Summary IFRS For SME

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At a glance
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The key takeaways are that the IFRS for SMEs provides accounting standards tailored for small and medium sized entities that do not have public accountability, outlines definitions of key terms like assets and liabilities, and establishes qualitative characteristics for financial statements.

The objective of SMEs' financial statements is to provide information about the entity's financial position, performance and cash flows, and to show the results of management's stewardship over resources.

The qualitative characteristics of financial statements according to the IFRS for SMEs are understandability, relevance, materiality, reliability, substance over form, prudence, completeness, comparability, timeliness, and balancing benefit and cost.

Section-by-Section Summary of the IFRS for SMEs

Preface

The IFRS for Small and Medium-sized Entities is organised by topic, with each topic presented in a separate section. All of the
paragraphs in the standard have equal authority.
The standard is appropriate for general purpose financial statements and other financial reporting of all profit-oriented entities.
General purpose financial statements are directed towards the common information needs of a wide range of users, for example,
shareholders, creditors, employees and the public at large.
The IASB intends to issue a comprehensively reviewed standard after two year's implementation, to address issues identified and
also, if appropriate, recent changes to full IFRSs. Thereafter, an omnibus proposal of amendments will be issued, if necessary,
once every three years.

Section 1 Small and Medium-sized Entities

Defines SME as used by IASB:


Small and medium-sized entities are entities that:

o
o

(a) do not have public accountability, and


(b) publish general purpose financial statements for external users. Examples of external users include owners who are not
involved in managing the business, existing and potential creditors, and credit rating agencies. General purpose financial
statements are those that present fairly financial position, operating results, and cash flows for external capital providers and
others.

An entity has public accountability if:

(a) its debt or equity instruments are traded in a public market or it is in the process of issuing such instruments for trading in a
public market (a domestic or foreign stock exchange or an over-the-counter market, including local and regional markets), or
o (b) it holds assets in a fiduciary capacity for a broad group of outsiders as one of its primary businesses. This is typically the
case for banks, credit unions, insurance companies, securities brokers/dealers, mutual funds and investment banks. If an entity
holds assets in a fiduciary capacity as an incidental part of its business, that does not make it publicly accountable. Entities that
fall into this category may include public utilities, travel and real estate agents, schools, and charities.
The standard does not contain a limit on the size of an entity that may use the IFRS for SMEs provided that it does not have public
accountability
Nor is there a restriction on its use by a public utility, not-for-profit entity, or public sector entity
A subsidiary whose parent or group uses full IFRSs may use the IFRS for SMEs if the subsidiary itself does not have public
accountability
The standard does not require any special approval by the owners of an SME for it to be eligible to use the IFRS for SME
Listed companies, no matter how small, may not use the IFRS for SMEs
Q&A 2011/01 (published June 2011) states that a parent entity assesses its eligibility to use the IFRS for SMEs in its separate
financial statements on the basis of its own public accountability without considering whether other group entities have, or the
group as a whole has, public accountability.

Section 2 Concepts and Pervasive Principles

Objective of SMEs' financial statements: To provide information about financial position, performance, cash flows
Also shows results of stewardship of management over resources
Qualitative characteristics (understandability, relevance, materiality, reliability, substance over form, prudence, completeness,
comparability, timeliness, balance between benefit and cost)
Definitions:
o Asset: Resource with future economic benefits
o Liability: Present obligation arising from past events, result in outflow of resources
o Income: Inflows of resources that increase equity, other than owner investments
o Expenses: Outflows of resources that decrease equity, other than owner withdrawals
Financial position: the relationship of assets and liabilities at a specific date
Performance: the relationship of income and expenses during a reporting period
Total comprehensive income: arithmetic difference between income and expenses

Profit or loss: arithmetic difference between income and expenses other than those items of income or expense that are classified
as 'other comprehensive income'.
There are only 3 items of other comprehensive income (OCI) in the IFRS for SMEs:
o Some foreign exchange gains and losses relating to a net investment in a foreign operation (see Section 30)
o Some changes in fair values of hedging instruments in a hedge of variable interest rate risk of a recognised financial
instrument, foreign exchange risk or commodity price risk in a firm commitment or highly probable forecast transaction, or a net
investment in a foreign operation (see Section 12) (Note that hedge accounting is optional)
o Some actuarial gains and losses (see Section 28) (Note that reporting actuarial gains and losses in OCI is optional)
Basic recognition concept An item that meets the definition of an asset, liability, income, or expense is recognised in the financial
statements if:
o it is probable that future benefits associated with the item will flow to or from the entity, and
o the item has a cost or value that can be measured reliably
Basic measurement concepts
o Historical cost and fair value are described
o Basic financial assets and liabilities are generally measured at amortised cost
o Other financial assets and liabilities are generally measured at fair value through profit or loss
o Non-financial assets are generally measured using a cost-based measure
o Non-financial liabilities are generally measured at settlement amount
Section 2 includes pervasive recognition and measurement principles
o Source of guidance if a specific issue is not addressed in the IFRS for SMEs (see Section 10)
Concepts of profit or loss and total comprehensive income
Offsetting of assets and liabilities or of income and expenses is prohibited unless expressly required or permitted

Section 3 Financial Statement Presentation

Fair presentation: presumed to result if the IFRS for SMEs is followed (may be a need for supplemental disclosures)
State compliance with IFRS for SMEs only if the financial statements comply in full
Does include 'true and fair override' but this should be 'extremely rare'
IFRS for SMEs presumes the reporting entity is a going concern
SMEs shall present a complete set of financial statements at least annually
At least one year comparative prior period financial statements and note data
Presentation and classification of items should be consistent from one period to the next
o Must justify and disclose any change in presentation or classification of items in financial statements
Materiality: an omission or misstatement is material if it could influence economic
Complete set of financial statements:
o Statement of financial position
o Either a single statement of comprehensive income, or two statements: an income statement and a statement of
comprehensive income
o Statement of changes in equity
o Statement of cash flows
o Notes
If the only changes to equity arise from profit or loss, payment of dividends, corrections of errors, and changes in accounting
policy, an entity may present a single (combined) statement of income and retained earnings instead of the separate statements of
comprehensive income and of changes in equity (see Section 6)
An entity may present only an income statement (no statement of comprehensive income) if it has no items of other
comprehensive income (OCI)
The only OCI items under the IFRS for SMEs are:
o Some foreign exchange gains and losses relating to a net investment in a foreign operation (see Section 30)
o Some changes in fair values of hedging instruments in a hedge of variable interest rate risk of a recognised financial
instrument, foreign exchange risk or commodity price risk in a firm commitment or highly probable forecast transaction, or a net
investment in a foreign operation (see Section 12)
o Some actuarial gains and losses (see Section 28)

