Ifrs For SMEs
Ifrs For SMEs
Ifrs For SMEs
(“the Framework”)
Table of Contents
Section 1 - Scope of the Framework ............................................................................................................. 2
Section 2 - Concepts and Pervasive Principles ............................................................................................ 3
Section 3 - Financial Statement Presentation ............................................................................................... 6
Section 4 - Subsidiaries .............................................................................................................................. 14
Section 5 - Accounting Policies, Estimates and Errors ............................................................................... 17
Section 6 - Basic Financial Instruments ...................................................................................................... 20
Section 7 - Other Financial Instruments ...................................................................................................... 26
Section 8 - Inventories ................................................................................................................................ 31
Section 9 - Investments in Associates ........................................................................................................ 34
Section 10 - Joint Arrangements ................................................................................................................. 37
Section 11 - Investment Property ................................................................................................................ 40
Section 12 - Property, Plant and Equipment ............................................................................................... 42
Section 13 - Intangible Assets Other than Goodwill ................................................................................... 46
Section 14 - Business Combinations and Goodwill .................................................................................... 50
Section 15 - Leases .................................................................................................................................... 54
Section 16 - Provisions and Contingencies ................................................................................................ 55
Section 17 - Equity ...................................................................................................................................... 58
Section 18 - Revenue .................................................................................................................................. 60
Section 19 - Borrowing Costs...................................................................................................................... 64
Section 20 - Share-based payment ............................................................................................................ 65
Section 21 - Impairment of Assets .............................................................................................................. 68
Section 22 - Employee Benefits .................................................................................................................. 72
Section 23 - Income Tax ............................................................................................................................. 75
Section 24 - Foreign Currency Translation ................................................................................................. 80
Section 25 - Events after the End of the Reporting Period ......................................................................... 81
Section 26 - Related Party Disclosures ...................................................................................................... 83
Section 27 - Biological Assets ..................................................................................................................... 86
Section 28 - Government Grants ................................................................................................................ 88
Section 29 - Transition to the Framework ................................................................................................... 89
Appendix: Glossary of Terms ...................................................................................................................... 92
Section 1 - Scope of the Framework
1 This Framework is intended for use by small entities as defined by the Philippine Securities and
Exchange Commission.
2 Entities who have operations or investments that are based or conducted in a different country
shall not apply this Framework and should instead apply the full Philippine Financial Reporting
Standards (PFRSs) or Philippine Financial Reporting Standard for Small and Medium-sized
Entities (PFRS for SMEs), as appropriate.
Financial position
4 The financial position of an entity is the relationship of its assets, liabilities and equity as of a
specific date. These are defined as follows:
a) an asset is a resource controlled by the entity as a result of past events and from which future
economic benefits are expected to flow to the entity;
b) a liability is a present obligation of the entity arising from past events, the settlement of which
is expected to result in an outflow from the entity of resources embodying economic benefits;
and
c) equity is the residual interest in the assets of the entity after deducting all its liabilities.
Performance
5 Performance is the relationship of the income and expenses of an entity during a reporting period.
Income and expenses are defined as follows:
a) income is increases in economic benefits during the reporting period in the form of inflows or
enhancements of assets or decreases of liabilities that result in increases in equity, other
than those relating to contributions from equity investors; and
b) expenses are decreases in economic benefits during the reporting period in the form of
outflows or depletions of assets or incurrences of liabilities that result in decreases in equity,
other than those relating to distributions to equity investors.
Cash flows
6 Cash flow information shows how an entity generates and uses cash and cash equivalents.
Entities need cash to conduct their operations, to pay their obligations, to make investments in
income-producing assets, and to provide returns to their investors. Information about the
performance of an entity shows the income, expenses, and profit or loss of the entity on an
accrual basis. However the actual inflows and outflows of cash from an entity’s operations
generally differ - often significantly - from its income and expenses on an accrual basis.
Moreover, reporting performance on an accrual basis gives no insight into the cash used by an
entity in its investing activities or the cash generated by the entity through its financing activities.
7 Cash flows are classified as cash flows from operating, investing and financing activities.
Classification by activity provides information on how those activities affect the financial position
of the entity (including its liquidity and solvency) and the amount of its cash and cash equivalents.
8 An item shall be recognized (i.e., incorporated in the financial statements) if it meets the definition
of an asset, liability, income or expense and satisfies the following criteria:
a) it is probable (i.e., more likely than not) that any future economic benefit associated with the
item will flow to or from the entity; and
b) the item has a cost or value that can be measured reliably.
Accrual basis
10 An entity shall prepare its financial statements, except for cash flow information, using the accrual
basis of accounting. On the accrual basis, items are recognized as assets, liabilities, equity,
income or expenses when they satisfy the definitions and recognition criteria for those items.
11 Measurement requirements are generally set out in the individual sections of this Framework.
However the following guidance on fair value measurement is relevant to several sections and so
has been included here.
12 Most of the requirements under this Framework require a cost-based measurement. However, in
a few circumstances, fair value measurement is required or permitted under this Framework. The
fair value of an asset is the amount for which the asset could be exchanged between
knowledgeable, willing parties in an arm’s length transaction. An entity shall use the following
hierarchy to estimate the fair value of an asset:
a) the best evidence of fair value is a price in a binding sale agreement in an arm’s length
transaction or a quoted price for an identical asset in an active market (the latter is usually the
current bid price).
b) if there is no binding sale agreement or active market for an asset, the price of a recent
transaction for an identical asset provides evidence of fair value as long as there has not
been a significant change in economic circumstances or a significant lapse of time since the
transaction took place. If the entity can demonstrate that the last transaction price is not a
good estimate of fair value (for example, because it reflects the amount that an entity would
receive or pay in a forced transaction, involuntary liquidation or distress sale), that price is
adjusted.
c) if there is no binding sale agreement or active market for an asset and recent transactions of
an identical asset on their own are not a good estimate of fair value, an entity estimates the
fair value by using another valuation technique. The objective of using a valuation technique
is to estimate what the transaction price would have been on the measurement date in an
arm’s length exchange motivated by normal business considerations.
13 Valuation techniques include using recent arm’s length market transactions for an identical asset
between knowledgeable, willing parties, reference to the current fair value of another asset that is
substantially the same as the asset being measured, and discounted cash flow analysis. If there
is a valuation technique commonly used by market participants to price the asset and that
technique has been demonstrated to provide reliable estimates of prices obtained in actual
market transactions, the entity uses that technique.
