XBRL US Domain Working Group
United
States Financial Reporting Taxonomy Framework
US GAAP
Commercial & Industrial Extension Taxonomy
Release Date: 2003-07-07
Release
Type: Acknowledged
Taxonomy Documentation
Status: |
Public Working Draft, issued in accordance with XBRL
International Processes REC 2002-04-20. |
Issued: |
2003-07-07 ( |
Name: |
US GAAP Commercial & Industrial |
Description: |
This financial reporting taxonomy is intended to provide detail
level accounting terms and reporting structures required by US GAAP-based commercial
and industrial-type companies in order to tag financial statements in XBRL. |
Namespace identifier: |
|
Recommended namespace prefix: |
us-gaap-ci |
Version of XBRL Used: |
XBRL 2.0a Specification dated 2002-11-15 |
Relation to Other XBRL Taxonomies: |
This taxonomy imports key elements of the United States (US) Financial Reporting (FR) Taxonomy Framework in order to create a comprehensive industry-level taxonomy for commercial and industrial-type companies. Taxonomies included in the USFR Taxonomy Framework include Global Common Document (INT-GCD), Accountants Report (INT-AR), General Concepts (USFR-GC), Primary Terms (USFR-PT), Management Report (USFR-MR), Notes and Management Discussion and Analysis (USFR-NAMDA) and SEC Officers Certification (USFR-SEC-CERT). |
Physical Location of Taxonomy Package: |
http://www.xbrl.org/taxonomy/us/fr/gaap/ci/2003-07-07/us-gaap-ci-2003-07-07.xsd
(Schema) http://www.xbrl.org/taxonomy/us/fr/gaap/ci/2003-07-07/us-gaap-ci-2003-07-07-references.xml (References linkbase) http://www.xbrl.org/taxonomy/us/fr/gaap/ci/2003-07-07/us-gaap-ci-2003-07-07-labels.xml
(Labels linkbase) http://www.xbrl.org/taxonomy/us/fr/gaap/ci/2003-07-07/us-gaap-ci-2003-07-07-presentation.xml
(Presentation
linkbase) http://www.xbrl.org/taxonomy/us/fr/gaap/ci/2003-07-07/us-gaap-ci-2003-07-07-calculation.xml
(Calculation linkbase) http://www.xbrl.org/taxonomy/us/fr/gaap/ci/2003-07-07/us-gaap-ci-2003-07-07-definition.xml (Definition linkbase) |
Rob Blake, Microsoft
Brad
Rob Blake, Microsoft
Glen Buter, CPA, BDO Siedman
Eric Cohen, CPA, PricewaterhouseCoopers
Michael Eng CPA, Deloitte & Touche
Sal Mileti, CPA, Ernst & Young
Jeff Naumann, CPA, AICPA
Paul Penler, CPA, Ernst & Young
Brad Saegesser, Moody’s KMV
Brian
Staples, Bank of
http://www.xbrl.org/taxonomy/us/fr/gaap/ci/2003-07-07/us-gaap-ci-2003-07-07.htm (HTML Format)
http://www.xbrl.org/taxonomy/us/fr/gaap/ci/2003-07-07/us-gaap-ci-2003-07-07.pdf (PDF Format)
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http://www.xbrl.org/taxonomy/us/fr/gaap/ci/2003-07-07/us-gaap-ci-2003-07-07-elements.pdf (PDF Format)
http://www.xbrl.org/taxonomy/us/fr/gaap/ci/2003-07-07/us-gaap-ci-2003-07-07-elements.xls
(Excel Format)
© 2003 AICPA® All
Rights Reserved. AICPA liability, , and rules apply.
This Taxonomy Documentation describes the eXtensible Business Reporting Language (XBRL) US Financial Reporting Taxonomy: US GAAP Commercial & Industrial (US-GAAP-CI). The US-GAAP-CI Taxonomy has been prepared by the XBRL US Domain Working Group, with feedback from other members of XBRL International as well.
This US-GAAP-CI Taxonomy is compliant with the XBRL 2.0a Specification,
dated 2002-11-15 (http://www.xbrl.org/tr/2001/).