Section 4 Statement of Financial Position

May still be called 'balance sheet'


Current/non-current split is not required if the entity concludes that a liquidity approach produces more relevant information
Some minimum line items required. These include:
o Cash and equivalents

o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o

Receivables
Financial assets
Inventories
Property, plant, and equipment
Investment property at fair value
Intangible assets
Biological assets at cost
Biological assets at fair value
Investment in associates
Investment in joint ventures
Payables
Financial liabilities
Current tax assets and liabilities
Deferred tax assets and liabilities
Provisions
Non-controlling interest
Equity of owners of parent
And some required items may be presented in the statement or in the notes
o Categories of property, plant, and equipment
o Info about assets with binding sale agreements
o Categories of receivables
o Categories of inventories
o Categories of payables
o Employee benefit obligations
o Classes of equity, including OCI and reserves
o Details about share capital
Sequencing, format, and titles are not mandated

Section 5 Statement of Comprehensive Income and Income Statement

One-statement or two-statement approach either a single statement of comprehensive income, or two statements: an income
statement and a statement of comprehensive income
Must segregate discontinued operations
Must present 'profit or loss' subtotal if the entity has any items of other comprehensive income
Bottom line ('profit or loss' in the income statement and 'total comprehensive income' in the statement of comprehensive income) is
before allocating those amounts to non-controlling interest and owners of the parent
No item may be labelled 'extraordinary'
o But unusual items can be separately presented
o Expenses may be presented by nature (depreciation, purchases of materials, transport costs, employee benefits, etc) or by
function (cost of sales, distribution costs, administrative costs, etc) either on face of the statement of comprehensive income (or
income statement) or in the notes
Single statement of comprehensive income:

o
o

Revenue
Expenses, showing separately:
finance costs
profit or loss from associates and jointly controlled entities
tax expense
discontinued operations)
o Profit or loss (may omit if no OCI)
o Items of other comprehensive income
o Total comprehensive income (may label Profit or Loss if no OCI)
Separate statements of income and comprehensive income:
Income Statement:

Bottom line is profit or loss (as above)

Statement of Comprehensive Income:

o
o
o

Begins with profit or loss


Shows each item of other comprehensive income
Bottom line is Total Comprehensive Income

Section 6 Statement of Changes in Equity and Statement of Comprehensive Income and Retained Earnings

Shows all changes to equity including


total comprehensive income
owners' investments
dividends
owners' withdrawals of capital
treasury share transactions
Can omit the statement of changes in equity if the entity has no owner investments or withdrawals other than dividends and elects
to present a combined statement of comprehensive income and retained earnings

o
o
o
o
o

Section 7 Statement of Cash Flows

Presents information about an entity's changes in cash and cash equivalents for a period
Cash equivalents are short-term, highly liquid investments (expected to be converted to cash in three months) held to meet
short-term cash needs rather than for investment or other purposes
Cash flows are classified as operating, investing, and financing cash flows
Option to use the indirect method or the direct method to present operating cash flows
Interest paid and interest and dividends received may be operating, investing, or financing
Dividends paid may be operating or investing
Income tax cash flows are operating unless specifically identified with investing or financing activities
Separate disclosure is required of some non-cash investing and financing transactions (for example, acquisition of assets by issue
of debt)
Reconciliation of components of cash

Section 8 Notes to the Financial Statements

Notes are normally in this sequence:


Basis of preparation (ie IFRS for SMEs)
Summary of significant accounting policies, including
Information about judgements
Information about key sources of estimation uncertainty
o Supporting information for items in financial statements
o Other disclosures
Comparative prior period amounts are required by Section 3 (unless another section allows omission of prior period amounts)

o
o

Section 9 Consolidated and Separate Financial Statements

Consolidated financial statements are required when a parent company controls another entity (a subsidiary).
Control: Power to govern financial and operating policies to obtain benefits
More than 50% of voting power: control presumed
Control exists when entity owns less than 50% but has power to govern by agreement or statute, or power to appoint majority of
the board, or power to cast majority of votes at board meetings
Control can be achieved by currently exercisable options that, if exercised, would result in control
A subsidiary is not excluded from consolidation because:
o Investor is a venture capital organisation
o Subsidiary's business activities are dissimilar to those of parent or other subs

Subsidiary operates in a jurisdiction that imposes restrictions on transferring cash or other assets out of the jurisdiction
However, consolidated financial statements are not required, even if a parent-subsidiary relationship exists if:
o Subsidiary was acquired with intent to dispose within one year
o Parent itself is a subsidiary and its parent or ultimate parent uses IFRSs or IFRS for SMEs
Must consolidate all controlled special-purpose entities (SPEs)
Consolidation procedures:
o Eliminate intracompany transactions and balances
o Uniform reporting date unless impracticable
o Uniform accounting policies
o Non-controlling interest is presented as part of equity
o Losses are allocated to a subsidiary even if non-controlling interest goes negative
Guidance on separate financial statements (but they are not required).
o In a parent's separate financial statements, it may account for subsidiaries, associates, and joint ventures that are not held for
sale at cost or fair value through profit and loss.
Guidance on combined financial statements (but they are not required)
If investor loses control but continues to hold some investment:
o If the subsidiary becomes an associate, follow Section 14
o If the subsidiary becomes a jointly controlled entity, follow Section 15
o If investment does not qualify as an associate or jointly controlled entity, treat it as a financial asset under Sections 11 and 12

