在安徽省,ACCA考试通过了你不这样做你还是不能拿到证书

发布时间:2020-01-08


近些年,随着各式各样的考试风靡全国以来,ACCA证书也是从众多资格证书里脱颖而出,逐渐映入大众的眼帘。了解它的人称之为金饭碗,那么有些通过所以ACCA考试全部科目的小伙伴就来咨询51题库考试学习网,成绩通过之后,证书是怎么样领取呢?是等待官方邮寄过来?还是自己去申请领证呢?这些疑问51题库考试学习网会为大家逐一解决,请大家耐心地往下看哟~

首先要恭喜你成为了ACCA准会员了,当你通过14ACCA考试的那一科开始,你就成为准会员了。但是需要注意的是从准会员并不是会员,想从准会员到ACCA会员,这些事情你必须要做:

1.ACCA每年2月份和8月份会分别公布12月份和6月份的考试成绩。每一个通过ACCA全部考试的学员随后会收到ACCA英国总部邮寄的《ACCA会员或准会员申请手册》(一般收到时间是3月初和9月初)。每人必须根据自身的情况,如是否满足ACCA相关工作经验要求,向ACCA英国申请成为会员或准会员。

2.ACCA总部收到学员申请后,不论是申请会员和准会员,都会给学员颁发ACCA准会员证书,以确认学员成功通过所有考试。

3.对于申请会员的学员,要求如实填写会员申请手册,并总结平时记录的STRStudent Training Record)中的主要工作经历和取得的工作能力,填入申请手册(在递交会员申请表时,可以暂时不提交STR,但是,一旦ACCA英国总部通知需要提交STR,以便了解更详细的信息完成评估,学员需要再补交STR)。ACCA英国总部会对学员所填的工作记录进行评估和并与其监督人联系进行核查,确认无误后,则批准其成为ACCA会员,一般这个过程需要两个月的时间。

4.如果学员在规定的时间内没有收到以上申请手册,可以直接登陆ACCA全球官网下载。

5.对于暂时未满足工作经验的准会员,可以在条件满足的任何时间向ACCA递交ACCA会员申请表。

完成了以上所有步骤之后,你就算是成功申请ACCA会员了,只需要等待官方发送证书即可。

都说,阳光总在风雨后,当你拿到通过自己努力获得的证书时,那份喜悦肯定是独一无二的,那一刻你也明白了自己的努力是值得的;所以,为了那一天的到来,各位ACCAer们加油复习,早日完成目标~


下面小编为大家准备了 ACCA考试 的相关考题,供大家学习参考。

(ii) Describe the basis for the calculation of the provision for deferred taxation on first time adoption of IFRS

including the provision in the opening IFRS balance sheet. (4 marks)

正确答案:
(ii) A company has to apply IAS12 to the temporary differences between the carrying amount of the assets and liabilities in
its opening IFRS balance sheet (1 November 2003) and their tax bases (IFRS1 ‘First time adoption of IFRS’). The
deferred tax provision will be calculated using tax rates that have been enacted or substantially enacted by the balance
sheet date. The carrying values of the assets and liabilities at the opening balance sheet date will be determined by
reference to IFRS1 and will use the applicable IFRS in the first IFRS financial statements. Any adjustments required to
the deferred tax balance will be recognised directly in retained earnings.
Subsequent balance sheets (at 31 October 2004 and 31 October 2005) will be drawn up using the IFRS used in the
financial statements to 31 October 2005. The deferred tax provision will be adjusted as at 31 October 2004 and thenas at 31 October 2005 to reflect the temporary differences arising at those dates.

(c) Calculate the expected corporation tax liability of Dovedale Ltd for the year ending 31 March 2007 on the

assumption that all available reliefs are claimed by Dovedale Ltd but that Hira Ltd will not claim any capital

allowances in that year. (4 marks)

正确答案:

 


Section A – This ONE question is compulsory and MUST be attempted

Hesket Nuclear (HN) is a nuclear power station in Ayland, a large European country. The HN plant is operated by Hesket Power Company (HPC), which in turn is wholly owned by the government of Ayland. Initially opened in the late 1950s, the power station grew in subsequent decades by the addition of several other facilities on the same site. HN now has the ability to generate 5% of Ayland’s entire electricity demand and is one of the largest nuclear stations in Europe. At each stage of its development from the 1950s to the present day, development on the site was welcomed by the relevant local government authorities, by the businesses that have supported it, by the trade union that represents the majority of employees (called Forward Together or FT for short) and also by the national Ayland government. A nuclear reprocessing facility was added in the 1980s. This is a valuable source of overseas income as nuclear power producers in many other parts of the world send material by sea to HN to be reprocessed. This includes nuclear producers in several developing countries that rely on the cheaper reprocessed fuel (compared to ‘virgin’ fuel) that HN produces.