It is a taxonomy created by combining (or “importing”) other taxonomies in the
USFR Taxonomy Framework, as well as offering its own specific financial reporting
detailed elements specific to commercial and industrial-type companies. Specifically, the US-GAAP-CI Taxonomy
represents financial reporting detail ranging from the Management Report to the
Balance Sheet and
This document assumes a general understanding of accounting and XBRL. If the reader desires additional information relating to XBRL, the XBRL International web site (http://www.xbrl.org) is recommended. In particular, a reading of the XBRL 2.0a Specification is highly recommended (http://www.xbrl.org/tr/2001/).
The terminology used in this document frequently overlaps with terminology from other disciplines. The following definitions are provided to explain the use of terms within the XBRL knowledge domain.
Taxonomy |
An XBRL Taxonomy is an XML Schema-compliant .xsd file that contains XBRL elements, which are XML elements that are defined by XBRL-specific attributes. An XBRL Taxonomy may also contain references to XLink linkbases. |
Instance document |
An XML document that includes on or more XBRL elements and optional references to zero or more XLink linkbases. |
Element |
An XBRL element is a “fact” or piece of information described by an XBRL taxonomy. For example, an element with the name “CashCashEquivalents” is the US GAAP CI taxonomy’s XBRL element name for the financial statement disclosure fact “Cash and Cash Equivalents.” |
Linkbase |
Linkbases provide additional information about XBRL
elements, in particular, relationships between them such as the relationship
that “Cash” is defined as a part of “Current Assets.” Linkbases used by XBRL
are compliant with the World
Wide Web Consortium’s (W3C) XML Linking Language (XLink) Recommendation 1.0, |
1.4. Relationship
to Other Work
2.3. Element
Naming Convention
2.6. Further Documentation Available
3. Items to Note in Using
the Taxonomy
3.2. How to Interpret the Taxonomy Structure
3.3. Document
and Entity Information
3.7. Statement
of Stockholder’s Equity
3.8. Notes
and Management Discussion and Analysis
3.11. SEC Officers Certification
3.14. Entering Numeric Values into
Instance Documents
5.3. Concepts
and Considerations
7. Review and Testing,
Updates and Changes
7.3. Errors and Clarifications
The XBRL US Domain Working Group is leading the development of this XBRL US GAAP Commercial and Industrial (US-GAAP-CI) Taxonomy for the purpose of expressing commercial and industrial-type financial statements according to US GAAP/FASB and other related/relevant accounting standards.
This US-GAAP-CI Taxonomy is designed to facilitate the creation of XBRL instance documents that reflect business and financial reporting for Commercial and Industrial companies according to the Financial Accounting Standards Board Generally Accepted Accounting Principles. The purpose of the US GAAP CI Taxonomy is to provide a framework for the consistent creation of XBRL documents for financial reporting purposes by private sector and certain public sector entities. The purpose of this and other taxonomies produced using XBRL is to supply a framework that will facilitate data exchange among software applications used by companies and individuals as well as other financial information stakeholders, such as lenders, investors, auditors, attorneys, and regulators.
The authority for this US-GAAP-CI Taxonomy is based upon US Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP). The development of the taxonomy is based upon input from accounting firms, technology companies and other domain experts in the field of financial reporting. In addition, the specific content of the taxonomy is based upon standards identified by the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) and other related standards organizations.
The particular disclosures in this US-GAAP-CI Taxonomy model are:
1. Required
by particular Commercial and
2. Typically represented in AICPA model financial statements, checklists and guidance materials as provided from each of the major international accounting firms.
3. Found in common reporting practice, or
4. Flow logically from items 1-3, for example, sub-totals and totals.
This US-GAAP-CI Taxonomy is in compliance with the XBRL 2.0a Specification, dated 2002-11-15 (http://www.xbrl.org/tr/2001/).
