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ICAJ
AND IDB SIGN TECHNICAL CO-OPERATION AGREEMENT
The
Board of Directors of the Inter-American
Development Bank (IDB) has approved a
technical cooperation project proposed
by the Institute of Chartered Accountants
of Jamaica (ICAJ) to support improvements
within the local Accountancy profession.
The agreement for donor funding, which
will be provided through the IDB’s, Multilateral
Investment Fund (MIF), was signed by IDB
representatives and the President of the
ICAJ, Mr L. Garth Kiddoe at the ICAJ Secretariat
recently. The cost of the three-year project
is US$1.015 million of which US$665,000
will be provided by MIF and US$ 350,000
by the ICAJ as local counterpart funding.
According to Mr Kiddoe, the project, which
will commence this year, is aimed at strengthening
the accountancy profession in Jamaica.
The project components include supporting
the implementation and application of
International Accounting Standards (IAS)
and building adequate mechanisms for the
enforcement of IAS and International Standards
on Auditing (ISA). He noted that efforts
are now being made to identify a full-time
Project Manager to co-ordinate and monitor
the implementation of the project.
Mr Kiddoe added that the project would
assist in rebuilding the confidence of
the investing public as well as analysts
and institutional investors in the financial
reporting process. This is of direct relevance
to quoted companies, banks, insurance
companies and other entities that make
their financial statements available to
the public and foreign investors.
Mr Oscar Spencer, Deputy Representative
at the Inter-American Development Bank
lauded the project as an innovative strategy
to improve financial reporting and transparency
in the private and public sectors.
The donor funding will support a technical
programme to assist chartered accountants,
financial sector professionals and others
involved in the preparation or use of
financial statements, in adopting IAS
and ISA. IAS was adopted on July 1, 2002
concurrently with ISA as Jamaica’s national
accounting and auditing standards.
As a result of the demands of an increasingly
complex global business environment, particularly,
the global capital markets, there is the
need for higher standards of disclosure
with greater emphasis on more detailed
financial reporting as is required under
International Accounting Standards. In
this regard, the project will result in
improvements in the quality and usefulness
of financial statements issued by Jamaican
businesses, Mr Kiddoe stated.

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