HPC is loss-making and receives a substantial subsidy each year from the government of Ayland. HPC has proven itself uneconomic but is deemed politically and environmentally necessary as far as the government is concerned. The government of Ayland has reluctantly accepted that large subsidies to HPC will be necessary for many years but considers nuclear power to be a vital component of its energy portfolio (along with other energy sources such as oil, gas, coal, renewables and hydroelectric) and also as a key part of its ‘clean’ energy strategy. Unlike energy from fossil fuels (such as coal, gas and oil), nuclear power generates a negligible amount of polluting greenhouse gas. HN also provides much needed employment in an otherwise deprived part of the country. The HN power station underpins and dominates the economy of its local area and local government authorities say that the HN plant is vital to the regional economy.

Since it opened, however, the HN power station has been controversial. Whilst being welcomed by those who benefi t from it in terms of jobs, trade, reprocessing capacity and energy, a coalition has gradually built up against it comprising those sceptical about the safety and environmental impact of nuclear power. Some neighbouring countries believe themselves to be vulnerable to radioactive contamination from the HN plant. In particular, two countries, both of whom say their concerns about HN arise because of their geographical positions, are vocal opponents. They say that their geographical proximity forced them to be concerned as they are affected by the location of the HN plant which was not of their choosing.

The government of Beeland, whose capital city is 70 km across the sea from HN (which is situated on the coast), has consistently opposed HN and has frequently asked the government of Ayland to close HN down. The Beeland government claims that not only does ‘low-level’ emission from the site already contaminate the waters separating the two countries but it also claims that any future major nuclear ‘incident’ would have serious implications for the citizens of Beeland. There is some scientifi c support for this view although opinion is divided over whether Beeland is being irrational in its general opposition to HN.

The government of Ceeland is also a vocal opponent of HN. Ceeland is located to the north of Beeland and approximately 500 km away from Ayland. Some nuclear scientists have said that with such a large stretch of water between the HN plant and Ceeland, even a much-feared incident would be unlikely to seriously impact on Ceeland. Some commentators have gone further and said that Ceeland’s concerns are unfounded and ‘borne of ignorance’. FT, the trade union for HN employees, issued a statement saying that Ceeland had no reason to fear HN and that its fears were ‘entirely groundless’.

HN’s other vocal and persistent opponent is No Nuclear Now (NNN), a well-organised and well-funded campaigning group. Describing itself on its website as ‘passionate about the environment’, it describes HN’s social and environmental footprint as ‘very negative’. NNN has often pointed to an environmentally important colony of rare seals living near the HN plant. It says that the seals are dependent on a local natural ecosystem around the plant and are unable to move, arguing that the animals are at signifi cant risk from low-level contamination and would have ‘no chance’ of survival if a more serious radioactive leak ever occurred. NNN points to such a leak that occurred in the 1970s, saying that such a leak proves that HN has a poor safety record and that a leak could easily recur.

Each time an objection to the HN power station is raised, FT, the trade union, robustly defends the HN site in the media, and argues for further investment, based on the need to protect the jobs at the site. Furthermore, the radiation leak in the 1970s led to FT uniting with the HPC board to argue against those stakeholders that wanted to use the leak as a reason to close the HN site. The combination of union and HPC management was able to counter the arguments of those asking for closure.

HN places a great deal of emphasis on its risk management and often publicises the fact that it conducts continual risk assessments and is in full compliance with all relevant regulatory frameworks. Similarly, FT recently pointed out that HN has had an ‘impeccable’ safety record since the incident in the 1970s and says on its website that it is ‘proud’ that its members are involved in ensuring that the company is continually in full compliance with all of the regulatory requirements placed upon it.

The board of HPC, led by chairman Paul Gog, is under continual pressure from the government of Ayland to minimise the amount of government subsidy. Each year, the government places challenging targets on the HPC board requiring stringent cost controls at the HN power station. In seeking to reduce maintenance costs on the expiry of a prior maintenance contract last year, the board awarded the new contract to an overseas company that brought its own workers in from abroad rather than employing local people. The previous contract company was outraged to have lost the contract and the move also triggered an angry response from the local workforce and from FT, the representative trade union.

FT said that it was deplorable that HPC had awarded the contract to an overseas company when a domestic company in Ayland could have been awarded the work. The union convenor, Kate Allujah, said that especially in the nuclear industry where safety was so important, domestic workers were ‘more reliable’ than foreign workers who were brought in purely on the basis of cost and in whose countries safety standards in similar industries might not be so stringent. HPC said that it had done nothing illegal as the foreign workers were allowed to work in Ayland under international legal treaties. Furthermore, it argued that pressure by FT to raise wages over recent years had created, with the government’s subsidy targets, the cost pressure to re-tender the maintenance contract.

On HN’s 50th anniversary last year, NNN published what it called a ‘risk assessment’ for the HN power station. It said it had calculated the probabilities (P) and impacts (I) of three prominent risks.

Risk of major radioactive leak over the next 10 years: P = 10%, I = 20

Risk of nuclear explosion over the next 50 years: P = 20%, I = 100

Risk of major terrorist attack over next 10 years: P = 10%, I = 80

Impacts were on an arbitrary scale of 1–100 where 100 was defi ned by NNN as ‘total nuclear annihilation of the area and thousands of deaths’.

The governments of Beeland and Ceeland seized upon the report, saying that it proved that HN is a genuine threat to their security and should be immediately closed and decommissioned. HN’s risk manager, Keith Wan, vigorously disagreed with this assessment saying that the probabilities and the impacts were ‘ridiculous’, massively overstated and intended to unnecessarily alarm people. HN’s public relations offi ce was also angry about it and said it would issue a rebuttal statement.

Required:

(a) Distinguish between voluntary and involuntary stakeholders, identifying both types of stakeholders in Hesket Nuclear. Assess the claims of THREE of the involuntary ‘affected’ stakeholders identifi ed. (12 marks)

(b) The trade union, Forward Together, has had a long relationship with HN and represents not only the main workforce but also the employees of the maintenance company replaced by the foreign workers.

Required:

Explain the roles of employee representatives such as trade unions in corporate governance and critically evaluate, from the perspective of HPC’s board, the contribution of Forward Together in the governance of HPC. (10 marks)

(c) Explain what an agency relationship is and examine the board of HPC’s current agency relationship and objectives. Briefl y explain how these would differ if HPC was a company with private shareholders. (10 marks)

(d) As a part of HPC’s public relations effort, it has been proposed that a response statement should be prepared for the company’s website to help address two major challenges to their reputation.

Required:

Draft this statement to include the following:

(i) Referring to the NNN report, explain why accurate risk assessment is necessary at Hesket Nuclear. (8 marks)

(ii) Explain what a social and environmental ‘footprint’ is and construct the argument that HN’s overall social and environmental footprint is positive. (6 marks)

Professional marks will additionally be awarded in part (d) for drafting a statement that is clear, has a logical fl ow, is persuasive and is appropriately structured. (4 marks)

正确答案:

(a) Distinguish and identify
Voluntary stakeholders are those that engage with an organisation of their own choice and free will. They are ultimately (in the long term) able to detach and discontinue their stakeholding if they choose. Involuntary stakeholders have their stakeholding imposed and are unable to detach or withdraw of their own volition.

The voluntary stakeholders identifi ed in the case are: Forward Together (the trade union), Hesket Nuclear employees, the Ayland government, the board of HPC, local authorities, No Nuclear Now and other nuclear producers who use the reprocessing facility.

The involuntary stakeholders – those whose stakeholding is placed upon them by virtue of their physical position – are the governments of Beeland and Ceeland, the local community and the seal colony.

[Tutorial note: membership of these categories is contestable if time perspectives are introduced. In the short term, some voluntary stakeholders are involuntary in that their involvement cannot be quickly withdrawn. The case clearly identifi es the involuntary stakeholders.]