14 The objective of using a valuation technique is to establish what the transaction price would have
been on the measurement date in an arm’s length exchange motivated by normal business
considerations. Fair value is estimated on the basis of the results of a valuation technique that
makes maximum use of market inputs, and relies as little as possible on entity-determined inputs.
A valuation technique would be expected to arrive at a reliable estimate of the fair value if:
a) it reasonably reflects how the market could be expected to price the asset; and
b) the inputs to the valuation technique reasonably represent market expectations and
measures of the risk return factors inherent in the asset.
15 An entity shall not offset assets and liabilities, or income and expenses, unless required or
permitted by this Framework.
a) Measuring assets net of valuation allowances - for example, allowances for inventory
obsolescence and allowances for uncollectible receivables - is not offsetting.
b) If an entity’s normal operating activities do not include buying and selling non-current assets,
including investments and operating assets, then the entity reports gains and losses on
disposal of such assets by deducting from the proceeds on disposal the carrying amount of
the asset and related selling expenses.
16 Financial statements shall present fairly the financial position, financial performance and cash
flows of an entity.
17 An entity that meets the requirements of this Framework and whose financial statements comply
with this Framework, shall make an explicit and unreserved statement of compliance with this
Framework in the notes to the financial statements.
Going concern
18 The principles of financial reporting in this Framework are intended for an entity that is a going
concern. An entity is a going concern unless management either intends to liquidate the entity or
to cease operations, or has no realistic alternative but to do so. In assessing whether the going
concern assumption is appropriate, management takes into account all available information
about the future, which is at least, but is not limited to, twelve months from the reporting date.
Frequency of reporting
19 An entity shall present a complete set of financial statements (including comparative information)
at least annually. When the end of an entity’s reporting period changes and the annual financial
statements are presented for a period longer or shorter than one year, the entity shall disclose the
following:
a) that fact;
b) the reason for using a longer or shorter period; and
c) the fact that comparative amounts presented in the financial statements (including the related
notes) are not entirely comparable.
Consistency of presentation
20 An entity shall retain the presentation and classification of items in the financial statements from
one period to the next unless it is apparent, following a significant change in the nature of the
entity’s operations or a review of its financial statements, that another presentation or
classification would be more appropriate. If the entity changes the presentation or classification of
an item in the financial statements this is a voluntary change in accounting policy (see Section 5 -
Accounting Policies, Estimates and Errors).
Comparative information
21 Except when this Framework permits or requires otherwise, an entity shall disclose comparative
information in respect of the previous comparable period for all amounts presented in the current
period’s financial statements. An entity shall include comparative information for narrative and
descriptive information when it is relevant to an understanding of the current period’s financial
statements.
23 An entity shall present separately each material class of similar items. An entity shall present
separately items of a dissimilar nature or function unless they are immaterial.
24 A complete set of financial statements of an entity shall include all of the following:
a) a statement of financial position (sometimes called the balance sheet), showing the entity’s
assets, liabilities and equity as at the reporting date.
b) a statement of income for the reporting period, displaying all items of income and expense
recognized during the period and a ‘bottom line’ that may be called ‘profit or loss’ or ‘net
income or loss’.
c) a statement of changes in equity for the reporting period. The statement of changes in equity
presents a reconciliation between the carrying amount at the beginning and end of the period
for each component of equity. However, if the only changes to equity in the current period or
any comparative period presented in the financial statements arise from profit or loss,
payment of dividends, corrections of prior period errors, and changes in accounting policy,
the entity may present a single statement of income and retained earnings in place of the
statement of income and statement of changes in equity.
d) a statement of cash flows for the reporting period. The statement of cash flows provides
information about the changes in cash and cash equivalents of an entity for a reporting
period, showing separately, changes from operating activities, investing activities and
financing activities.
e) notes, comprising a summary of significant accounting policies and other explanatory
information. Notes contain information in addition to that presented in the statements in (a)-
(d) above. Notes provide narrative descriptions or disaggregations of items presented in
those statements and information about items that do not qualify for recognition in those
statements.
25 Because paragraph 21 requires comparative amounts in respect of the previous period for all
amounts presented in the financial statements, a complete set of financial statements means that
an entity shall present, as a minimum, two of each of the required financial statements, and the
related notes.
26 In a complete set of financial statements, an entity shall present each financial statement with
equal prominence.
27 An entity may use titles for the financial statements other than those used in this Framework as
long as they are not misleading.
28 An entity shall clearly identify each of the financial statements and the notes and distinguish them
from other information in the same document. In addition, an entity shall display the following
information prominently, and repeat it when necessary for an understanding of the information
presented:
a) the name of the reporting entity and any change in its name since the end of the preceding
reporting period;
b) the fact that the financial statements cover an individual entity or a group of entities;
c) the date of the end of the reporting period and the period covered by the financial statements;
d) the currency in which the financial statements are presented; and
e) the level of rounding, if any, used in presenting amounts in the financial statements.
Current/non-current distinction
30 An entity shall present current and non-current assets, and current and non-current liabilities, as
separate classifications in its statement of financial position.
32 An entity shall classify all other assets as non-current. When the entity’s normal operating cycle is
not clearly identifiable, its duration is assumed to be twelve months.
34 The Framework does not prescribe the sequence or format in which items are to be presented. In
addition:
a) line items are included when the size, nature or function of an item or aggregation of similar
items is such that separate presentation is relevant to an understanding of the entity’s
financial position; and
b) the descriptions used and the sequencing of items or aggregation of similar items may be
amended according to the nature of the entity and its transactions, to provide information that
is relevant to an understanding of the entity’s financial position.
35 An entity shall disclose, either in the statement of financial position or in the notes, the following
sub-classifications of the line items, as applicable:
a) property, plant and equipment in classifications appropriate to the entity;
b) trade and other receivables showing separately amounts due from related parties, amounts
due from other parties, and receivables arising from accrued income not yet billed;
c) inventories, showing separately amounts of inventories:
i) held for sale in the ordinary course of business (for example, inventories held by
retailers and the finished goods of a manufacturer);
ii) in the process of production for such sale (for example, the work in progress of a
manufacturer); and
iii) in the form of materials or supplies to be consumed in the production process or in
the rendering of services (for example, raw materials).
d) trade and other payables, showing separately amounts payable to trade suppliers, payable to
related parties, deferred income and accruals;
e) provisions for employee benefits and other provisions;
f) liabilities and assets for current tax;
g) deferred tax liabilities and deferred tax assets (as applicable); and
h) classes of equity, such as paid-in capital, share premium, and retained earnings.
