Official 2009 XBRL Taxonomy for GAAP Released

XBRL US has published the 2009 edition of the interactive data tags that the Securities and Exchange Commission will accept for coding financial statements in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles.

The “digital dictionary” of interactive tags use Extensible Business Reporting Language, or XBRL, technology. Former SEC Chairman Christopher Cox was a strong proponent of XBRL and pushed for a mandate that requires the largest public companies to begin filing their financial statements using the technology. XBRL promises to make it easier for investors to analyze and compare the performance of different companies across industries.

The SEC mandated XBRL for public company reporting, which will be phased in over two years. The largest public companies, those with a worldwide public float of $5 billion or higher, must comply with the mandate starting with their June 15, 2009, quarter, a group of approximately 500 companies. All other large accelerated filers must comply starting with their June 15, 2010, fiscal quarter, and all other publicly traded companies and foreign private issuers will be required to comply starting with their June 15, 2011, fiscal quarter.

The 2009 release of the U.S. GAAP taxonomy in XBRL includes hundreds of accounting and industry-specific revisions to the 2008 release. XBRL US also plans to provide tools, training programs and webinars to help companies work with the new taxonomies and comply with SEC requirements. FASB pronouncements incorporated since the 2008 release include FAS 141(R), 160, 161 and 163.

The taxonomies can be viewed and downloaded at http://xbrl.us/Pages/US-GAAP.aspx.

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