Section 10 Accounting Policies, Estimates and Errors

If the IFRS for SMEs addresses an issue, the entity must follow the IFRS for SMEs
If the IFRS for SMEs does not address an issue:
o Choose policy that results in the most relevant and reliable information
o Try to analogise from standards in the IFRS for SMEs
o Or use the concepts and pervasive principles in Section 2
o Entity may look to guidance in full IFRSs (but not required)
Change in accounting policy:
o If mandated, follow the transition guidance as mandated
o If voluntary, retrospective
Change in accounting estimate: prospective
Correction of prior period error: restate prior periods if practicable

Section 11 Basic Financial Instruments

IFRS for SMEs has two sections on financial instruments:


Section 11 on Basic Financial Instruments
Section 12 on Other FI Transactions
Option to follow IAS 39 instead of sections 11 and 12
Even if IAS 39 is followed, make Section 11 and 12 disclosures (not IFRS 7 disclosures)
Essentially, Section 11 is an amortised historical cost model
o Except for equity investments with quoted price or readily determinable fair value. These are measured at fair value through
profit or loss.
Scope of Section 11 includes:
o Cash
o Demand and fixed deposits
o Commercial paper and bills
o Accounts and notes receivable and payable
o Debt instruments where returns to the holder are fixed or referenced to an observable rate
o Investments in nonconvertible and non-puttable ordinary and preference shares
o Most commitments to receive a loan
Initial measurement:
o Basic financial assets and financial liabilities are initially measured at the transaction price (including transaction costs except in
the initial measurement of financial assets and liabilities that are measured at fair value through profit or loss) unless the
arrangement constitutes, in effect, a financing transaction. A financing transaction may be indicated in relation to the sale of
goods or services, for example, if payment is deferred beyond normal business terms or is financed at a rate of interest that is
not a market rate. If the arrangement constitutes a financing transaction, measure the financial asset or financial liability at the
present value of the future payments discounted at a market rate of interest for a similar debt instrument.

o
o

Measurement subsequent to initial recognition:


Debt instruments at amortised cost using the effective interest method
Debt instruments that are classified as current assets or current liabilities are measured at the undiscounted amount of the
cash or other consideration expected to be paid or received (ie net of impairment) unless the arrangement constitutes, in effect,
a financing transaction. If the arrangement constitutes a financing transaction, the entity shall measure the debt instrument at
the present value of the future payments discounted at a market rate of interest for a similar debt instrument.
o Investments in non-convertible preference shares and non-puttable ordinary or preference shares:
if the shares are publicly traded or their fair value can otherwise be measured reliably, measure at fair value with changes in
fair value recognised in profit or loss
measure all other such investments at cost less impairment
Must test all amortised cost instruments for impairment or uncollectibility
Previously recognised impairment is reversed if an event occurring after the impairment was first recognised causes the original
impairment loss to decrease
Guidance is provided on determining fair values of financial instruments
o The most reliable is a quoted price in an active market
o When a quoted price is not available the most recent transaction price provides evidence of fair value
o If there is no active market or recent market transactions, a valuation technique may be used
Guidance is provided on the effective interest method
Derecognise a financial asset when:
o the contractual rights to the cash flows from the financial asset expire or are settled;
o the entity transfers to another party all of the significant risks and rewards relating to the financial asset; or
o the entity, despite having retained some significant risks and rewards relating to the financial asset, has transferred the ability
to sell the asset in its entirety to an unrelated third party who is able to exercise that ability unilaterally and without needing to
impose additional restrictions on the transfer.
Derecognise a financial liability when the obligation is discharged, cancelled, or expires
Disclosures:
o Categories of financial instruments
o Details of debt and other instruments
o Details of derecognitions
o Collateral
o Defaults and breaches on loans payable
o Items of income and expense

o
o

Section 12 Additional Financial Instruments Issues

Financial instruments not covered by Section 11 (and, therefore, are within Section 12) are measured at fair value through profit or
loss. This includes:
o Investments in convertible and puttable ordinary and preference shares
o Options, forwards, swaps, and other derivatives
o Financial assets that would otherwise be in Section 11 but that have 'exotic' provisions that could cause gain/loss to the holder
or issuer
Hedge accounting involves matching the gains and losses on a hedging instrument and hedged item.
o It is allowed only for the following kinds of risks:
interest rate risk of a debt instrument measured at amortised cost
foreign exchange or interest rate risk in a firm commitment or a highly probable forecast transaction
price risk of a commodity that it holds or in a firm commitment or highly probable forecast transaction to purchase or sell a
commodity
foreign exchange risk in a net investment in a foreign operation.
o Section 12 defines the type of hedging instrument required for hedge accounting.
o Hedges must be documented up front to qualify for hedge accounting
o Section 12 provides guidance for measuring assessing effectiveness
o Special disclosures are required

Section 13 Inventories

Inventories include assets for sale in the ordinary course of business, being produced for sale, or to be consumed in production
Measured at the lower cost and estimated selling price less costs to complete and sell
Cost is determined using:
o specific identification is required for large items

o
o

option to choose FIFO or weighted average for others


LIFO is not permitted
Inventory cost includes costs to purchase, costs of conversion, and costs to bring the asset to present location and condition
Inventory cost excludes abnormal waste and storage, administrative, and selling costs
If a production process creates joint products and/or by-products, the costs are allocated on a consistent and rational basis
A manufacturer allocates fixed production overheads to inventories based on normal capacity
Standard costing, retail method, and most recent purchase price may be used only if the result approximates actual cost
Impairment write down to net realisable value (selling price less costs to complete and sell see Section 27)

Section 14 Investments in Associates

Associates are investments where significant influence exists. Significant influence is defined as the power to participate in the
financial and operating policy decisions of the associate but where there is neither control nor joint control over those policies.
Presumption that significant influence exists if investor owns 20% or more of the voting shares.
Option to use:
o Cost-impairment model (except if there is a published quotation then must use fair value through profit or loss)
o Equity method (investor recognises its share of profit or loss of the associate detailed guidance is provided)
o Fair value through profit or loss
Investments in associates are always classified as non-current assets

