What is the difference between Local and Group Reporting?
Local Reporting refers to financial reporting based on local accounting standards, whereas Group Reporting involves consolidating financial data from multiple entities based on group accounting standards.
Parallel Accounting encompasses both local and group reporting, allowing for the simultaneous management of multiple reporting standards.
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Local vs Group Reporting — Final Clarity
Local Reporting (Statutory)
Financial statements prepared as per country law where the company operates.
Example:
Indian entity → Indian GAAP / Companies Act
Required for:
Tax filing
Statutory audit
Government compliance
Audience:
π Government, tax authorities, local auditors
Ledger:
π Usually Leading Ledger (0L)
Group Reporting (Consolidation)
Financial statements prepared for parent company / global group.
Parent company wants:
Same accounting rules across all subsidiaries
Same reporting format
Consolidated financial statements
Example:
Indian subsidiary reporting to US HQ using US GAAP or IFRS.
Audience:
π Parent company, investors, global management
Ledger:
π Non-leading ledgers
Why Parallel Accounting Is Needed
One company → two reporting requirements.
| Requirement | Standard |
|---|---|
| India law | Indian GAAP |
| Parent company | US GAAP / IFRS |
SAP solves this by allowing multiple ledgers in same company code.
That’s the real purpose of parallel accounting.
Interview Answer (Best Version)
Local reporting is prepared according to country-specific statutory requirements, while group reporting is prepared for consolidation based on the parent company’s accounting standards. SAP supports both through parallel ledgers.
Memorize this. It’s perfect.
We’re now deep into the General Ledger / Parallel Accounting block.
Next logical interview question:
π Why is the Leading Ledger integrated with Controlling (CO)?
Want to tackle it?
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