36 An entity with share capital shall disclose the following, either in the statement of financial position
or in the notes:
a) for each class of share capital:
i) the number of shares authorized;
ii) the number of shares issued and fully paid, and issued but not fully paid;
iii) par value per share, or that the shares have no par value;
iv) a reconciliation of the number of shares outstanding at the beginning and at the end
of the period;
v) the rights, preferences and restrictions attaching to that class including restrictions on
the distribution of dividends and the repayment of capital; and
vi) shares reserved for issue under options and contracts for the sale of shares,
including the terms and amounts; and
b) a description of each reserve within equity.
37 An entity without share capital, such as a partnership or trust, shall disclose information
equivalent to that required by paragraph 36(a), showing changes during the period in each
category of equity, and the rights, preferences and restrictions attaching to each category of
equity.
38 If, at the reporting date, an entity has a binding sale agreement for a major disposal of assets, or
a group of assets and liabilities, the entity shall disclose the following information:
a) a description of the asset(s) or the group of assets and liabilities;
b) a description of the facts and circumstances of the sale or plan; and
39 An entity shall not present or describe any items of income and expense as ‘extraordinary items’
in the statement of income or in the notes.
Analysis of expenses
40 An entity shall present an analysis of expenses using a classification based on either the nature
of expenses or the function of expenses within the entity, whichever provides information that is
reliable and more relevant.
41 Cash includes cash on hand and demand deposits. Cash equivalents are short-term, highly liquid
investments held to meet short-term cash commitments rather than for investment or other
purposes. Therefore, an investment normally qualifies as a cash equivalent only when it has a
short maturity of, say, three months or less from the date of acquisition. Bank overdrafts are
normally considered financing activities similar to borrowings. However, if they are repayable on
demand and form an integral part of an entity’s cash management, bank overdrafts are a
component of cash and cash equivalents.
Operating activities
42 Operating activities are the principal revenue-producing activities of the entity. Therefore, cash
flows from operating activities generally result from the transactions and other events and
conditions that enter into the determination of profit or loss. Examples of cash flows from
operating activities are:
a) cash receipts from the sale of goods and the rendering of services;
b) cash payments to suppliers for goods and services;
c) cash payments to and on behalf of employees; and
d) cash payments or refunds of income tax, unless they can be specifically identified with
financing and investing activities.
Some transactions, such as the sale of an item of plant by a manufacturing entity, may give rise
to a gain or loss that is included in profit or loss. However, the cash flows relating to such
transactions are cash flows from investing activities.
Indirect method
44 Under the indirect method, the net cash flow from operating activities is determined by adjusting
profit or loss for the effects of:
a) changes during the period in inventories and operating receivables and payables;
b) non-cash items such as depreciation, provisions, accrued income (expenses) not yet
received (paid) in cash, unrealized foreign currency gains and losses; and
c) all other items for which the cash effects relate to investing or financing.
Direct method
45 Under the direct method, net cash flow from operating activities is presented by disclosing
information about major classes of gross cash receipts and gross cash payments. Such
information may be obtained either:
a) from the accounting records of the entity; or
b) by adjusting sales, cost of sales and other items in the statement of income for:
i) changes during the period in inventories and operating receivables and payables;
ii) other non-cash items; and
iii) other items for which the cash effects are investing or financing cash flows.
Investing activities
46 Investing activities are the acquisition and disposal of long-term assets and other investments not
included in cash equivalents. Examples of cash flows arising from investing activities are:
a) cash payments to acquire property, plant and equipment (including self-constructed property,
plant and equipment);
b) cash receipts from sales of property, plant and equipment;
c) cash advances and loans made to other parties; and
d) cash receipts from the repayment of advances and loans made to other parties.
Financing activities
47 Financing activities are activities that result in changes in the size and composition of the
contributed equity and borrowings of an entity. Examples of cash flows arising from financing
activities are:
a) cash proceeds from owner contributions, issuing shares or other equity instruments;
b) cash payments to owners to acquire or redeem the entity’s shares;
c) cash proceeds from loans payable and other borrowings; and
d) cash repayments of amounts borrowed.
48 An entity shall present separately major classes of gross cash receipts and gross cash payments
arising from investing and financing activities.
49 An entity shall present separately cash flows from interest and dividends received and paid. The
entity shall classify cash flows consistently from period to period as operating, investing or
financing activities.
50 An entity may classify interest paid and interest and dividends received as operating cash flows
because they are included in profit or loss. Alternatively, the entity may classify interest paid and
interest and dividends received as financing cash flows and investing cash flows, respectively,
because they are costs of obtaining financial resources or returns on investments.
51 An entity may classify dividends paid as a financing cash flow because they are a cost of
obtaining financial resources. Alternatively, the entity may classify dividends paid as a component
of cash flows from operating activities because they are paid out of operating cash flows.
Income tax
52 An entity shall present separately cash flows arising from income tax and shall classify them as
cash flows from operating activities unless they can be specifically identified with financing and
investing activities. When tax cash flows are allocated over more than one class of activity, the
entity shall disclose the total amount of taxes paid.
Non-cash transactions
53 An entity shall exclude from the statement of cash flows investing and financing transactions that
do not require the use of cash or cash equivalents. An entity shall disclose such transactions
elsewhere in the financial statements in a way that provides all the relevant information about
those investing and financing activities. Examples of non-cash transactions is the contribution of a
non-cash asset, for example, an item of property, plant and equipment, by the owner.
54 An entity shall present the components of cash and cash equivalents and shall present a
reconciliation of the amounts presented in the statement of cash flows to the equivalent items
presented in the statement of financial position. However, an entity is not required to present this
reconciliation if the amount of cash and cash equivalents presented in the statement of cash
flows is identical to the amount similarly described in the statement of financial position.
Other disclosures
55 An entity shall disclose, together with a commentary by management, the amount of significant
cash and cash equivalent balances held by the entity that are not available for use by the entity.
For example, cash and cash equivalents held by an entity may not be available for use by the
entity because of legal restrictions.