Section 15 Investments in Joint Ventures

For investments in jointly controlled entities, there is an option for the venturer to use:
Cost model (except if there is a published quotation then must use fair value through profit or loss)
Equity method (using the guidance in Section 14)
Fair value through profit or loss
Proportionate consolidation is prohibited
For jointly controlled operations, the venturer should recognise assets that it controls and liabilities it incurs as well as its share of
income earned and expenses that are incurred
For jointly controlled assets, the venturer should recognise its share of the assets and liabilities it incurs as well as income it earns
and expenses that are incurred

o
o
o

Section 16 Investment Property

Investment property is investments in land, buildings (or part of a building), and some property interests in finance leases held to
earn rentals or for capital appreciation or both
Property interests that are held under an operating lease may be classified as an investment property provided the property would
otherwise have met the definition of an investment property
Mixed use property must be separated between investment and operating property
If fair value can be measured reliably without undue cost or effort, use the fair value through profit or loss model
Otherwise, an entity must treat investment property as property, plant and equipment using Section 17

Section 17 Property, Plant and Equipment

Historical cost-depreciation-impairment model only


The revaluation model (as in IAS 16) is not permitted
Section 17 applies to most investment property as well (but if fair value of investment property can be measured reliably without
undue cost or effort then the fair value model in Section 16 applies)
Section 17 applies to property held for sale there is no special section on assets held for sale. Holding for sale is an indicator of
possible impairment.
Measurement is initially at cost, including costs to get the property ready for its intended use Subsequent to acquisition, the entity
uses the cost-depreciation-impairment model, which recognises depreciation and impairment of the carrying amount
The carrying amount of an asset, less estimated residual value, is depreciated over the asset's anticipated useful life. The method
of depreciation shall be the method that best reflects the consumption of the asset's benefits over its life. Separate significant
components should be depreciated separately.
Component depreciation only if major parts of an item of PP&E have 'significantly different patterns of consumption of economic
benefits'

Review useful life, residual value, depreciation rate only if there is a significant change in the asset or how it is used. Any
adjustment is a change in estimate (prospective).
Impairment testing and reversal follow Section 27

Section 18 Intangible Assets other than Goodwill

No recognition of internally generated intangible assets. Therefore:


Charge all research and development costs to expense
Charge the following items to expense when incurred: Costs of internally generated brands, logos, and masthead, start-up
costs, training costs, advertising, and relocating of a division or entity
Amortisation model for intangibles that are purchased separately, acquired in a business combination, acquired by grant, and
acquired by exchange of other assets
Amortise over useful life. If the entity is unable to estimate useful life, then use 10 years. Review useful life, residual value,
depreciation rate only if there is a significant change in the asset or how it is used. Any adjustment is a change in estimate
(prospective)
Impairment testing follow Section 27
Any revaluation of intangible assets is prohibited

o
o

Section 19 Business Combinations and Goodwill

Section does not apply to combinations of entities under common control


Acquisition (purchase) method. Under this method:
o An acquirer must always be identified
o The cost of the business combination is measured. Cost is the fair value of assets given, liabilities incurred or assumed, and
equity instruments issued, plus costs directly attributable to the combination
o At the acquisition date, the cost is allocated to the assets acquired and liabilities and provisions for contingent liabilities
assumed. The identifiable assets acquired and liabilities and provisions for contingent liabilities assumed are measured at their
fair values. Any difference between cost and amounts allocated to identifiable assets and liabilities (including provisions) is
recognised as goodwill or so-called 'negative goodwill'.
All goodwill must be amortised. If the entity is unable to estimate useful life, then use 10 years.
'Negative goodwill' first reassess original accounting. If that is ok, then immediate credit to profit or loss
Impairment testing of goodwill follow Section 27
Reversal of goodwill impairment is not permitted

Section 20 Leases

Scope includes arrangements that contain a lease [IFRIC 4]


Leases are classified as either finance leases or operating leases.
o Finance leases result in substantially all the risks and rewards incidental to ownership being transferred between the parties,
while operating leases do not.
o Substantially all risks and rewards of ownership are presumed transferred if:
the lease transfers ownership of the asset to the lessee by the end of the lease term
the lessee has a 'bargain purchase option'
the lease term is for the major part of the economic life of the asset even if title is not transferred
at the inception of the lease the present value of the minimum lease payments amounts to at least substantially all of the fair
value of the leased asset
the leased assets are of such a specialised nature that only the lessee can use them without major modifications
the lessee bears the lessor losses if cancelled
a secondary rental period at below market rates
the residual value risk is borne by the lessee.
Lessees finance leases:
o The rights and obligations are to be recognised as assets and liabilities at fair value, or, if lower, the present value of the
minimum lease payments. Any direct costs of the lessee are added to the asset amount recognised. Subsequently, payments
are to be spilt between a finance charge and reduction of the liability. The asset should be depreciated either over the useful
life or the lease term.
Lessees operating leases:
o Payments are to be recognised as an expense on the straight line basis, unless payments are structured to increase in line with
expected general inflation or another systematic basis is better representative of the time pattern of the user's benefit.
Lessors finance leases:

The rights are to be recognised as assets held, i.e. as a receivable at an amount equal to the net investment in the lease. The
net investment in a lease is the lessor's gross investment in the lease (including unguaranteed residual value) discounted at the
interest rate implicit in the lease.
o For finance leases other than those involving manufacturer or dealer lessors, initial direct costs are included in the initial
measurement of the finance lease receivable and reduce the amount of income recognised over the lease term.
o If there is an indication that the estimated unguaranteed residual value used in computing the lessor's gross investment in the
lease has changed significantly, the income allocation over the lease term is revised, and any reduction in respect of amounts
accrued is recognised immediately in profit or loss.
Lessors finance leases by a manufacturer or dealer:
o A finance lease of an asset by a manufacturer or dealer lessor gives rise to two types of income:
profit or loss equivalent to the profit or loss resulting from an outright sale of the asset being leased, at normal selling prices,
reflecting any applicable volume or trade discounts; and
finance income over the lease term.
o The sales revenue recognised at the commencement of the lease term by a manufacturer or dealer lessor is the fair value of
the asset or, if lower, the present value of the minimum lease payments accruing to the lessor, computed at a market rate of
interest.
o The cost of sale recognised at the commencement of the lease term is the cost, or carrying amount if different, of the leased
property less the present value of the unguaranteed residual value. The difference between the sales revenue and the cost of
sale is the selling profit, which is recognised in accordance with the entity's policy for outright sales.
o If artificially low rates of interest are quoted, selling profit shall be restricted to that which would apply if a market rate of interest
were charged. Costs incurred by manufacturer or dealer lessors in connection with negotiating and arranging a lease shall be
recognised as an expense when the selling profit is recognised.
Lessors operating leases:
o Lessors retain the assets on their balance sheet and payments are to be recognised as income on the straight line basis,
unless payments are structured to increase in line with expected general inflation or another systematic basis is better
representative of the time pattern of the user's benefit.
Sale and leaseback:
o If a sale and leaseback results in a finance lease, the seller should not recognise any excess as a profit, but recognise the
excess over the lease term
o If a sale and leaseback results in an operating lease, and the transaction was at fair value, the seller shall recognise any profits
immediately.

Section 21 Provisions and Contingencies

Provisions:
Provisions are recognised only when (a) there is a present obligation as a result of a past event, (b) it is probable that the entity
will be required to transfer economic benefits, and (c) the amount can be estimated reliably
o The obligation may arise due to contract or law or when there is a constructive obligation due to valid expectations having been
created from past events. However, these do not include any future actions that may create an expectation. Nor can expected
future losses be recognised as provisions.
o Initially recognised at the best possible estimate at the reporting date. This value should take into any time value of money if
this is considered material. When all or part of a provision may be reimbursed by a third party, the reimbursement is to be
recognised separately only when it is virtually certain payment will be received.
o Subsequently, provisions are to be reviewed at each reporting date and adjusted to meet the best current estimate. Any
adjustments are recognised in profit and loss while any unwinding of discounts is to be treated as a finance cost.
Must accrue provisions for (examples):
o Onerous contracts
o Warranties
o Restructuring if legal or constructive obligation to restructure
o Sales refunds
May NOT accrue provisions for (example):
o Future operating losses, no matter how probable
o Possible future restructuring (plan but not yet a legal or constructive obligation)
Contingent liabilities:
o These are not recognised as liabilities
o Unless remote, disclose an estimate of the financial effect, indications of the uncertainties relating to timing or amount, and the
possibility of reimbursement
Contingent assets:
o These are not recognised as assets.

Disclose a description of the nature and the financial effect.

Section 22 Liabilities and Equity

Guidance on classifying an instrument as liability or equity


An instrument is a liability if the issuer could be required to pay cash
Puttable financial instruments are only recognised as equity if it has all of the following features:
o The holder is entitled to a pro rata share of the entity's net assets in the event of liquidation.
o The instrument is the most subordinate class.
o All financial instruments in the most subordinate class have identical features.
o Apart from the puttable features the instrument includes no other financial instrument features.
o The total expected cash flows attributable to the instrument over the life of the instrument are based substantially on the
change in the value of the entity.
Members' shares in co-operative entities and similar instruments are only classified as equity if the entity has an unconditional right
to refuse redemption of the members' shares or the redemption is unconditionally prohibited by local law, regulation or the entity's
governing charter. If the entity could not refuse redemption, the members' shares are classified as liabilities.
Covers some material not covered by full IFRSs, including:
o original issuance of shares and other equity instruments. Shares are only recognised as equity when another party is obliged to
provide cash or other resources in exchange for the instruments. The instruments are measured at the fair value of cash or
resources received, net of direct costs of issuing the equity instruments, unless the time value of money is significant in which
case initial measurement is at the present value amount. When shares are issued before the cash or other resources are
received, the amount receivable is presented as an offset to equity in the statement of financial position and not as an asset.
Any shares subscribed for which no cash is received are not recognised as equity before the shares are issued.
o sales of options, rights and warrants
o stock dividends and stock splits these do not result in changes to total equity but, rather, reclassification of amounts within
equity.
'Split accounting' is required to account for issuance of convertible instruments
o Proceeds on issue of convertible and other compound financial instruments are split between liability component and equity
component. The liability is measured at its fair value, and the residual amount is the equity component. The liability is
subsequently measured using the effective interest rate, with the original issue discount amortised as added interest expense.
o A comprehensive example of split accounting is included
Treasury shares (an entity's own shares that are reacquired) are measured at the fair value of the consideration paid and are
deducted from the equity. No gain or loss is recognised on subsequent resale of treasury shares.
Minority interest changes that do not affect control do not result in a gain or loss being recognised in profit and loss. They are
equity transactions between the entity and its owners.
Dividends paid in the form of distribution of assets other than cash are recognised when the entity has an obligation to distribute
the non-cash assets. The dividend liability is measured at the fair value of the assets to be distributed.

Section 23 Revenue

Revenue results from the sale of goods, services being rendered, construction contracts income by the contractor and the use by
others of your assets
Some types of revenue are excluded from this section and dealt with elsewhere:
o leases (section 20)
o dividends from equity accounted entities (section 14 and 15)
o changes in fair value of financial instruments (section 11 and 12)
o initial recognition and subsequent re-measurement of biological assets (section 34) and initial recognition of agricultural
produce (section 34)
Principle for measurement of revenue is the fair value of the consideration received or receivable, taking into account any possible
trade discounts or rebates, including volume rebates and prompt settlement discounts
If payment is deferred beyond normal payment terms, there is a financing component to the transaction. In that case, revenue is
measured at the present value of all future receipts. The difference is recognised as interest revenue.
Recognition - sale of goods: An entity shall recognise revenue from the sale of goods when all the following conditions are
satisfied:
o (a) the entity has transferred to the buyer the significant risks and rewards of ownership of the goods.
o (b) the entity retains neither continuing managerial involvement to the degree usually associated with ownership nor effective
control over the goods sold.
o (c) the amount of revenue can be measured reliably.
o (d) it is probable that the economic benefits associated with the transaction will flow to the entity.

(e) the costs incurred or to be incurred in respect of the transaction can be measured reliably.
Recognition - sale of services: Use the percentage of completion method if the outcome of the transaction can be estimated
reliably. Otherwise use the cost-recovery method.
Recognition - construction contracts: Use the percentage of completion method if the outcome of the contract can be estimated
reliably. Otherwise use the cost-recovery method.
Recognition - interest: Interest shall be recognised using the effective interest method as described in Section 11
Recognition - royalties: Royalties shall be recognised on an accrual basis in accordance with the substance of the relevant
agreement.
Recognition - dividends: Dividends shall be recognised when the shareholder's right to receive payment is established.
Appendix of examples of revenue recognition under the principles in Section 23
o Award credits or other customer loyalty plan awards need to be accounted for separately. The fair value of such awards
reduces the amount of revenue initially recognised and, instead, is recognised when awards are redeemed.

