortage of
accountants, financial managers, and auditors in China, especially those experienced
with market economy transactions and international accounting practices. As of 1995, there were only 25,000
accountants in china, far short of the hundreds of thousands that will be
needed if China
continues on its path towards becoming a market economy. Chinese enterprises, including equity and
cooperative joint ventures with foreign firms, must be audited by Chinese
accounting firms, which are regulated by the state. Traditionally, many experienced auditors have
audited only state-owned enterprises, working through the local province or
city authorities and the state audit bureau to report to the government entity
overseeing the audited firm. In response
to the shortage of accountants schooled in the principles of private sector
accounting, several large international auditing firms have established joint
ventures with emerging Chinese accounting and auditing firms to bridge the
growing need for international accounting, tax and securities expertise.
A further problem concerns the somewhat halting evolution
of China’s
emerging accounting standards. Current
thinking is that China
won’t simply adopt the international accounting standards specified by the
IASC, nor will it use the generally accepted accounting principles of any
particular country as its mode. Rather,
accounting standards in China
are expected to evolve in a rather piecemeal fashion, with the Chinese adopting
a few standards as they are studied and deemed appropriate for Chinese
circumstances.
In the meantime, current Chinese accounting principles
present difficult problems for Western firms.
For example, the former Chinese accounting system didn’t need to accrue
unrealized losses. In an economy where
shortages were the norm, if a state-owned company didn’t sell its inventory
right away, it could store it and use it for some other purpose later. Similarly, accounting principles assumed the
state always paid its debts – eventually.
Thus, Chinese enterprises don’t generally provide for lower-of-cost or
market inventory adjustments or the creation of allowance for bad debts, both
of which are standard practices in the West.
Questions:
1. What factors have shaped the accounting
system currently in use in China?
2. What problem does the accounting system,
currently in sue in China, present to foreign investors in joint ventures with
Chinese companies?
3. If the evolving Chinese system does not
adhere to IASC standards, but instead to standards that the Chinese governments
deem appropriate to China’s “Special situation”, how might this affect foreign
firms with operations in China ?
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