58 An entity shall, as far as practicable, present the notes in a systematic manner. An entity shall
cross-reference each item in the financial statements to any related information in the notes.
60 An entity shall disclose the following in the summary of significant accounting policies:
a) the measurement basis (or bases) used in preparing the financial statements (for example,
historical cost, fair value, etc.); and
b) the other accounting policies used that are relevant to an understanding of the financial
statements.
61 This section includes the accounting policies available for a parent company with investment in a
subsidiary. The section also includes procedures for preparing consolidated financial statements
and guidance on separate financial statements.
62 A subsidiary is an entity that is controlled by the parent. Control is the power to govern the
financial and operating policies of an entity so as to obtain benefits from its activities. Control is
presumed to exist when the parent company owns, directly or indirectly through subsidiaries,
more than half of the voting power of an entity.
64 If the parent is itself a subsidiary of an entity whose investments in subsidiaries are either
consolidated or equity-accounted, it may present separate financial statements as its only
financial statements in accordance with paragraph 75.
65 All subsidiaries should be accounted for using the same method. A material difference in the
basis of accounting between a parent and a subsidiary precludes the consolidation and the
application of equity accounting for investments in subsidiaries.
Consolidation procedures
66 The consolidated financial statements present financial information about the group as a single
economic entity. In preparing consolidated financial statements, an entity shall:
a) combine the financial statements of the parent and its subsidiaries line by line by adding
together like items of assets, liabilities, equity, income and expenses;
b) eliminate the carrying amount of the parent’s investment in each subsidiary and the parent’s
portion of equity of each subsidiary;
c) measure and present non-controlling interest in the profit or loss of consolidated subsidiaries
for the reporting period separately from the interest of the owners of the parent; and
d) measure and present non-controlling interest in the net assets of consolidated subsidiaries
separately from the parent shareholders’ equity in them. Non-controlling interest in the net
assets consists of:
i) the amount of the non-controlling interest at the date of the original combination
ii) the non-controlling interest’s share of changes in equity since the date of the
combination.
67 The proportions of profit or loss and changes in equity allocated to the owners of the parent and
to the non-controlling interest are determined on the basis of existing ownership interests and do
not reflect the possible exercise or conversion of options or convertible instruments.
68 Intragroup balances and transactions, including income, expenses and dividends, are eliminated
in full. Profits and losses resulting from intragroup transactions that are recognized in assets,
such as inventory and property, plant and equipment, are eliminated in full.
69 The financial statements of the parent and its subsidiaries used in the preparation of the
consolidated financial statements shall be prepared as of the same reporting date unless it is
impracticable to do so.
70 Consolidated financial statements shall be prepared using uniform accounting policies for like
transactions and other events and conditions in similar circumstances. If a member of the group
uses accounting policies other than those adopted in the consolidated financial statements for like
transactions and events in similar circumstances, appropriate adjustments are made to its
financial statements in preparing the consolidated financial statements.
71 The income and expenses of a subsidiary are included in the consolidated financial statements
from the acquisition date. The income and expenses of a subsidiary are included in the
consolidated financial statements until the date on which the parent ceases to control the
subsidiary. The difference between the proceeds from the disposal of the subsidiary and its
carrying amount as of the date of disposal, is recognized in the consolidated statement of income
as the gain or loss on the disposal of the subsidiary.
72 An entity shall present non-controlling interest in the consolidated statement of financial position
within equity, separately from the equity of the owners of the parent.
73 An entity shall disclose non-controlling interest in the profit or loss of the group separately in the
statement of income.
74 Profit or loss shall be attributed to the owners of the parent and to the non-controlling interest.
Total net income or loss shall be attributed to the owners of the parent and to the non-controlling
interest even if this results in the non-controlling interest having a deficit balance.
Scope
76 The entity shall adopt in its separate financial statements a policy of accounting for its
investments in subsidiaries:
a) at cost less impairment, or
b) at equity method (using the procedures in Section 9 - Investments in Associates).
The entity shall apply the same accounting policy for all its investments in subsidiaries.
78 In addition to a - c above, an entity that chose the equity method should disclose separately any
dividends received from the subsidiaries and its share of the profit or loss of such subsidiaries.
79 An entity preparing separate financial statements should identify the consolidated financial
statements to which they relate.
80 Accounting policies are the specific principles, bases, conventions, rules and practices applied by
an entity in preparing and presenting financial statements. An entity shall select and apply its
accounting policies consistently for similar transactions, other events and conditions.
81 An entity need not follow a requirement in this Framework if the effect of doing so would not be
material.
If this Framework does not specifically address a transaction, other event or condition, an entity's
management shall use its judgment in developing and applying an accounting policy that results
in information that is:
(a) relevant to the economic decision-making needs of users, and
(b) reliable, in that the financial statements:
(i) represent faithfully the financial position, financial performance and cash flows of the
entity;
(ii) reflect the economic substance of transactions, other events and conditions, and not
merely the legal form;
(iii) are neutral, i.e., free from bias;
(iv) are prudent; and
(v) are complete in all material respects.
In making the judgment described above, management shall refer to, and consider the
applicability of, the following sources in descending order:
(a) the requirements and guidance in this Framework dealing with similar and related issues, and
(b) the definitions, recognition criteria and measurement concepts for assets, liabilities, income
and expenses and the pervasive principles in Section 2 Concepts and Pervasive Principles.
In making the judgment described above, management may also consider the requirements and
guidance in PFRS for Small and Medium-sized Entities (PFRS for SMEs) dealing with similar and
related issues.
82 An entity shall change an accounting policy if required by this Framework or if the change results
in the financial statements providing reliable and more relevant information about the effects of
transactions, other events or conditions on the entity’s financial position, financial performance or
cash flows. Therefore, changes in accounting policies are generally rare.
83 Examples of changes in accounting policies that would be appropriate if the new policy provides
reliable and more relevant information are:
a) in the statement of income, a change from presenting an analysis of expenses based on the
nature of expenses to presenting it based on the function of expenses;
b) changing the cost formula used to measure inventories from first-in first-out to weighted
average; and
c) a change from presenting a single statement of income and retained earnings to preparing
both a separate statement of income and a separate statement of changes in equity.
84 The application of a new accounting policy for transactions, other events or conditions that did not
occur previously or were not material, is not a change in accounting policy.
