Anticipating the Impact of IFRS on the Management of German Manufacturing Companies: Some Observations from a British Perspective
Accounting in Europe, Vol. 2, pp. 165-193, 2005
Posted: 18 Mar 2009
Date Written: 2005
Abstract
The introduction of IFRS in 2005 marked a significant departure from Germany's traditional financial accounting practices. This paper questions whether this change may have consequential effects on the distinctive traditional management accounting practices in the field of Controlling. We examine the possible impact on manufacturing companies drawing upon perceptions and expectations of managers in three Bavarian companies and two management consultancy firms. We consider whether financial accounting will assume an increased importance within firms, and whether this may lead to abandonment of some traditional management accounting practices and the adoption of different techniques in internal reporting compatible with the new IFRS regime for external reporting. This prompts consideration of whether such changes would lead to financial accounting domination of management accounting in Germany analogous to that argued by Johnson & Kaplan (1987) in their 'Relevance Lost' thesis. We conclude that, at this juncture in the development of their information systems, German managers face an important choice between integrating external and internal reporting in ways that might fundamentally change established Controlling practices, or of continuing to operate dual accounting systems in much the same way as in the past so that adoption of IFRS is restricted to external reporting.
Keywords: German manufacturing, Controlling, IFRS, Financial Accounting, Management Accounting, 'Relevance Lost'
JEL Classification: M4
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation