Wednesday, 20 July 2011

Change in Principle versus Change in Estimate


A change in accounting principle refers to a change in the method used to compute financial statement amounts, not to a change in the underlying estimate. For example, a switch from straight line to another method of computing depreciation is regarded as a change in accounting principle. However, a change in the estimated useful life used in computing depreciation expense is a change in estimate. This distinction is an important one.