88 An entity shall recognize the effect of a change in an accounting estimate, other than a change to
which paragraph 89 applies, prospectively by including it in profit or loss in:
a) the period of the change, if the change affects that period only; or
b) the period of the change and future periods, if the change affects both.
89 To the extent that a change in an accounting estimate gives rise to changes in assets and
liabilities, or relates to an item of equity, the entity shall recognize it by adjusting the carrying
amount of the related asset, liability or equity item in the period of the change.
90 Prior period errors are omissions from, and misstatements in, the entity’s financial statements for
one or more prior periods arising from a failure to use, or misuse of, reliable information that:
a) was available when financial statements for those periods were authorized for issue; and
b) could reasonably be expected to have been obtained and taken into account in the
preparation and presentation of those financial statements.
91 Such errors include the effects of mathematical mistakes, mistakes in applying accounting
policies, oversights or misinterpretations of facts, and fraud.
92 An entity shall correct material prior period errors by excluding its impact from net income for the
period when the error is discovered. The carrying amounts of assets and liabilities at the
beginning of the current period shall be restated to correct the material prior period error. Any
cumulative effect shall be recognized as an adjustment to the opening balance of retained
earnings (or other component of equity, as appropriate) of the current period.
93 When a change in accounting policy has an effect on the current period or any prior period, an
entity shall disclose the following:
a) the nature of the change in accounting policy;
b) the amount of adjustments to the carrying amounts of assets and liabilities at the beginning of
the current period and any cumulative effect recognized as an adjustment to the opening
balance of retained earnings (or other component of equity, as appropriate) of the current
period; and
c) for each financial statement line item affected in the prior period, the amount of the necessary
adjustment and the adjusted amount had the new accounting policy been applied in the prior
period.
94 Management should disclose the nature and amount of a change in an accounting estimate that
has an effect in the current period. Disclosure of those effects is not necessary for estimates
made each period in the ordinary course of accounting for items such as uncollectible accounts or
inventory obsolescence; however, disclosure is required if the effect of a change in the estimate
is material.
96 A financial instrument is a contract that gives rise to a financial asset of one entity and a financial
liability or equity instrument of another entity.
97 An entity shall account for the following financial instruments in this Section.
a) cash;
b) the following receivables and payables provided they meet the requirements in paragraph 99:
i) bank deposits;
ii) trade receivables and payables;
iii) loans receivable and payable;
iv) notes receivable and payable; and
c) investments in non-convertible preference shares and non-puttable ordinary shares. Non-
puttable shares in an entity are shares that cannot be sold back to the entity at the option of
the holder.
98 Entities with financial instruments other than those listed in paragraph 97 are accounted for under
Section 7 - Other financial instruments.
99 A financial instrument that is a debt instrument, receivable or payable, shall be accounted for in
accordance with this Section if it satisfies all of the conditions in (a)–(d) below:
a) Returns to the holder are
i) a fixed amount;
ii) a fixed rate of return over the life of the instrument;
iii) a variable return that, throughout the life of the instrument, is equal to a single
referenced quoted or observable interest rate (such as LIBOR); or
iv) some combination of such fixed rate and variable rates (such as LIBOR plus 200
basis points), provided that both the fixed and variable rates are positive.
b) There is no contractual provision that could, by its terms, result in the holder losing the
principal amount or any interest attributable to the current period or prior periods. The fact
that a debt instrument is subordinated to other debt instruments is not an example of such a
contractual provision.
c) Contractual provisions that permit the debtor to prepay a debt instrument or permit the
creditor to require the debtor to repay the debt before maturity are not contingent on future
events.
d) There are no conditional returns or repayment provisions except for the variable rate return
described in (a) and prepayment provisions described in (c).
100 The following financial instruments are not accounted for in accordance with this section and are
covered by other sections of this Framework:
a) financial instruments that meet the definition of an entity’s own equity covered by Section 17 -
Equity;
b) leases covered by Section 15 - Leases. However, the derecognition requirements in
paragraphs 117 - 119 apply to lease payables recognized by a lessee; and
c) employers’ rights and obligations under employee benefit plans covered by Section 22 -
Employee Benefits.
101 An entity shall recognize a financial asset or a financial liability only when the entity becomes a
party to the contractual provisions of the instrument.
102 When a financial asset or financial liability is recognized initially, an entity shall measure it at the
transaction price (including transaction costs) unless the arrangement constitutes, in effect, a
financing transaction. A financing transaction may take place in connection with 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, the
entity shall 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.
a) For a long-term loan made to another entity, a receivable is recognized at the present value
of cash receivable (including interest payments and repayment of principal) from that entity.
b) For goods sold to a customer on short-term credit, a receivable is recognized at the
undiscounted amount of cash receivable from that entity, which is normally the invoice price.
c) For an item sold to a customer on two-year interest-free credit, a receivable is recognized at
the current cash sale price for that item. If the current cash sale price is not known, it may be
estimated as the present value of the cash receivable discounted using the prevailing market
rate(s) of interest for a similar receivable.
d) For a cash purchase of another entity’s ordinary shares, the investment is recognized at the
amount of cash paid to acquire the shares.
a) For a long-term loan received from a bank, a payable is recognized initially at the present
value of cash payable to the bank (for example, including interest payments and repayment
of principal).
b) For goods purchased from a supplier on short-term credit, a payable is recognized at the
undiscounted amount owed to the supplier, which is normally the invoice price.
Subsequent measurement
103 At the end of each reporting period, an entity shall measure financial instruments as follows,
without any deduction for transaction costs the entity may incur on sale or other disposal:
a) Debt instruments that meet the conditions in paragraph 99 shall be measured at amortized
cost using the effective interest method (see paragraphs 104 - 109). Cash and debt
instruments that are classified as current assets or current liabilities shall be measured at the
undiscounted amount of the cash or other consideration expected to be paid or received (i.e.,
net of impairment) unless the arrangement constitutes, in effect, a financing transaction (see
paragraph 102). 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. Paragraphs 110 - 115 provide guidance
on impairment or uncollectibility.
b) Investments in shares shall be carried at cost less impairment, unless the investment in
shares are traded in an active market, which shall be measured at the lower of cost or fair
value, with changes in fair value recognized in profit or loss. For shares traded in an active
market, the best evidence of fair value is the quoted price for those shares in that active
market.