The
XBRL Taxonomies can exist in five states insofar as XBRL International
is concerned:
The following is a summary of levels
of approval attainable within each state of Taxonomy approval outlined above:
This
US GAAP CI Taxonomy is released in conjunction
with XBRL International’s Global Common
Document (INT-GCD) and Accountants Report (INT-AR) taxonomies and
the following XBRL
. The US GAAP CI Taxonomy brings together up-stream taxonomies to deliver core financial statement, Notes to the Financial Statements, Accountants Report and other related content that certain private and public sector entities report typically in annual, semi-annual or quarterly financial disclosures. These taxonomies are all part of the US Financial Reporting Taxonomy Framework, an XBRL taxonomy framework that enables reusability of components and provides the foundation for creating new industry taxonomies (such Insurance, Banks and Savings Institutions) going forward.
Taken together, these taxonomies will meet
the reporting needs of companies that meet three criteria, viz (i) they report
under FASB standards, (ii) are in the broad category of “commercial and
industrial” industries and (iii) have relatively common reporting elements in
their financial statements. In practice, these three criteria are less likely to
hold for all companies. Additional taxonomies
are likely to be required. These
taxonomies are likely to identify the particular needs of:
These
extension taxonomies will either extend the US GAAP CI Taxonomy to meet
the particular reporting requirements of that industry, country or company and/or restrict by limiting the use of
particular US GAAP CI Taxonomy elements.
The
inter-relationships of the various taxonomies are show in Figure 1:
Figure 1: Interrelationship of Taxonomies and Instance Document
XBRL utilizes the World Wide Web consortium (W3C www.w3.org ) recommendations, specifically:
The primary purpose of the US GAAP CI Taxonomy is to bring together the
necessary USFR Taxonomy components to create a complete solution to “tag”
financial information using XBRL. This
Framework includes the following detailed information (specific Schema file in
parenthesis):
Reporting elements from the US GAAP
CI taxonomy may be incorporated into a wide variety of other disclosures from
press releases to multi-period summaries.
This US GAAP CI Taxonomy makes available to users the most commonly disclosed financial information under the FASB Standards. This taxonomy is an expression of financial information in terms that are understandable to humans, but more importantly also understandable by a computer application.
The US GAAP CI Taxonomy is made up of a “package” of interrelated XML files:
The package is represented visually with an example based on US GAAP Balance Sheet reporting of “Cash and Cash Equivalents” as shown in Figure 2:
Figure 2: US GAAP CI
The US GAAP CI Taxonomy contains over 1,400 unique, individually identified pieces of information related to financial reporting. Most of these 1,400 elements are contained in the up-stream taxonomies and are “imported” or “included” in the US GAAP CI taxonomy. The XML Schema file at the heart of the US GAAP CI taxonomy provides a straightforward listing of the elements in the taxonomy. The US GAAP CI linkbases provide the other information necessary to interpret (e.g. Label and Definition linkbases) taxonomy elements or place a given taxonomy element in context of other taxonomy elements (e.g. Calculation and Presentation linkbases).
Given that information on the
Taxonomy is included in XML Schema and linkbase files, it is best rendered for
human interpretation in a “paper” paradigm. Users are encouraged to review
versions of the taxonomy elements in Adobe Acrobat (PDF) http://www.xbrl.org/taxonomy/us/fr/gaap/ci/2003-07-07/us-gaap-ci-2003-07-07-elements.pdf
or Excel http://www.xbrl.org/taxonomy/us/fr/gaap/ci/2003-07-07/us-gaap-ci-2003-07-07-elements.xls
formats.
However, in this rendering much of the characteristics of taxonomy are not obvious. The paper paradigm is two dimensional, whereas the information in the taxonomy is multidimensional. The application of a metaphor assists in understanding taxonomies. The US GAAP CI Taxonomy is organized using a financial statement metaphor. This organization is used because it is understood by most accountants who use this metaphor to organize their audit working papers; to put the notes to the financial statements in order and in a variety of other uses. This metaphor is also familiar to the users of financial statements.
However, this metaphor and organization somewhat limits an understanding of the power behind an XBRL taxonomy. A taxonomy has multiple “dimensions”. Relationships can be expressed in terms of definitions, calculations, links to labels in one or more languages, links to one or more references, etc. The metaphor used expresses only one such relationship.
The
US GAAP CI Taxonomy is divided logically into sections that correspond to
typical US GAAP financial statement components. While there is no true concept
of “sections” in the Taxonomy, their purpose is to group similar concepts
together and facilitate navigation within the Taxonomy.