Assess the claims
The case identifi es three ‘affected’ stakeholders that are clearly involuntary. Both Beeland and Ceeland say that they are stakeholders because of their geographical position and the seals are unable to move because of local environmental conditions.

Beeland government’s claim is based on its position near to the Hesket plant. With the capital 70 km from the plant, it claims that it is already the ‘victim’ of low level radiation in the sea between the two countries. The case does not give the radius of damage if a major incident were to occur but it does say that there is ‘scientifi c support’ for the view that it could affect the capital of Beeland. Assuming that both of these statements are accurate then the Beeland government would appear to have a legitimate and reasonable claim that they are affected by the Hesket Nuclear plant and could be further affected in the future.

The government of Ceeland claims to be a potential ‘victim’ of nuclear contamination from the HN plant and has sought to have the plant closed as a result. The weakness of its claim rests upon the physical distance away from HN (500 km). If the threats to Ceeland are, as scientists have suggested, ‘unfounded and borne of ignorance’ then clearly Ceeland has a weak claim over Hesket Nuclear. It may have political reasons of its own to make protestations, perhaps to appease opinion in Ceeland or to be populist to manage dissent at home.

The case says that the local seal colony is unable to move away from the HN plant because of the local environmental conditions there and so it is unable to discontinue its stakeholding. It is thus involuntary. Low level emissions could potentially affect the seals and their food sources and any major incident would obviously impact it signifi cantly. Whilst their affectedness is therefore indisputable, the value of the colony’s claim rests in part upon the value placed upon sea life value against human and economic value. This assessment is therefore contestable.

The local community is another involuntary stakeholder albeit with a weaker involuntary element than the above three described. Whilst not structurally involuntary (they are able to move away if they do not like it), many local citizens may have lived near the HN plant for many years before it was built and may therefore have simply had to accept its development regardless of their views. The impacts on local communities can be positive or negative in that HN supports them through the provision of jobs but they would also be the fi rst and most affected if there ever was a major incident at the HN plant.

[Tutorial note: allow for other ‘affected’ stakeholders if coherently argued. It is possible to argue that the taxpayers of Ayland are affected involuntary stakeholders, for example.]

(b) Roles of employee representatives
Trade unions are the most usual example of employee representation in corporate governance. Trade unions represent employees in a work facility such as an offi ce or a plant. Membership is voluntary and the infl uence of the union is usually proportional to its proportion of membership.

Although a trade union is by default assumed to have an adversarial role with management, its ability to ‘deliver’ the compliance of a workforce can help signifi cantly in corporate governance. When an external threat is faced, such as with the reputation losses following the 1970s leak, then the coalition of workforce (via Forward Together) and management meant that it was more diffi cult for external critics to gain support.

A trade union is an actor in the checks and balances of power within a corporate governance structure. Where management abuses occur, it is often the trade union that is the fi rst and most effective reaction against it and this can often work to the advantage of shareholders or other owners, especially when the abuse has the ability to affect productivity.

Trade unions help to maintain and control one of the most valuable assets in an organisation (employees). Where a helpful and mutually constructive relationship is cultivated between union and employer then an optimally effi cient industrial relations climate exists, thus reinforcing the productivity of human resources in the organisation. In defending members’ interests and negotiating terms and conditions, the union helps to ensure that the workforce is content and able to work with maximum effi ciency and effectiveness.

Critically evaluate the contribution of Forward Together from HPC’s perspective

Helpful roles
The case describes Forward Together’s (FT) role as generally supportive of the development of the Hesket Nuclear site. Clearly, with a primary loyalty to its members, FT will always pursue causes that are going to maximise members’ job security. When the primary external stakeholder pressure is for the reduction of the HN site, the union and board are aligned in their objectives for the continuation of the facility.

FT’s statement over Ceeland’s concern was very helpful to the HPC board. FT has a clear interest in diffusing unfounded concern where it exists and its statement that Ceeland’s fears were ‘entirely groundless’ would reinforce the power of any similar such statement made by others. Similarly, FT provided support after the leakage incident in the 1970s. The helpful reinforcement was evident when FT pointed to the impeccable safety record and compliance. This may have meant more as a public relations exercise coming from the trade union rather than the HPC board as FT is independent of the company.