Section 24 Government Grants

This section does not apply to any 'grants' in the form of income tax benefits
All grants are measured at the fair value of the asset received or receivable
Recognition as income:
o Grants without future performance conditions are recognised in profit or loss when proceeds are receivable
o If there are performance conditions, the grant is recognised in profit or loss only when the conditions are met

Section 25 Borrowing Costs

Borrowing costs are interest and other costs arising on an entity's financial liabilities and finance lease obligations
All borrowing costs are charged to expense when incurred none are capitalised

Section 26 Share-based Payment

Basic principle: all share-based payment must be recognised


Equity-settled:
o Transactions with other than employees are recorded at the fair value of the goods and services received, if these can be
estimated reliably
o Transactions with employees or where the fair value of goods and services received cannot be reliably measured are
measured with reference to the fair value of the equity instruments granted
Cash-settled:
o Liability is measured at fair value on grant date and at each reporting date and settlement date, with each adjustment through
profit or loss.
o For employees where shares only vest after a specific period of service has been completed, recognise the expense as the
service is rendered.
Share-based payment with cash alternatives:
o Account for all such transactions as cash settled, unless the entity has a past practice of settling by issuing equity instruments
or the option has no commercial substance because the cash settlement amount bears no relationship to, and is likely to be
lower in value than, the fair value of the equity instrument.
Fair value of equity instruments granted:
o (a) Observable market price if available
o (b) If no observable price, use entity-specific market data such as a recent share transaction or valuation of the entity
o (c) If (a) and (b) are impracticable, directors must use their judgement to estimate fair value
Certain government-mandated plans provide for equity investors (such as employees) to acquire equity without providing goods or
services that can be specifically identified (or by providing goods or services that are clearly less than the fair value of the equity
instruments granted). These are equity-settled share-based payment transactions within the scope of this section.

Section 27 Impairment of Assets

Inventories write down, in profit or loss, to lower of cost and selling price less costs to complete and sell, if below carrying
amount. When the circumstances that led to the impairment no longer exist, the impairment is reversed through profit or loss.
Other assets write down, in profit or loss, to recoverable amount, if below carrying amount. When the circumstances that led to
the impairment no longer exist, the impairment is reversed through profit or loss.
Recoverable amount is the greater of fair value less costs to sell and value in use

If recoverable amount of an individual asset cannot be determined, measure recoverable amount of that asset's cash generating
unit
If an impairment indicator exists, the entity should review the useful life and the depreciation methods even though an impairment
may not be recognised
Simplified guidance on computing impairment of goodwill when goodwill cannot be allocated to cash generating units

Section 28 Employee Benefits

Short-term benefits:
Measured at an undiscounted rate and recognised as the services are rendered.
Other costs such as annual leave are recognised as a liability as services are rendered and expensed when the leave is taken
or used.
o Bonus payments are only recognised when an obligation exists and the amount can be reliably estimated.
Post-Employment Benefits Defined Contribution Plans:
o Contributions are recognised as a liability or an expense when the contributions are made or due.
Post-Employment Benefits Defined benefit plans
o Recognise a liability based on the net of present value of defined benefit obligations less the fair value of any plan assets at
balance sheet date.
o The projected unit credit method is only used when it could be applied without undue cost or effort.
o Otherwise, en entity can simplify its calculation:
Ignore estimated future salary increases
Ignore future service of current employees (assume closure of plan)
Ignore possible future in-service mortality
o Plan introductions, changes, curtailments, settlements: Immediate recognition (no deferrals)
o For group plans, consolidated amount may be allocated to parent and subsidiaries on a reasonable basis
o Actuarial gains and losses may be recognised in profit or loss or as an item of other comprehensive income but...
No deferral of actuarial gains or losses, including no corridor approach
All past service cost is recognised immediately in profit or loss
Other Long-Term benefits:
o The entity shall recognise a liability at the present value of the benefit obligation less any fair value of plan assets.
Termination benefits:
o These are recognised in profit and loss immediately as there are no future economic benefits to the entity.

o
o

Section 29 Income Tax

Requires a temporary difference approach, similar to IAS 12


Current tax:
o Recognise a current tax liability if the current tax payable exceeds the current tax paid at that point in time. Recognise a current
tax asset when current tax paid exceeds current tax payable or the entity has carried a loss forward from the prior year and this
can be used to recover current tax in the current year.
o Current tax assets and liabilities for current and prior periods are measured at the actual amount that is owed or the entity owes
using the applicable tax rates enacted or substantively enacted at the reporting date. The measurement must include the effect
of the possible outcomes of a review by the tax authorities.
Deferred tax:
o If an asset or liability is expected to affect taxable profit if it recovered or settled for its carrying amount, then a deferred tax
asset or liability is recognised
o If the entity expects to recover an asset through sale, and capital gains tax is zero, then no deferred tax is recognised, because
recovery is not expected to affect taxable profit
o Temporary difference arises if the tax basis of such assets or liabilities is different from carrying amount
o Tax basis assumes recovery by sale. Exception: No deferred tax on unremitted earnings of foreign subsidiaries and jointly
controlled entities
o Recognise deferred tax assets in full, with a valuation allowance
o Criterion is that realisation is probable (more likely than not)
o Take uncertainty into account in measuring all current and deferred taxes assume tax authorities will examine reported
amounts and have full knowledge of all relevant information
o Deferred taxes are all presented as non-current
Recognition of changes in current or deferred tax must be allocated to the related components of profit or loss, other
comprehensive income and equity.

