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Accounting Foundations: Global Finance and Accounting

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Jim Stice and Earl Stice

1:46:58

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  • 001 Staying on top of global and accounting issues.mp4
    00:57
  • 001 Financial reporting in China Russia and Kazakhstan.mp4
    02:48
  • 002 FASB and IASB.mp4
    05:08
  • 003 Similarities between IFRS and US GAAP.mp4
    03:55
  • 004 Differences between IFRS and US GAAP.mp4
    04:30
  • 005 Convergence of IFRS and US GAAP.mp4
    05:01
  • 006 Samples of multinational financial reporting approaches.mp4
    05:09
  • 001 Salary paid in Kazakhstan tenge.mp4
    03:30
  • 002 Selling goods or services in a foreign currency.mp4
    04:44
  • 003 Buying goods or services in a foreign currency.mp4
    04:56
  • 004 Accounting for a subsidiary in a foreign currency.mp4
    04:58
  • 005 Hedging foreign exchange risk.mp4
    05:00
  • 006 Impact of currency devaluations.mp4
    04:55
  • 001 Mismatch between operating currency and borrowing currency.mp4
    04:16
  • 002 In what currencies do Disney and Coca-Cola borrow money .mp4
    03:54
  • 003 Where to list your equity shares .mp4
    04:52
  • 004 International differences in business regulation.mp4
    04:52
  • 001 The size of the gray economy.mp4
    03:36
  • 002 Income taxes Strategic location of operations.mp4
    04:37
  • 003 Income taxes International transfer prices.mp4
    04:02
  • 001 Impact on the cost of capital.mp4
    04:04
  • 002 Supply chains across national borders.mp4
    04:15
  • 003 Outsourcing of production and offshoring of labor services.mp4
    04:57
  • 004 Data security and storage.mp4
    03:40
  • 001 The dramatic globalization of business.mp4
    04:22
  • Description


    If you run a business, you probably want your business to have as broad a market as possible, which means, ideally, conducting business in multiple countries. Of course, having a business that’s active in a global, interconnected economy brings with it a whole slew of accounting challenges. How do you keep track of credits and debits when you’re dealing with US dollars, euros, British pounds, Japanese yen, and more? In this course, accounting experts Jim Stice and Kay Stice dive into how conducting business across national borders creates finance and accounting challenges that don’t exist when all business is done locally. Lenders, investors, and borrowers need to communicate using a common financial language. Jim and Kay show how additional operating, investing, financing, legal, and social risks are introduced when a company buys, sells, borrows, or invests across national borders.

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    Jim Stice and Earl Stice
    Jim Stice and Earl Stice
    Instructor's Courses
    I am the Distinguished Teaching Professor in the Marriott School of Management at Brigham Young University. I have served as an Associate Dean of the Marriott School. I also served for eight years as the director of BYU's MBA Program. I hold bachelor's and master's degrees in accounting from BYU and a PhD in accounting from the University of Washington. I have been on the faculty at BYU since 1988. During my time at BYU, I have been selected by graduating accounting students as “Teacher of the Year” on numerous occasions; I was selected by my peers in the Marriott School at BYU to receive the “Outstanding Teaching Award,” and I was selected by the University to receive its highest teaching award, the Maeser Excellence in Teaching Award. I have taught in academic and executive education programs in the United States, Europe, South Africa, Singapore, and China for such companies as IBM, Bank of America, and Ernst & Young. I have published articles in the Journal of Accounting Research, The Accounting Review, Decision Sciences, Issues in Accounting Education, The CPA Journal, and other academic and professional journals. In addition to teaching and research, I have served on the board of directors of a publicly-traded company that was taken private and on the Audit Committee for Deseret Management Corporation. I have been writing accounting textbooks since 1990. I am co-author of Intermediate Accounting, 19th edition; Accounting: Concepts and Applications, 11th edition; and Financial Accounting: Reporting and Analysis, 7th Edition. I am now the co-creator (with my brother Kay and with our colleague Steve Albrecht) of online textbooks for Financial and Managerial Accounting courses at MyEducator.com. My brother Kay and I have been teaching accounting for decades. Together we have over 70 years of experience in the classroom. We are passionate about teaching accounting and are grateful for the opportunity afforded us on LinkedIn Learning to share our passion with others.
    LinkedIn Learning is an American online learning provider. It provides video courses taught by industry experts in software, creative, and business skills. It is a subsidiary of LinkedIn. All the courses on LinkedIn fall into four categories: Business, Creative, Technology and Certifications. It was founded in 1995 by Lynda Weinman as Lynda.com before being acquired by LinkedIn in 2015. Microsoft acquired LinkedIn in December 2016.
    • language english
    • Training sessions 25
    • duration 1:46:58
    • Release Date 2024/09/18