104 The amortized cost of a financial asset or financial liability at each reporting date is the net of the
following amounts:
a) the amount at which the financial asset or financial liability is measured at initial recognition;
b) minus any repayments of the principal;
c) plus or minus the cumulative amortization using the effective interest method of any
difference between the amount at initial recognition and the maturity amount; and
d) minus, in the case of a financial asset, any reduction (directly or through the use of an
allowance account) for impairment or uncollectibility.
Financial assets and financial liabilities that have no stated interest rate and are classified as
current assets or current liabilities are initially measured at an undiscounted amount in
accordance with paragraph 103(a). Therefore, (c) above does not apply to them.
105 The effective interest method is a method of calculating the amortized cost of a financial asset or
a financial liability (or a group of financial assets or financial liabilities) and of allocating the
interest income or interest expense over the relevant period. The effective interest rate is the rate
that exactly discounts estimated future cash payments or receipts through the expected life of the
financial instrument or, when appropriate, a shorter period, to the carrying amount of the financial
asset or financial liability. The effective interest rate is determined on the basis of the carrying
amount of the financial asset or liability at initial recognition. Under the effective interest method:
a) the amortized cost of a financial asset (liability) is the present value of future cash receipts
(payments) discounted at the effective interest rate; and
b) the interest expense (income) in a period equals the carrying amount of the financial liability
(asset) at the beginning of a period multiplied by the effective interest rate for the period.
106 When calculating the effective interest rate, an entity shall estimate cash flows considering all
contractual terms of the financial instrument (for example, prepayment and other options) and
known credit losses that have been incurred, but it shall not consider possible future credit losses
not yet incurred.
107 When calculating the effective interest rate, an entity shall amortize any related fees, finance
charges paid or received, and transaction costs over the expected life of the instrument, except
as follows. The entity shall use a shorter period if that is the period to which the fees, finance
charges paid or received, or transaction costs relate. This will be the case when the variable to
which the fees, finance charges paid or received, and transaction costs is repriced to market
rates before the expected maturity of the instrument. In such a case, the appropriate amortization
period is the period to the next such repricing date.
108 For variable rate financial assets and variable rate financial liabilities, periodic re-estimation of
cash flows to reflect changes in market rates of interest alters the effective interest rate. If a
variable rate financial asset or variable rate financial liability is recognized initially at an amount
equal to the principal receivable or payable at maturity, re-estimating the future interest payments
normally has no significant effect on the carrying amount of the asset or liability.
109 If an entity revises its estimates of payments or receipts, the entity shall adjust the carrying
amount of the financial asset or financial liability (or group of financial instruments) to reflect
actual and revised estimated cash flows. The entity shall recalculate the carrying amount by
computing the present value of estimated future cash flows at the financial instrument’s original
effective interest rate. The entity shall recognize the adjustment as income or expense in profit or
loss at the date of the revision.
Recognition
110 At the end of each reporting period, an entity shall assess whether there is objective evidence of
impairment of any financial assets that are measured at cost or amortized cost. If there is
objective evidence of impairment, the entity shall recognize an impairment loss in profit or loss
immediately.
111 Objective evidence that a financial asset or group of assets is impaired includes observable data
that come to the attention of the entity about the following loss events:
a) a breach of contract by the debtor, such as a default or delinquency in interest or principal
payments;
b) the entity, for economic or legal reasons relating to the debtor’s financial difficulty, granting to
the debtor a concession that the entity would not otherwise consider; or
c) significant financial difficulty of the debtor or the issuer or it has become probable that the
debtor or the issuer will enter bankruptcy or other financial reorganization.
112 Other factors may also be evidence of impairment, including significant changes with an adverse
effect that have taken place in the technological, market, economic or legal environment in which
the debtor or the issuer operates.
113 An entity shall assess financial assets that are individually significant for impairment separately.
An entity shall assess other financial assets for impairment either individually or grouped on the
basis of similar credit risk characteristics.
Measurement
114 For financial assets measured at amortized cost, impairment loss is the difference between the
asset’s carrying amount and the present value of estimated cash flows discounted at the asset’s
original effective interest rate. If such a financial asset has a variable interest rate, the discount
rate for measuring any impairment loss is the current effective interest rate determined under the
contract. For a financial asset measured at cost less impairment, impairment loss is the difference
between the asset’s carrying amount and the best estimate (which will necessarily be an
approximation) of the amount (which might be zero) that the entity would receive for the asset if it
were to be sold at the reporting date.
Reversal
115 If, in a subsequent period, the amount of an impairment loss decreases and the decrease can be
related objectively to an event occurring after the impairment was recognized (such as an
improvement in the debtor’s credit rating), the entity shall reverse the previously recognized
impairment loss either directly or by adjusting an allowance account. The reversal shall not result
in a carrying amount of the financial asset (net of any allowance account) that exceeds what the
carrying amount would have been had the impairment not previously been recognized. The entity
shall recognize the amount of the reversal in profit or loss immediately.
117 An entity shall derecognize a financial liability (or a part of a financial liability) only when it is
extinguished - i.e., when the obligation specified in the contract is discharged, is cancelled or has
expired.
118 If an existing borrower and lender exchange financial instruments with substantially different
terms, the entities shall account for the transaction as an extinguishment of the original financial
liability and the recognition of a new financial liability. Similarly, an entity shall account for a
substantial modification of the terms of an existing financial liability or a part of it (whether or not
attributable to the financial difficulty of the debtor) as an extinguishment of the original financial
liability and the recognition of a new financial liability.
119 The entity shall recognize in profit or loss any difference between the carrying amount of the
financial liability (or part of a financial liability) extinguished or transferred to another party and the
consideration paid, including any non-cash assets transferred or liabilities assumed.
Disclosures
120 In accordance with paragraph 60, an entity shall disclose, in the summary of significant
accounting policies, the measurement basis (or bases) used for financial instruments and the
other accounting policies used for financial instruments that are relevant to an understanding of
the financial statements.
121 An entity shall disclose the carrying amounts of each of the following categories of financial
assets and financial liabilities at the reporting date, in total, either in the statement of financial
position or in the notes:
a) financial assets measured at cost/amortized cost;
b) financial liabilities measured at cost/amortized cost;
c) investments in shares carried at cost; and
d) investments in shares carried at the lower of cost or fair value.
