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18 - Share-based payment

from Part II - Some specifics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 November 2009

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Summary

Introduction

This chapter considers the accounting treatment required when a company issues share options or share awards as part of an employee's remuneration package or as consideration for any other goods or services received. It also considers the accounting required when a company issues any other form of consideration, for goods or services, which is calculated by reference to the company's share price, for example, phantom share options issued as part of an employee's remuneration package.

Issuing share options and granting other long-term incentive plans as part of an employee's remuneration package, in particular for executive directors, has long been a common practice in the UK. During the ‘dotcom’ boom, the practice was extended and it became common, for dotcom companies at least, to issue share options and shares, rather than cash, to non-employees as consideration for goods or services. In terms of employee remuneration, it is also now a widely accepted practice to make payments, as part of a long-term incentive scheme, that are in the form of cash, but which are calculated by reference to the growth in the company's share price.

Controversy, however, has surrounded the appropriate accounting treatment. Many have argued that, for share options and other share awards, there is no cost to the company itself; the ‘cost’ is to the shareholders who suffer a dilution in their share of the company. Consequently, the proponents of this view argue that the appropriate place to reflect these transactions is in the calculation of earnings per share and that there should be no charge in arriving at profit/loss.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009

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