Unhelpful roles
FT’s wage pressure, over time, put a pressure on the company’s costs that had, according to the HPC board, created the need to bring in cheaper foreign workers to fulfi l the maintenance contract. From the board of HPC’s viewpoint, such pressure was ultimately self-defeating for the union and effectively meant that the previous maintenance contractor was priced out. The union had been short-sighted in its year-on-year wage demands.

We are not told whether the board agrees with Kate Allujah that workers from Ayland were ‘more reliable’ in such a risk sensitive industry, but her comment was possibly based on prejudice against foreign workers entering the country. She seemed to be unconcerned with the legal implications of her outrage. Given that the company was legally entitled to employ foreign workers in Ayland, she had no valid legal argument for her position. From an economic perspective, it is also unhelpful, from HPC’s perspective to have the union making high wage demands and then complaining about legitimate measures that the company takes to stay within its government subsidy such as cutting costs, including labour costs.

Conclusion
HPC’s relationship with FT has been positive and mutually benefi cial for the majority of the company’s history. Clearly seeing their destinies to be linked, FT has supported the company against external threats but has, at the same time, used its good relations to make wage demands that ultimately led to the award of a maintenance contract to the foreign workers. This would have broken an important relationship with experienced maintenance personnel and the foreign workers may or may not have had the same level of expertise as the previous workers.

(c) Explain agency relationship
An agency relationship is one of trust between an agent and a principal which obliges the agent to meet the objectives placed upon it by the principal. As one appointed by a principal to manage, oversee or further the principal’s specifi c interests, the primary purpose of agency is to discharge its fi duciary duty to the principal. In this case, there is an agency relationship between the government and the board of HPC.

Examine existing agency relationship
Although HPC is run by a conventional board, the company is wholly owned by the government of Ayland. This means that the company’s strategic objectives are determined by the government and these are likely to be different from purely commercial concerns. The nuclear operation is clearly not economic in terms of profi t and so the government’s objectives for the company must be other than that. The case describes this in terms of broadening its energy portfolio and meeting environmental objectives. The board’s objectives are likely to be predominantly fi nancial, due to the control by subsidy placed upon it, but the principal’s political and environmental concerns may also affect the objectives placed upon the HPC board (such as employment objectives in what is a deprived region of Ayland).

The principal is the government of Ayland and ultimately the board is accountable to the taxpayers of Ayland. This means that the development and even the existence of HN is ultimately under democratic control. The agency relationship means that the board of HPC has subsidy targets and also sees its role as fulfi lling an important role in Ayland’s energy portfolio.

HPC as a ‘conventional’ company owned by private shareholders
If HPC was a private company, its principals would be shareholders with very different objectives. Shareholders would be predominantly concerned with the economic performance of HP and the economies of the nuclear power industry. It would insist that the board pursued only those parts of the business that were profi table. This would necessitate a radical redesign of HPC’s business as we are told that in its present form. it is loss-making.

(d) (i)

Statement
Hesket Power Company’s response to the report produced by NNN

Importance of risk assessment at Hesket Power Company
Hesket Power Company was recently dismayed to have been made aware of a report conducted by an anti-nuclear pressure group purporting to be a risk assessment of selected risks to the Hesket Nuclear plant. The company would like to take this opportunity to inform. the public about the irresponsibility of the pressure group’s activity whilst comprehensively rejecting its arguments.

In all industries it is important to assess risks as accurately as possible but in the nuclear power industry, it is critical. It is because the pressure group misrepresented our risks that we feel it necessary to remind stakeholders about the importance of a correct risk assessment based on valid measurements.

In observing best practice, Hesket Nuclear carries out thorough and continual risk assessments in compliance with our regulatory frameworks. The information going into the process must be as accurate as possible because resources are allocated in part on the basis of our risk assessments. Clearly, a risk assessed as probable and of high impact would attract a signifi cant resource allocation and to have incorrect information could conceivably lead to the misallocation of company resources. This, in turn, would be a failure of our duty to the HPC company and ultimately to our owners, the government of Ayland and its taxpayers. The fact that there has not been a serious incident since the 1970s highlights the efforts that we take with risk assessment.

The ways in which we manage risk also depend upon the assessment. Once a risk, such as the risk of a nuclear leakage, is identifi ed and assessed, the company pursues a strategy for managing that risk, typically to transfer or share the risk, avoid the risk, reduce it or accept it. This has implications for the entire strategy of the organisation, especially where the assessed risks are strategic in nature. Inaccurate assessment might, for example, mean accepting a risk that should have been avoided or vice versa.