The US-GAAP–CI Taxonomy uses a readable
Currently, labels for taxonomy elements are provided in English. In the future, taxonomy labels could be expressed in additional languages as required.
This Taxonomy provides references to FASB and other relevant standards. Figure 3 shows the reference elements are used in this taxonomy, using “FASB 142, sub paragraph 23” to illustrate how a reference is matched to these elements:
Figure 3: Reference Naming Structure
Name: |
FASB |
Number: |
142 |
Paragraph: |
|
Subparagraph: |
23 |
Clause: |
|
Authoritative reference
information used throughout the taxonomy relies on a series of acronyms. The following list provides an overview of
the acronyms used commonly throughout the authoritative references:
(FASB) - Financial
Accounting Standards Board;
(CT) - FASB Accounting
Standards Current Text and its Appendix E;
(SX) - Regulation S-X;
(Topic) - Topic paragraph in
Codification of SEC Staff Accounting Bulletins (SAB);
(FAS) - Statement of
Financial Accounting Standards;
(APB) - Accounting
Principles Board Opinion;
(EITF) - FASB Emerging
Issues Task Force issue;
(SOP) - AICPA Statement of
Position;
(PB) - AICPA Practice
Bulletin;
(SAS) - Statement on
Auditing Standards;
(ARB) - Accounting Research
Bulleting;
(FRR) - SEC Financial
Reporting Release;
(FTB) - FASB technical
Bulletin;
(SP) - SEC Staff Position;
(FIN) - FASB
Interpretations;
(CON) - FASB Statement of
Financial Accounting Concepts;
(ATB) - Accounting
Terminology Bulletins;
(APS) - Accounting
Principles Board Statement
The
intent of this document is to explain the Taxonomy. This document assumes a
general understanding of accounting and XBRL. If the reader desires additional
information relating to XBRL, the XBRL International web site (http://www.xbrl.org)
is recommended. Specifically, a reading of the XBRL 2.0a Specification is
highly recommended (http://www.xbrl.org/tr/2001/).
The purpose of this document is to explain how XBRL is being applied in this
specific case, for this taxonomy.
The following documentation is available to assist those wishing to understand and use this taxonomy. This documentation is available on the XBRL International web site (http://www.xbrl.org):
These documents correspond to a set of interrelated files comprising an XBRL taxonomy package:
These files are located as follows:
http://www.xbrl.org/taxonomy/us/fr/gaap/ci/2003-07-07/us-gaap-ci-2003-07-07.xsd (Schema)
http://www.xbrl.org/taxonomy/us/fr/gaap/ci/2003-07-07/us-gaap-ci-2003-07-07-references.xml (References linkbase)
http://www.xbrl.org/taxonomy/us/fr/gaap/ci/2003-07-07/us-gaap-ci-2003-07-07-labels.xml (Labels linkbase)
http://www.xbrl.org/taxonomy/us/fr/gaap/ci/2003-07-07/us-gaap-ci-2003-07-07-presentation.xml
(Presentation linkbase)
http://www.xbrl.org/taxonomy/us/fr/gaap/ci/2003-07-07/us-gaap-ci-2003-07-07-calculation.xml
(Calculation linkbase)
http://www.xbrl.org/taxonomy/us/fr/gaap/ci/2003-07-07/us-gaap-ci-2003-07-07-definition.xml
(Definition linkbase)
Sample
company instance documents will be made available soon after the initial
release of the
The following explanation of the taxonomy, the taxonomies with which this US-GAAP-CI Taxonomy is designed to interoperate, and examples of how to interpret the US-GAAP-CI Taxonomy are provided to make the US-GAAP-CI Taxonomy easier to use. Please refer to the detailed printout of the US-GAAP-CI Taxonomy as you go through this explanation (http://www.xbrl.org/taxonomy/us/fr/gaap/ci/2003-07-07/us-gaap-ci-2003-07-07-elements.pdf). This explanatory document is designed to provide an overview of the US GAAP CI Taxonomy to be a brief and concise overview. We expect that the XBRL community will create courses, books and other materials to provide a thorough explanation of every aspect of using the US GAAP CI Taxonomy and other cognate taxonomies.