122 An entity shall disclose information that enables users of its financial statements to evaluate the
significance of financial instruments for its financial position and performance. For example, for
long-term debt such information would normally include the terms and conditions of the debt
instrument (such as interest rate, maturity, repayment schedule, and restrictions that the debt
instrument imposes on the entity).
123 For investments in shares, the entity shall disclose the basis for determining the fair value.
124 For loans payable recognized at the reporting date for which there is a breach of terms or default
of principal, interest, sinking fund, or redemption terms that has not been remedied by the
reporting date, an entity shall disclose the following:
a) details of that breach or default;
b) the carrying amount of the related loans payable at the reporting date; and
c) whether the breach or default was remedied, or the terms of the loans payable were
renegotiated, before the financial statements were authorized for issue.
125 An entity shall disclose the following items of income, expense, gains or losses:
a) income, expense, gains or losses, including changes in the fair value, recognized on:
i) investments in shares carried at the lower of cost or fair value;
ii) financial assets measured at cost/amortized cost; and
iii) financial liabilities measured at cost/amortized cost.
b) total interest income and total interest expense (calculated using the effective interest
method) for financial assets or financial liabilities measured at cost/amortized cost; and
c) the amount of any impairment loss for each class of financial assets.
Scope
127 This section applies to all financial instruments except the following:
(a) those covered by Section 6 - Basic Financial Instruments.
(b) interests in subsidiaries (see Section 4 - Subsidiaries), associates (see Section 9 -
Investments in Associates) and joint ventures (see Section 10 - Joint Arrangements).
(c) employers’ rights and obligations under employee benefit plans (see Section 22 - Employee
Benefits).
(d) rights under insurance contracts unless the insurance contract could result in a loss to either
party as a result of contractual terms that are unrelated to:
(i) changes in the insured risk;
(ii) changes in foreign exchange rates; or
(iii) a default by one of the counterparties.
(e) financial instruments that meet the definition of an entity’s own equity (see Section 17 –
Equity and Section 20 - Share-based payment).
(f) contracts for contingent consideration in a business combination (see Section 14 - Business
Combinations and Goodwill). This exemption applies only to the acquirer.
128 Most contracts to buy or sell a non-financial item such as a commodity, inventory, or property,
plant and equipment are excluded from this section because they are not financial instruments.
However, this section applies to all contracts that impose risks on the buyer or seller that are not
typical of contracts to buy or sell tangible assets. For example, this section applies to contracts
that could result in a loss to the buyer or seller as a result of contractual terms that are unrelated
to changes in the price of the non-financial item, changes in foreign exchange rates, or a default
by one of the counterparties.
129 In addition to the contracts described in paragraph 128, this section applies to contracts to buy or
sell non-financial items if the contract can be settled net in cash or another financial instrument, or
by exchanging financial instruments as if the contracts were financial instruments, with the
following exception: contracts that were entered into and continue to be held for the purpose of
the receipt or delivery of a non-financial item in accordance with the entity’s expected purchase,
sale or usage requirements are not financial instruments for the purposes of this section.
130 An entity shall recognize a financial asset or a financial liability only when the entity becomes a
party to the contractual provisions of the instrument.
Initial measurement
131 When a financial asset or financial liability is recognized initially, an entity shall measure it at its
fair value, which is normally the transaction price.
132 At the end of each reporting period, an entity shall measure all financial instruments within the
scope of this section at fair value and recognize changes in fair value in profit or loss, except as
follows: equity instruments that are not publicly traded and whose fair value cannot otherwise be
measured reliably, and contracts linked to such instruments that, if exercised, will result in
delivery of such instruments, shall be measured at cost less impairment.
133 An entity shall not include transaction costs in the initial measurement of financial assets and
liabilities that will be measured subsequently at fair value through profit or loss. If payment for an
asset is deferred or is financed at a rate of interest that is not a market rate, the entity shall
initially measure the asset at the present value of the future payments discounted at a market rate
of interest.
134 If a reliable measure of fair value is no longer available for an equity instrument that is not publicly
traded but is measured at fair value through profit or loss, its fair value at the last date the
instrument was reliably measurable is treated as the cost of the instrument. The entity shall
measure the instrument at this cost amount less impairment until a reliable measure of fair value
becomes available.
Fair value
135 An entity shall apply the guidance on fair value in paragraphs 11 - 14 to fair value measurements
in accordance with this section.
136 The fair value of a financial liability that is due on demand is not less than the amount payable on
demand, discounted from the first date that the amount could be required to be paid.
137 An entity shall apply the guidance on impairment of a financial instrument measured at cost in
paragraphs 110 - 113 to financial instruments measured at cost less impairment in accordance
with this section.
138 An entity shall apply the derecognition requirements in paragraphs 116 - 119 to financial assets
and financial liabilities to which this section applies.
Hedge accounting
139 If specified criteria are met, an entity may designate a hedging relationship between a hedging
instrument and a hedged item in such a way as to qualify for hedge accounting. Hedge
accounting permits the gain or loss on the hedging instrument and on the hedged item to be
recognized in profit or loss at the same time.
140 To qualify for hedge accounting, an entity shall comply with all of the following conditions:
(a) the entity designates and documents the hedging relationship so that the risk being hedged,
the hedged item and the hedging instrument are clearly identified and the risk in the hedged
item is the risk being hedged with the hedging instrument.
(b) the hedged risk is one of the risks specified in paragraph 141.
(c) the hedging instrument is as specified in paragraph 142.
(d) the entity expects the hedging instrument to be highly effective in offsetting the designated
hedged risk. The effectiveness of a hedge is the degree to which changes in the fair value or
141 This Framework permits hedge accounting only for the following risks:
(a) interest rate risk of a debt instrument measured at amortized cost;
(b) foreign exchange or interest rate risk in a firm commitment or a highly probable forecast
transaction; and
(c) 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 of a debt instrument measured at amortized cost is not in the list above
because hedge accounting would not have any significant effect on the financial statements.
Basic accounts, notes and loans receivable and payable are normally measured at amortized
cost. This would include payables denominated in a foreign currency. Paragraph 433 requires
any change in the carrying amount of the payable because of a change in the exchange rate to
be recognized in profit or loss. Therefore, both the change in fair value of the hedging instrument
(the cross-currency swap) and the change in the carrying amount of the payable relating to the
change in the exchange rate would be recognized in profit or loss and should offset each other
except to the extent of the difference between the spot rate (at which the liability is measured)
and the forward rate (at which the swap is measured).
