Multiple Choice
The Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) in the U.S. uses what it calls a "functional currency approach" to differentiate among various intracorporate relationship scenarios and, on that basis, specify how financial statement translation must be done. The International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) uses a different approach, but the end result is usually identical. Basically,
A) If an operating affiliate is classified as a "self-sustaining foreign entity," in the absence of hyperinflation, its functional currency will be its local currency and translation will be done using the current rate method.
B) If the functional currency is neither the local currency nor the reporting currency (assume the U.S. dollar) , then the local currency financial statements must be remeasured into the functional currency using the temporal method and then restated into the U.S. dollar (the reporting currency) using the current rate method.
C) If an operating affiliate is classified as an "integrated foreign entity," in the absence of hyperinflation, its functional currency will be the reporting currency (U.S. dollar) and translation will be done using the temporal method.
D) All of the statements above are correct.
E) Only statements a and c are correct.
Correct Answer:

Verified
Correct Answer:
Verified
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