The accounting treatment of single-company client loyalty programme transactions

Client loyalty programmes have been prevalent in South Africa since the 1980s, but the popularity of these programmes has increased drastically over the past few years, with more than 100 suppliers in South Africa currently making use of them. On 1 July 2007 the IASB issued IFRIC 13 to give specific...

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Main Author: Sophia Brink
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2013-10-01
Series:Journal of Economic and Financial Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jefjournal.org.za/index.php/jef/article/view/259
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spelling doaj-6810f72e01ee4420ac26395c574adbc42021-02-02T07:51:30ZengAOSISJournal of Economic and Financial Sciences1995-70762312-28032013-10-016310.4102/jef.v6i3.259197The accounting treatment of single-company client loyalty programme transactionsSophia Brink0Department of Accounting, Stellenbosch UniversityClient loyalty programmes have been prevalent in South Africa since the 1980s, but the popularity of these programmes has increased drastically over the past few years, with more than 100 suppliers in South Africa currently making use of them. On 1 July 2007 the IASB issued IFRIC 13 to give specific guidance to suppliers on the accounting treatment of client loyalty programme transactions. The IASB is currently compiling a new revenue standard. This single new revenue standard will replace six existing standards or interpretations, including IFRIC 13. A critical analysis of IFRIC 13 will assist the development of this new revenue standard. The main objective of the research was therefore to determine whether the guidance in IFRIC 13 regarding the accounting treatment of a single-company client loyalty programme transaction is consistent with other accounting standards and recent developments. The accounting treatment of each component of a client loyalty programme transaction with a change in estimate was considered. It was found that inconsistencies exist in the initial measurement of the fair value and how a change in accounting estimate is recognised.https://jefjournal.org.za/index.php/jef/article/view/259client loyalty programmesIFRIC 13new revenue standard
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sophia Brink
spellingShingle Sophia Brink
The accounting treatment of single-company client loyalty programme transactions
Journal of Economic and Financial Sciences
client loyalty programmes
IFRIC 13
new revenue standard
author_facet Sophia Brink
author_sort Sophia Brink
title The accounting treatment of single-company client loyalty programme transactions
title_short The accounting treatment of single-company client loyalty programme transactions
title_full The accounting treatment of single-company client loyalty programme transactions
title_fullStr The accounting treatment of single-company client loyalty programme transactions
title_full_unstemmed The accounting treatment of single-company client loyalty programme transactions
title_sort accounting treatment of single-company client loyalty programme transactions
publisher AOSIS
series Journal of Economic and Financial Sciences
issn 1995-7076
2312-2803
publishDate 2013-10-01
description Client loyalty programmes have been prevalent in South Africa since the 1980s, but the popularity of these programmes has increased drastically over the past few years, with more than 100 suppliers in South Africa currently making use of them. On 1 July 2007 the IASB issued IFRIC 13 to give specific guidance to suppliers on the accounting treatment of client loyalty programme transactions. The IASB is currently compiling a new revenue standard. This single new revenue standard will replace six existing standards or interpretations, including IFRIC 13. A critical analysis of IFRIC 13 will assist the development of this new revenue standard. The main objective of the research was therefore to determine whether the guidance in IFRIC 13 regarding the accounting treatment of a single-company client loyalty programme transaction is consistent with other accounting standards and recent developments. The accounting treatment of each component of a client loyalty programme transaction with a change in estimate was considered. It was found that inconsistencies exist in the initial measurement of the fair value and how a change in accounting estimate is recognised.
topic client loyalty programmes
IFRIC 13
new revenue standard
url https://jefjournal.org.za/index.php/jef/article/view/259
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