Financial statements include statements of financial position, comprehensive income, and cash flow that, presumably provide complementary information about the entity to provide investors with more information than any one of these statements provide on its own. Although changes in asset and liability measurements determine income and expense measurements, the Framework does not explain how, conceptually, the statements of financial position and comprehensive income complement each other and,thus . how they are designed to provide information to financial statement users. Mechanically, the statement of comprehensive income is a disaggregation of the change in retained earnings and accumulated other comprehensive income from one period to the next, other than transactions with equity holders in their capacity as equity holders. The statement of cash flow is a disaggregation of the change in cash. Yet, there are no concepts in the Framework that explain why disaggregation of changes in retained earnings and accumulated other comprehensive income and changes in cash are worthy of separate statements, and why disaggregation of changes in other assets, liabilities, and equity are not. Thus, it is unclear, conceptually, what information users of financial statements learn from each statement incremental to the others, and whether and how what they learn differs depending on the measurement base(s) used for assets and liabilities.