The element fragment shown in Figure 4 exists within the Taxonomy:
Figure 3: Sample Elements
Element |
Label |
ID Number |
Page |
CashCashEquivalents |
Cash and Cash
Equivalents |
|
1 |
Cash |
Cash |
|
1 |
Cash Equivalents |
Cash Equivalents |
|
1 |
This means that for a commercial and industrial company, there is a type
of current asset called “Cash and Cash Equivalents”. This is represented by the
element with that label, and a composite name of “CashCashEquivalents”.
If a company reports their financials using an XBRL instance document,
then because “Cash and Cash Equivalent” is an element in the taxonomy, and this
element has children that roll up to it, then one of the following will be
true:
·
All
“Cash and Cash Equivalent” of the entity must be recorded within one of those child
elements, OR
·
The
instance document will include an extension to the taxonomy that consists of a
new element or elements and an indication of how those new elements relate to “Cash
and Cash Equivalent”.
All of the elements in the fragment shown are of a data type “monetary”
with a weight of “1”. Having a weight of “1” indicates that the element values
of all children of an element, multiplied by the weight, then add up or “roll
up” to the value of the parent element. For example, “Cash and Cash Equivalent,”
“Marketable Securities” and “Prepaid Expenses” are part of the make up of the
value of “Current Assets”. This continues up the Calculation linkbase tree so
that “Assets” has a value of the children “Current Assets” and “Non Current
Assets”, and so forth throughout the entire taxonomy.
The taxonomy is laid out with parents coming
before children. For example, the section “Current Assets” is presented before
sections such as “Noncurrent Assets”. This pattern is
followed throughout the taxonomy.
The following sectional information is based
on the US GAAP CI Taxonomy’s Presentation linkbase and provides and overview of
the various “sections” found within the
This section of the US-GAAP-CI Taxonomy includes common information important in creating any XBRL instance document such as document information, entity information, contact information, periods covered and revision information.
This section of the US-GAAP-CI
Taxonomy includes elements related to the information and disclosures that are
typically found in the
This section of the US-GAAP-CI Taxonomy includes elements related to the information and disclosures that are typically found in the Balance Sheet.
This section of the US-GAAP-CI Taxonomy includes elements related to the information and disclosures that are typically found in the Statement of Cash Flows.
This section of the US-GAAP-CI Taxonomy includes elements related to the information and disclosures that are typically found in the Statement of Stockholder’s Equity.
This section of the US-GAAP-CI Taxonomy includes elements related to the information typically found in the Notes to the Financial Statements and Management Discussion and Analysis sections of external reports of companies.
This section of the US-GAAP-CI Taxonomy contains elements related to the auditor’s/independent Accountants Report that typically accompanies external financial reports of companies.
This section of the US-GAAP-CI Taxonomy contains elements related to the Management Report on Responsibility for Financial Reporting that typically accompanies external financial reports of companies.
This section of the US-GAAP-CI Taxonomy contains elements related to the officers’ certifications that are required in the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.
These exceptions require the use of
“same-as” links. The “same as” concept is part of the XBRL 2.0a Specification,
and its interpretation is as follows: there will be an error if an instance document having two
elements linked by a “same as” definition relationship and which have the same numeric context have different content
values.
Specific to the US-GAAP-CI Taxonomy, there does
exist equivalent facts that require the use of “same as” links. In the example above using “Net Income”, the
need to have multiple occurrences of the term “Net Income” is handled by within
the
For example, the US-GAAP-CI Taxonomy uses the component
name “Income” to represent the concept “Income”. If the
The way this is done is that each
taxonomy has a unique namespace. A namespace is a URI (Uniform Resource
Identifier) such as http://www.xbrl.org/taxonomy/us/fr/gaap/ci/2003-07-07, which is the namespace of this release
of the US-GAAP-CI Taxonomy. A namespace is not
a URL that one is meant to use with a browser; it is a simply a globally unique
identifier. Within any particular XML document, however, it is quite unnecessary
to repeat such a huge identifier with every taxonomy element – instead, XML
allows one to define an abbreviation for each of the namespaces one uses. Using
“qualified” namespaces in this way, instance documents and taxonomies can
define an alias such as us-gaap-ci
for the US-GAAP-CI Taxonomy and uk-gaap-ci
for the UK-GAAP-CI Taxonomy. Thus the US-GAAP-CI element would be referred to
as us-gaap-ci:Income
and the
Using qualified namespaces, the US-GAAP-CI
Taxonomy “Income and Expenses” becomes us-gaap-ci:IncomeExpenses and the United
Kingdom Taxonomy’s would be uk-gaap-ci:IncomeExpenses. The namespace simply adds a contextual prefix to any given XML
element.