Our stakeholders expect us to be a responsible company in all matters but especially in matters of safety and the environment. We owe it to our local community, employees and others to ensure that all risks are fully but accurately understood. In addition to ensuring that we are fully compliant with all regulatory regimes applicable to us, we believe that accurate risk assessment is necessary to our valued reputation as an ethical and responsible employer and neighbour.

Finally, as we have seen in the case of this misguided report by the pressure group, inaccurate assessments can breed fear, distrust and unnecessary panic. HPC was disappointed to hear the report being used by critics when the information it contained was inaccurate and this leads us to the second matter.

(ii) HN’s social and environmental ‘footprint’

HPC is aware of some critics that have asserted that our overall footprint is negative. In responding to this, we feel it necessary to remind readers that the footprint of any organisation includes the sum total of its positive and negative interactions with the environment. Whilst this sometimes involves negative impacts such as carbon emissions and accidental pollution, it also takes into account the positive impacts such as social benefi t, through such things as job creation, and positive environmental impacts. Both ‘sides’ need to be taken into account before an overall evaluation of the social and environmental footprint can be established. To focus on only a small number of measures, as some of our critics have done, is to provide an unfair and biased account of our genuine overall footprint.

Social arguments
It is our belief that Hesket Nuclear makes a substantial positive contribution on both social and environmental measures. In terms of social contribution, HN makes a positive impact for several reasons. Whilst accepting that Hesket Nuclear has its critics, the company would like to remind the public both in Ayland and Beeland that the plant is a very large employer and vital to the economic well-being of the region, a fact recognised by a wide range of local and national stakeholders. Others have noted the importance of the jobs provided at Hesket Nuclear to the social and economic well-being of the region and HPC fully agrees with this analysis.

In addition to the jobs provided in Ayland, Hesket Nuclear also provides reprocessed fuel that is cheaper than virgin fuel. This provides support for nuclear power, and hence clean energy, in several developing countries that are our valued customers. Hesket Nuclear therefore indirectly supports employment and social development in those countries. Were our reprocessed fuel unavailable to them, rates of economic and social development growth may be slowed in those countries. We are therefore determined to continue to supply this vital input into those countries and to continue to support them.

Environmental arguments
In addition, as a non-fossil fuel industry, nuclear is relatively non-polluting and is an essential component of the government of Ayland’s clean energy strategy. Hesket Nuclear is proud to be a part of that strategy and will continue to be a dependable producer of nuclear power and reprocessing services. In so doing we will continue to carefully manage the risks of nuclear power supply whilst providing the jobs and clean energy for which Hesket Nuclear is corporately responsible. A likely alternative to nuclear is the burning of more polluting fossil fuels which would presumably be as unacceptable to our critics as it is to us.

Whilst conceding that all nuclear operations require a high level of safety and regulatory observance, we are pleased to be able to remind our stakeholders, including the governments of Beeland and Ceeland, of our very high performance in this area. As our colleagues in the Forward Together trade union recently said, Hesket Nuclear has had an impeccable safety record since the 1970s and is fully compliant with all relevant safety regulations. We fully intend to maintain this high level of performance.

[Tutorial note: allow latitude in responding to part (ii), especially rewarding answers referring to the specifi c case of nuclear]


(b) A summary of the information needed to satisfy our obligations under the money laundering legislation and

any action that should be taken before agreeing to become tax advisers to the Saturn Ltd group. (5 marks)

正确答案:
(b) Before agreeing to become tax advisers to the Saturn Ltd group
Information needed:
– Proof of incorporation and primary business address and registered office.
– The structure, directors and shareholders of the company.
– The identities of those persons instructing the firm on behalf of the company and those persons that are authorised to
do so.
Action to take:
– Consider whether becoming tax advisers to the Saturn Ltd group would create any threats to compliance with the
fundamental principles of professional ethics, for example integrity and professional competence. Where such threats
exist, we should not accept the appointment unless the threats can be reduced to an acceptable level via the
implementation of safeguards.
– Contact the existing tax adviser in order to ensure that there has been no action by the Saturn Ltd group that would, on
ethical grounds, preclude us from accepting appointment.

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