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December 16, 2008
Drexel University
Comprehensive,mac makeup, integrated academics enhanced by co-operative education,cheap mac makeup sale, technology, and research opportunities. Back Print Read Article
Drexel Accounting Professor Available to Comment on U.S. Adoption of IFRS Accounting Standards
A leading expert on IFRS who worked in Europe with Ernst & Young during the period of transition to IFRS from national GAAPs, Campbell can speak about the pros and cons of U.S. adoption of IFRS standards from personal experience as well as from an academic perspective. He recently had an article accepted for publication in the Journal of Accountancy about the momentum that has been building for global standards convergence now that over 100 countries have more or less adopted IFRS, with the U.S. taking steps toward convergence.
***To schedule an interview with Dr. Campbell, contact LeBow College of Business at 215.895.2897. ***
Philadelphia
Drexel University’s Dr. David Campbell, a professor at the University’s LeBow College of Business is available to comment on the challenges and opportunities presented by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) roadmap for U.S. companies to adopt IFRS accounting standards. While the SEC is awaiting comments to its IFRS Roadmap Release due February 19, as well as the arrival of the new Obama Administration in January, Campbell can discuss why it is imperative for companies to consider steps they can take now toward IFRS implementation:
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Lisa Litzinger, LeBow College of Business
215.895.2897 or lml64@drexel.edu
Niki Gianakaris, University Relations
215-895-6741 or ngianakaris@drexel.edu
-How to compare “rule-based” U.S. GAAP to “principles-based” IFRS accounting standards
-Why standards reporting may be the easiest part of the transition to IFRS
-The challenges presented by global cultural differences—including legal, regulatory,cheap mac makeup, ethics-related, and training and education issues
-Whether or not the transition to IFRS—which provides less formal guidance—increases the importance “of an appreciation and adherence to sound business ethics by those setting and applying accounting policies, the auditors of the financial reports generated in an IFRS environment, and the users interpreting the results.”


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We’re having the wedding ceremony way upstate, immediately followed by a reception for all the wedding guests. But then a month later, in New York City (where we live, as well as most of our friends and Mr. Bluebell’s family) we’ll have a Chinese banquet to which we’ll invite all the wedding guests again, plus a lot of additional people we would have loved to have at the ceremony but couldn’t due to space limitations upstate.This type of situation seems fairly common these days, plus a lot of people seem to be having a second reception back home after tying the knot at a destination wedding.How did you decide to have more than one reception? Who’s paying for the extra ones if you’re having more than one?
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