Note that these particular aliases reflect a usage convention only within the US-GAAP-CI taxonomy itself as an aid to communication between humans. Software applications must not depend on these particular prefixes being used; they should process namespace identifiers and aliases as specified by the XML specifications.
Figure 4 describes how weights have been incorporated into the US-GAAP-CI Taxonomy and how corresponding values will most often be entered into an instance document: (note that the term “natural balance” is not used, this is intentional)
Figure 4: Numeric Values and Weights
Typical Balance |
Enter* |
|
Asset |
Debit |
Positive |
Liability & Equity |
Credit |
Positive |
Revenue |
Credit |
Positive |
Expense |
Debit |
Positive |
|
|
|
Other Income (Expense) |
|
Positive or (Negative) |
|
|
|
Cash Inflow |
|
Positive |
Cash Outflow |
|
Positive |
|
|
|
Number of Employees |
|
Positive |
*Enter means enter into an instance document.
XBRL instance documents distinguish facts relating to different segments
of an entity in nonNumericContexts and numericContexts. For example, revenues
for the entire company, and segmented into revenues for the
This section is designed to provide guidance in reviewing this taxonomy. This will assist the user of this documentation and of the taxonomy as well as assisting in providing feedback to the XBRL US Domain Working Group and XBRL International. There are three levels of review
This is a high level review, undertaken with the objective of ensuring the taxonomy has not omitted any key sections. This contrasts with the Detailed Review, which is concerned with a line-by line analysis. If a crucial part of the taxonomy is missing, such as a specific aspect related to the Management Report, this should be picked up in the Global Review. Knowledge of GAAP and Financial Reporting is required to undertake this review. It is intended to identify missing sections of the taxonomy rather than a missing element within a section. A question that would be asked in the Global Review might be “are there XBRL elements that capture necessary Management Report information?” rather than validating each of the individual Management Report disclosures.
Other issues include:
Structure – nesting and completeness
Are the elements grouped in a sensible manner? To illustrate, this review would ask whether the elements that are nested under, for example, “Prepaid Expenses” are appropriate and complete. To answer this requires knowledge of the Management Report and the content typically contained within.
Do the elements seem to roll up properly?
Is every child element correctly placed under the appropriate parent? Do the parents roll up to the correct “grandparents”? The focus on this review is to ensure that from a bottom-up perspective the taxonomy is structured in an appropriate fashion.
Consistency
Are elements aggregated in a consistent manner? There may be cases where some parent elements appear to have a disproportionate number of children, and therefore provide detail that is more appropriately included elsewhere in the US-GAAP-CI Taxonomy.
The objective of the Detailed Review is to ensure the taxonomy correctly captures information typically required by commercial and industrial-type companies with respect to financial reporting. It has two components, the first driven from GAAP and the second driven from XBRL.
Model
Report Review
This review involves validating the elements and disclosures in the taxonomy on a line-by-line basis against commonly used financial report formats.
The accuracy is checked by reviewing the taxonomy against:
GAAP to XBRL
Reviewers should be able to identify an element in the taxonomy for every item required to be disclosed under GAAP. This requires a 100% mapping from GAAP to the US-GAAP-CI Taxonomy. This includes checking all the appropriate authoritative references.
This review should ensure that the element list is sufficiently complete in relation to all of these matters.