Section 30 Foreign Currency Translation

Functional currency approach similar to that in IAS 21


An entity's functional currency, is the currency of the primary economic environment in which it operates
It is a matter of fact, not an accounting policy choice
o A change in functional currency is applied prospectively from the date of the change
To record a foreign currency transaction in an entity's functional currency:
o On initial recognition, record the transaction by applying the spot rate at the date of the transaction. An average rate may be
used, unless there are significant fluctuations in the rate.
o At reporting date, translate foreign currency monetary items using the closing rate. For non-monetary items measured at
historical cost, use the exchange at the date of the transaction. For non-monetary items measured at fair value, use the
exchange at the date when the fair value was determined.
o For monetary and non-monetary item translations, gains or losses are recognised where they were initially recognised either
in profit or loss, comprehensive income, or equity
Exchange differences arising from a monetary item that forms part of the net investment in a foreign operation are recognised in
equity and are not 'recycled' through profit or loss on disposal of the investment
Goodwill arising on acquisition of a foreign operation is deemed to be an asset of the subsidiary, and translated at the closing rate
at year end
An entity may present its financial statements in a currency different from its functional currency (a 'presentation currency'). If the
entity's functional currency is not hyperinflationary, translation of assets, liabilities, income, and expense from functional currency
into presentation currency is done as follows:
o Assets and liabilities for each statement of financial position presented are translated at the closing rate at the date of that
statement of financial position
o Income and expenses are translated at exchange rates at the dates of the transactions
o All resulting exchange differences are recognised in other comprehensive income.

Section 31 Hyperinflation

An entity must prepare general price-level adjusted financial statements when its functional currency is hyperinflationary
IFRS for SMEs provides indicators of hyperinflation but not an absolute rate. One indicator is where cumulative inflation
approaches or exceeds 100% over a 3 year period.
In price-level adjusted financial statements, all amounts are stated in terms of the (hyperinflationary) presentation currency at the
end of the reporting period. Comparative information and any information presented in respect of earlier periods must also be
restated in the presentation currency.
All assets and liabilities not recorded at the presentation currency at the end of the reporting period must be restated by applying
the general price index (generally an index published by the government).
All amounts in the statement of comprehensive income and statement of cash flows must also be recorded at the presentation
currency at the end of the reporting period. These amounts are restated by applying the general price index from the dates when
they were recorded.
The gain or loss on translating the net monetary position is included in profit or loss. However, that gain or loss is adjusted for
those assets and liabilities linked by agreement to changes in prices.

Section 32 Events after the End of the Reporting Period

Adjust financial statements to reflect adjusting events events after the balance sheet date that provide further evidence of
conditions that existed at the end of the reporting period.
Do not adjust for non-adjusting events events or conditions that arose after the end of the reporting period. For these, the entity
must disclose the nature of event and an estimate of its financial effect.
If an entity declares dividends after the reporting period, the entity shall not recognise those dividends as a liability at the end of the
reporting period. That is a non-adjusting event.

Section 33 Related Party Disclosures

Disclose parent-subsidiary relationships, including the name of the parent and (if any) the ultimate controlling party.
Disclose key management personnel compensation in total for all key management. Compensation includes salaries, short-term
benefits, post-employment benefits, other long-term benefits, termination benefits and share-based payments. Key management
personnel are persons responsible for planning, directing and controlling the activities of an entity, and include executive and nonexecutive directors.

Disclose the following for transactions between related parties:


Nature of the relationship
Information about the transactions and outstanding balances necessary to understand the potential impact on the financial
statements
o Amount of the transaction
o Provisions for uncollectible receivables
o Any expense recognised during the period in respect of an amount owed by a related party
Government departments and agencies are not related parties simply by virtue of their normal dealings with an entity

o
o

Section 34 Specialised Activities


Agriculture:

If the fair value of a class of biological asset is readily determinable without undue cost or effort, use the fair value through profit or
loss model.
If the fair value is not readily determinable, or is determinable only with undue cost or effort, measure the biological assets at cost
less and accumulated depreciation and impairment.
At harvest, agricultural produce is be measured at fair value less estimated costs to sell. Thereafter it is accounted for an inventory.

Extractive industries:

Not required to charge exploration costs to expense, but must test for impairment
Expenditure on tangible or intangible assets used in extractive activities is accounted for under Section 17Property, Plant and
Equipment and Section 18 Intangible Assets other than Goodwill
An obligation to dismantle or remove items or restore sites is accounted for using Section 17 and Section 21 Provisions and
Contingencies.

Service concession arrangements:

Guidance is provided on how the operator accounts for a service concession arrangement. The operator either recognises a
financial asset or an intangible asset depending on whether the grantor (government) has provided an unconditional guarantee of
payment or not.
A financial asset is recognised to the extent that the operator has an unconditional contractual right to receive cash or another
financial asset from or at the direction of the grantor for the construction services.
An intangible asset is recognised to the extent that the operator receives a right or license to charge users for the public service.

Section 35 Transition to the IFRS for SMEs

First-time adoption is the first set of financial statements in which the entity makes an explicit and unreserved statement of
compliance with the IFRS for SMEs: '...in conformity with the International Financial Reporting Standard for Small and Mediumsized Entities'.
Can be switching from:
o National GAAP
o Full IFRSs
o Or never published General Purpose Financial Statements in the past
Date of transition is beginning of earliest period presented
Select accounting policies based on IFRS for SMEs at end of reporting period of first-time adoption
o Many accounting policy decisions depend on circumstances not 'free choice'
o But some are pure 'free choice'
Prepare current year and one prior year's financial statements using the IFRS for SMEs
But there are many exceptions from restating specific items
o Some exceptions are optional
o Some exceptions are mandatory
And a general exemption for impracticability
All of the special exemptions in IFRS 1 are included in the IFRS for SMEs

July 2009: Deloitte IFRS Survey 2009 for SMEs

A Deloitte (United States) survey, published in July 2009, has found that more than half (51%) of small and mid-size private company
respondents (revenues less than US$1 billion) support separate accounting standards for private and public companies. Deloitte
surveyed finance professionals from 225 private companies in June 2009 to gather data and information about the challenges of current
US GAAP and the level of interest in the IFRS for SMEs. Financial professionals of private companies from various industries and sizes
responded. Two-thirds of the companies had 20 or fewer employees, and 42% had sales less than US$100 million. Highlights of the
survey report include:

51% of SME respondents believe that there should be separate accounting standards for public and private companies.
43% of SME respondents are not aware of the IASB's standard IFRS for SMEs, indicating the need for more education.
SME respondents view fair value measurement (42%), accounting for income taxes (23%), and consolidations (10%) as the top
areas of US GAAP in need of simplification.
10% of SME respondents either currently use IFRSs or would consider adopting the IFRS for SMEs in the near term, while 63%
would adopt when required.

