Cordery, Carolyn JoyBaskerville-Morley, Rachel F2007-11-212022-07-052007-11-212022-07-0520052005https://ir.wgtn.ac.nz/handle/123456789/18618Charities are becoming more highly regulated worldwide and yet they are subject to diverse, country-specific, financial reporting standards. New Zealand is a jurisdiction that has treated all sectors alike in its approach to the financial regulation of charities, whilst the United Kingdom has, for some time, separated the regulation of charities from other entities. This paper provides a comparison of the histories of the evolution of regulation for charity reporting in the United Kingdom and New Zealand. The current process of international harmonization in both jurisdictions is premised on the principle that accounting conceptual frameworks should not be jurisdiction-specific, but charities have proved to be an exception. We suggest in this study that this exception is attributed to different drivers resulting in regulatory distinctions in two otherwise similar jurisdictions. Without persisting in the maintenance of sector neutrality, the inevitable divergence increases the load on preparers, attesters, and users and may lead to lower levels of accountability and transparency.pdfen-NZAccounting regulationsNon-profit organisationsRegulation variationNon profit organisationsCharity Financial Reporting Regulation: a Comparison of the United Kingdom and Her Former Colony, New ZealandText