XBRL to
GAAP
Not all elements in the Taxonomy will map directly to a GAAP disclosure requirement. Such elements should exist in the taxonomy because it is either 1) common practice for enterprises to disclose the fact or 2) the fact is a sub-total that helps the structural completeness of the taxonomy.
This review has an XBRL focus, and involves verifying some of the attributes of the elements. The principal attributes to be verified are weights, labels and data type.
Weights
Is the weight correct, so that the children correctly roll-up to the parent?
Labels
Label names should be consistent. For example, change in prepaid expense might be labeled as “Change in Prepaid Expenses”. There should therefore be no cases of “Changes in…” or any other variations. All abbreviations should also be consistent.
Data-Types
Is the element data-type correct? Valid data types include (but are not limited to) string, monetary, date, tuple and shares.
This section explains the naming conventions
created and used in the US-GAAP-CI Taxonomy to associate digital “tags” to
concepts from GAAP and other related materials. The purpose of this
“translation” is to provide a consistent, reliable, language-independent,
unambiguous way for relevant parties to use and integrate XBRL standards into
their software applications.
The following terms are used
throughout this section:
·
Component: A representation of a fact that
relates to the element or concept being described. This fact may represent,
among other things, an accounting term, an accounting concept, or a
GAAP-defined definition. Examples: [Cash] = “Cash”; [CashEquivalents] = “Cash
Equivalents”.
·
Composite: A composite element name is a series
of two or more component labels joined together to create a unique element name.
A composite represents a more specific concept than a component. Examples: [MinorityInterest]
could appear multiple places. In order
to make it unique, a composite might be [PaymentMinorityInterestDividents] = “Minority
Interest Dividends”, which is different from [MinorityInterestNetTaxEffect] = “Minority
Interest, Net of Tax Effect”.
·
Reference: A reference to literature that
supports the existence and necessity of a component and/or composite. Each
component and composite has at least one reference. Typically these refer to
chapter/subchapter/paragraphs/etc., as denoted in GAAP and other standards.
However, other references may also be present
·
Label: A label is text that describes a
component and/or composite to a user. A single component or composite may have
multiple labels, typically one per language, although a single language may
have multiple types of labels.
·
XBRL: Extensible Business Reporting
Language is an XML language that has been designed to represent business
information in an XML (digital) format. XBRL is used to define sets of element
names; US-GAAP-CI composite element names.
The
US-GAAP-CI Taxonomy XBRL “element name” has been created using a Label
CamelCase Concatenation (LC3) convention.
The base for the element name is the label name for a given element. The
label is a natural language expression that is meaningful to experts in the domain
of that taxonomy (e.g., “PrepaidExpenses”, “MarketableSecurities”) for a given
element. If multiple labels exist in one
or more label linkbases for that taxonomy, all element names in the taxonomy
shall be derived from a linkbase in the primary language of the taxonomy and
will be consistent with the label link having the highest assigned priority.
Specific requirements of the LC3 naming
convention are as follows:
·
The base for the element name is the label name for an
element. The label is a natural language expression that is meaningful to
experts in the domain of that taxonomy (e.g., “Revaluo Propio”, “Restatement of
Fixed Assets”) for a given element.
·
If multiple labels exist in one or more label linkbases
for that taxonomy, all element names in the taxonomy shall be derived from a
linkbase in the primary language of the taxonomy and will be consistent with
the label link having the highest assigned priority.
·
The first character of the element name must be
alphabetic.
·
The first alphabetic character of the element name shall
be capitalized.
·
Connective words in the label shall be omitted from the
element name, in order to make names shorter.
Connective words include (but are not limited to) the, and, to, for,
from, which, of
·
All special characters shall be omitted from the element
name. Special characters include, but
are not limited to; ( ) * +. [ ] ? \ / ^
{ } | @ # % ^ - _ = ~ ` “ ‘ ; : < > & $, ₤ €.
·
Element names shall be limited to 256 characters or fewer.
·
A list of standard abbreviations and rules for
substitution (e.g. “Property Plant and Equipment” always replaced by “PPE”)
will be maintained and consistently applied to labels when used in constructing
element names.
