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Mostrando postagens com marcador contabilidade por fundos. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador contabilidade por fundos. Mostrar todas as postagens

19 fevereiro 2009

Uma possível solucão para contabilidade da TARP?

Um dos pontos discutidos sobre a ajuda que o governo dos EUA está fornecendo aos bancos através do programa denominado Troubled Asset Relief Program corresponde a transparência no uso dos recursos. Em outras palavras, como a entidade pode mostrar a ajuda que está recebendo do governo (e dos contribuintes).

James Deitrick e Michael Granof (Soup-Kitchen Accounting, 18/2/2009, The New York Times, 27) consideram a possibilidade de usar a contabilidade por fundo, um tipo de contabilidade utilizada em entidades sem fins lucrativos.

Nonprofit accounting is designed to ensure that the recipients of grants from the federal government and other benefactors are held accountable for the funds they receive. Regrettably, the big banks that have been granted billions from the Troubled Asset Relief Program are less transparent in their financial reporting than the local soup kitchen that gets federal support.

Nonprofits use what is known as ''fund accounting.'' Fund accounting requires that a separate set of books be maintained for all grants that are designated for a specific activity. The aim is to ensure that the resources are spent for their intended purpose.

Executives of banks that have received TARP cash have said that it is too hard to account separately for how they spend their federal dollars. Money is fungible, they argue, and therefore they cannot readily distinguish between outlays of their own resources and those provided by the government. But that's the type of doublespeak that would get the head of a town's homeless shelter thrown in jail. If bankers are unable to segregate cash by source and specifically account for expenditures, why are they in charge of banks in the first place?