Click to Download the Deloitte Survey Report (PDF 156k).

September 2009: Financial Executive Magazine IFRS for SMEs 'goes live'
We have posted an article by Paul Pacter, the IASB's Director of Standards for SMEs (who is also webmaster of IAS Plus) about the
new IFRS for SMEs. The article, titled IFRS for Most Private Companies Goes Live (PDF 726k), was published in Financial
Executive magazine September 2009 issue. The article discusses why the IASB took the project on, benefits of the new standard, the
kinds of simplifications of full IFRSs that are reflected in the SME standard, and issues in transitioning from an SME's existing GAAP to
the IFRS for SMEs.
"With the issuance of IFRS for SMEs, IASB has eased the complexity of financial statements for thousands of companies
worldwide as well as for those who use those financial statements to make credit, lending and investment decisions."
The article is copyright by Financial Executives International, and we have posted it on IAS Plus with their kind permission.

March 2010: Nominations invited for new SME Implementation Group


The Trustees of the IASC Foundation have invited nominations for membership of the new SME Implementation Group (SMEIG). The
Terms of Reference and Operating Procedures of the SMEIG have also been released (available on the IASB's
website www.ifrs.org/IFRS+for+SMEs/SME+Implementation+Group. The mission of the SMEIG is to support the international adoption
of the IFRS for SMEs and to monitor its implementation. The SMEIG will have two principal responsibilities:
a.
b.

to develop non-mandatory guidance for implementing the IFRS for SMEs in the form of questions and answers (Q&As) that
will be made publicly available to interested parties on a timely basis, and
to make recommendations to the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) if and when needed regarding the need to
amend the IFRS for SMEs.

The SMEIG will be chaired by Paul Pacter, the IASBs Director of Standards for SMEs. All members of the SMEIG will serve on a
voluntary basis. The SMEIG may also include appointed observers who have the right to participate in SMEIG deliberations, but not to
vote. Nominations and applications are invited by 30 April 2010. Click for Press Release (PDF 78k).

June 2010: Webcasts on IFRS for SMEs available on-line


The World Bank has made available for viewing on their website a two-part webcast presentation by Paul Pacter An Overview of the
IFRS for SMEs. Each part is approximately one hour long. The presentation reviews the requirements in each of the 35 sections of the
IFRS for SMEs and highlights differences with full IFRSs. To view the webcast presentations:

Part 1: Overview of IFRS for SMEs


Part 2: Overview of IFRS for SMEs

These presentations together are one of the 20 training modules used in the IASB's train-the-trainers workshops for the IFRS for SMEs.
For more information about the workshops or to download all of the presentations Click Here.

August 2010: IFRS Foundation appoints members of the SME Implementation Group
The IFRS Foundation has announced the membership of the newly created SME Implementation Group. The mission of the Group is to
support the international adoption of the IFRS for Small and Medium-sized Entities (IFRS for SMEs) and to monitor its implementation.
The Group has two main responsibilities:

to develop non-mandatory guidance for implementing the IFRS for SMEs in the form of questions and answers that will be made
publicly available on a timely basis; and
to make recommendations to the IASB if and when needed regarding amendments to the IFRS for SMEs.

Although members of the group do not act as country representatives, the Trustees of the IFRS Foundation have sought to ensure a
balanced geographical distribution in selecting its members. The members of the Group will serve a renewable term of two years from
July 2010; the chairman is the IASB member Paul Pacter.
Click for:

IFRS Foundation press release (PDF 42k)


Full list of members of the group on the IASB's website

February 2011: SME Implementation Group publishes draft guidance for public comment
The SME Implementation Group published for public comment a question and answer document (Q&A) on draft guidance related to the
implementation of the International Financial Reporting Standard for Small and Medium-sized Entities (IFRS for SMEs). This Q&A
addresses whether a parent entity that itself does not have public accountability may present its separate financial statements in
accordance with the IFRS for SMEs if it is part of a group that is required (or elects) to present consolidated financial statements in
accordance with full IFRSs.
Comments are due 4 April 2011. Click for:

IASB press release (link to IASB website)


Draft Q&A 2011/01 Use of the IFRS for SMEs in parents separate financial statements (link to IASB website)

April 2011: SME Implementation Group publishes three draft guidance for public comment
The SME Implementation Group has published for public comment three questions and answer documents (Q&A) on draft guidance
related to the implementation of the International Financial Reporting Standard for Small and Medium-sized Entities (IFRS for SMEs).
The three Q&As cover:

Captive insurance subsidiaries


Interpretation of traded in a public market
Investment funds with only a few participants

Comments are due 15 June 2011. Click for:

IASB press release (link to IASB website)


Draft Q&A 2011/02 Captive insurance subsidiaries (link to IASB website)
Draft Q&A 2011/03 Interpretation of 'traded in a public market' (link to IASB website)
Draft Q&A 2011/04 Investment funds with only a few participants (link to IASB website)

June 2011: SME Implementation Group publishes its first Q&A guidance
The SME Implementation Group (SMEIG) has published its first final question and answer (Q&A) guidance on the IFRS for SMEs.
Q&As are non-mandatory guidance.
Q&A 2011/01 Use of the IFRS for SMEs in a Parent's Separate Financial Statements addresses whether a parent entity that itself does

not have public accountability may present its separate financial statements in accordance with the IFRS for SMEs if it is part of a group
that is required (or elects) to present consolidated financial statements in accordance with full IFRSs.
SMEIG concludes that an entity is eligible to use the IFRS for SMEs if it does not have public accountability. A parent entity assesses
its eligibility to use the IFRS for SMEs in its separate financial statements on the basis of its own public accountability without
considering whether other group entities have, or the group as a whole has, public accountability.
SMEIG has two principal responsibilities:
a.
b.

to develop non-mandatory guidance for implementing the IFRS for SMEs in the form of questions and answers (Q&As) that
will be made publicly available to interested parties on a timely basis, and
to make recommendations to the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) if and when needed regarding the need to
amend the IFRS for SMEs.

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