·
In the event that two or more elements share the same
element name and the element name is less that 256 characters, uniqueness shall
be accomplished by appending an additional distinguishing suffix word, or,
failing that, by appending the first duplicate name with a number, beginning
with 1 and incrementing by 1 for each element with a common name.
Composite Element Names are not Hierarchical in Nature
The order in which label “fragments”
are listed in a component in a composite element name are combined should not
be interpreted as a hierarchy. Although some composite element names may
“appear” to resemble this relationship, it is strictly coincidence and
unintentional. All components in a
composite element name are equal in stature, i.e., there is no implied
hierarchy within the composite element name. The hierarchy is expressed in the
XBRL linkbases.
All US-GAAP-CI Taxonomy element
names roll up to a component that represents one of the concepts outlined in
the FASB FAS 6: Position (asset, liability, equity), performance (income,
expense, profit or loss), or cash flow (change in asset, liability, equity).
There are exceptions to this general
rule. One such example is when a fact that can be either income or expense
depending on circumstances represented by the instance document where it is
used. In this example, a third ‘state’ – income or expense – exists.
Sample
company instance documents will be made available soon after the initial
release of the
Version Number |
Version Date |
Modified By |
Changes Made |
1.0 |
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Original Version |
2.0 |
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Brad Homer |
Update personnel and hyperlinks to conform to new release of taxonomy. |
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This taxonomy will be updated with revisions for errors and new features within the following guidelines:
· Since financial statements created using a taxonomy must be available indefinitely, the taxonomy must be available indefinitely. All updates will take the form of new versions of the taxonomy with a different date. For example, the taxonomy http://www.xbrl.org/taxonomy/us/fr/gaap/ci/2002-10-15/us-gaap-ci-2002-10-15.xsd will never change. New versions will be issued under a different name, such as http://www.xbrl.org/taxonomy/us/fr/gaap/ci/2003-12-31/us-gaap-ci-2003-12-31.xsd. This will ensure that any taxonomy created will be available indefinitely.
The following information relating to this taxonomy will be accumulated:
If you wish to report an error, require a clarification or suggest a best practice, please provide feedback as indicated in the “Comments and Feedback” section of this document.
Comments and feedback on either accounting concepts or specific to the North America Financial Reporting Taxonomy Framework are welcome, particularly ideas to improve this taxonomy. If you have a comment or feedback or wish to report an error, email comments to:
Jeff Naumann (jnaumann@aicpa.org)
A tremendous effort has gone into creating this piece of intellectual property that is being placed in the public domain by the XBRL US Jurisdiction for use and benefit of all. The XBRL US Jurisdiction and members of the XBRL US Domain Working Group believe that this cooperative effort will benefit all participants in the financial information supply chain.
The XBRL US Domain Working Group would like to acknowledge the contributions
of the following individuals for their work in the creation of this taxonomy,
and to their respective organizations who provided the funds and time for their
participation in and support of this effort:
Name
|
Organization
|
Accounting Jurisdiction
|
Rob Blake |
Microsoft |
|
Amie
Bothwell |
BearingPoint |
|
Glen Buter |
BDO Seidman |
|
Eric Cohen |
PwC |
|
Michael
Eng |
KPMG |
|
George
Farkas |
XBI
Software Inc. |
Canada |
Herm Fisher |
UBmatrix |
|
Gary
Gannon |
UBmatrix |
|
Clicia
Guzzardo |
Morgan
Stanley |
United
States |
|
Standard
Advantage |
United
States |
|
UBmatrix |
|
Louis Matherne |
AICPA |
|
Sal Mileti |
Ernst & Young |
|
Victor Mullings |
Bank of |
|
Jeff Naumann |
AICPA |
|
Paul Penler |
Ernst & Young |
|
Campbell
Pryde |
KPMG |
|
Brad Saegesser |
Moody’s KMV |
|
|
Morgan
Stanley |
|
Brian Staples |
Bank
of America |
|
Tom
Taylor |
CICA |
Canada |
Phil Walenga |
FDIC |
|
Hugh
Wallis |
Hyperion |
United
States |
Liv Watson |
EDGAROnline |
|
|
PwC |
|
A current list of corporate members of XBRL
International can be found at the XBRL International web site (www.xbrl.org).