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The users of financial statements include present and potential
investors, employees, lenders, suppliers and other trade creditors, customers,
governments and their agencies and the public. They use financial statements in
order to satisfy some of their different needs for information. These needs
include the following:
(a) Investors. The providers of risk capital and their advisers are
concerned with the risk inherent in, and return provided by, their investments.
They need information to help them determine whether they should buy, hold or
sell. Shareholders are also interested in information which enables them to assess
the ability of the enterprise to pay dividends.
(b) Employees. Employees and their representative groups are interested in
information about the stability and profitability of their employers. They are also
interested in information which enables them to assess the ability of the enterprise
to provide remuneration, retirement benefits and employment opportunities.
(c) Lenders. Lenders are interested in information that enables them to determine
whether their loans, and the interest attaching to them, will be paid when due.
(d) Suppliers and other trade
creditors. Suppliers and other creditors are interested
in information that enables them to determine whether amounts owing to them
will be paid when due. Trade creditors are likely to be interested in an
enterprise over a shorter period than lenders unless they are dependent upon
the continuation of the enterprise as a major customer.
(e) Customers. Customers have an interest in information about the continuance
of an enterprise, especially when they have a long-term involvement with, or
are dependent on, the enterprise.
(f) Governments and their agencies. Governments and their agencies are interested in the
allocation of resources and, therefore, the activities of enterprises. They
also require information in order to regulate the activities of enterprises,
determine taxation policies and as the basis for national income and similar
statistics.
(g) Public. Enterprises affect members of the public in a variety of
ways. For example, enterprises may make a substantial contribution to the local
economy in many ways including the number of people they employ and their
patronage of local suppliers. Financial statements may assist the public by
providing information about the trends and recent developments in the
prosperity of the enterprise and the range of its activities.
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Nicholas Musuuza
Director
WFConsults
Box 2090
Kampala
Uganda
Tel 256-752-959-439
The Customer is the most important Visitor on our premises, we are not doing him a favour by serving him ,rather he is doing us a favour by letting us serve him.- Gandhi
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