142 This Framework permits hedge accounting only if the hedging instrument has all of following
terms and conditions:
(a) it is an interest rate swap, a foreign currency swap, a foreign currency forward exchange
contract or a commodity forward exchange contract that is expected to be highly effective in
offsetting a risk identified in paragraph 141 that is designated as the hedged risk.
(b) it involves a party external to the reporting entity (i.e., external to the group, segment or
individual entity being reported on).
(c) its notional amount is equal to the designated amount of the principal or notional amount of
the hedged item.
(d) it has a specified maturity date not later than
(i) the maturity of the financial instrument being hedged;
(ii) the expected settlement of the commodity purchase or sale commitment; or
(iii) the occurrence of the highly probable forecast foreign currency or commodity
transaction being hedged.
(e) it has no prepayment, early termination or extension features.
Hedge of fixed interest rate risk of a recognized financial instrument or commodity price
risk of a commodity held
143 If the conditions in paragraph 140 are met and the hedged risk is the exposure to a fixed interest
rate risk of a debt instrument measured at amortized cost or the commodity price risk of a
commodity that it holds, the entity shall:
(a) recognize the hedging instrument as an asset or liability and the change in the fair value of
the hedging instrument in profit or loss; and
(b) recognize the change in the fair value of the hedged item related to the hedged risk in profit
or loss and as an adjustment to the carrying amount of the hedged item.
144 If the hedged risk is the fixed interest rate risk of a debt instrument measured at amortized cost,
the entity shall recognize the periodic net cash settlements on the interest rate swap that is the
hedging instrument in profit or loss in the period in which the net settlements accrue.
145 The entity shall discontinue the hedge accounting specified in paragraph 143 if:
(a) the hedging instrument expires or is sold or terminated;
146 If hedge accounting is discontinued and the hedged item is an asset or liability carried at
amortized cost that has not been derecognized, any gains or losses recognized as adjustments to
the carrying amount of the hedged item are amortized into profit or loss using the effective
interest method over the remaining life of the hedged item.
147 If the conditions in paragraph 140 are met and the hedged risk is
(a) the variable interest rate risk in a debt instrument measured at amortized cost;
(b) the foreign exchange risk in a firm commitment or a highly probable forecast transaction; or
(c) the commodity price risk in a firm commitment or highly probable forecast transaction,
the entity shall recognize a hedging reserve (an equity account) the portion of the change in
the fair value of the hedging instrument that was effective in offsetting the change in the fair
value or expected cash flows of the hedged item. The entity shall recognize in profit or loss
in each period any excess (in absolute amount) of the cumulative change in the fair value of
the hedging instrument over the cumulative change in the fair value of the expected cash
flows of the hedged item since inception of the hedge (sometimes called hedge
ineffectiveness). The hedging gain or loss recognized in hedging reserve shall be
reclassified to profit or loss when the hedged item is recognized in profit or loss or when the
hedging relationship ends.
148 If the hedged risk is the variable interest rate risk in a debt instrument measured at amortized
cost, the entity shall subsequently recognize in profit or loss the periodic net cash settlements
from the interest rate swap that is the hedging instrument in the period in which the net
settlements accrue.
149 The entity shall discontinue the hedge accounting specified in paragraph 147 if:
(a) the hedging instrument expires or is sold or terminated;
(b) the hedge no longer meets the criteria for hedge accounting in paragraph 140;
(c) in a hedge of a forecast transaction, the forecast transaction is no longer highly probable; or
(d) the entity revokes the designation. If the forecast transaction is no longer expected to take
place or if the hedged debt instrument measured at amortized cost is derecognized, any
gain or loss on the hedging instrument that was recognized in hedging reserve shall be
reclassified from hedging reserve to profit or loss.
Disclosures
150 An entity applying this section shall make all of the disclosures required in Section 6 incorporating
in those disclosures financial instruments that are within the scope of this section as well as those
within the scope of Section 6. In addition, if the entity uses hedge accounting, it shall make the
additional disclosures in paragraphs 151 - 153.
151 An entity shall disclose the following separately for hedges of each of the three types of risks
described in paragraph 141:
(a) a description of the hedge.
(b) a description of the financial instruments designated as hedging instruments and their fair
values at the reporting date.
(c) the nature of the risks being hedged, including a description of the hedged item.
153 If an entity uses hedge accounting for a hedge of variable interest rate risk, foreign exchange risk,
or commodity price risk in a firm commitment or highly probable forecast transaction
(paragraphs 147 - 149) it shall disclose the following:
(a) the periods when the cash flows are expected to occur and when they are expected to affect
profit or loss.
(b) a description of any forecast transaction for which hedge accounting had previously been
used, but which is no longer expected to occur.
(c) the amount of the change in fair value of the hedging instrument that was recognized in
hedging reserve during the period (paragraph 147).
(d) the amount that was reclassified from hedging reserve to profit or loss for the period
(paragraphs 147 and 149).
(e) the amount of any excess of the cumulative change in the fair value of the hedging
instrument over the cumulative change in the fair value of the expected cash flows that was
recognized in profit or loss for the period (paragraph 147).
Measurement of inventories
156 An entity shall measure inventories at the lower of cost or market value. Section 21 - Impairment
of Assets covers impairment requirements for inventories.
Cost of inventories
157 An entity shall include in the cost of inventories all costs of purchase, costs of conversion and
other costs incurred in bringing the inventories to their present location and condition.
Costs of purchase
158 The costs of purchase of inventories comprise the purchase price, import duties and other taxes
(other than those subsequently recoverable by the entity from the taxing authorities), and
transport, handling and other costs directly attributable to the acquisition of finished goods,
materials and services. Trade discounts, rebates and other similar items are deducted in
determining the costs of purchase.
159 An entity may purchase inventories on deferred settlement terms. In some cases, the
arrangement effectively contains an unstated financing element, for example, a difference
between the purchase price for normal credit terms and the deferred settlement amount. In these
cases, the difference is recognized as interest expense over the period of the financing and is not
added to the cost of the inventories.
Costs of conversion
160 The costs of conversion of inventories include costs directly related to the units of production,
such as direct labor. They also include a systematic allocation of fixed and variable production
overheads that are incurred in converting materials into finished goods. Fixed production
overheads are those indirect costs of production that remain relatively constant regardless of the
volume of production, such as depreciation and maintenance of factory buildings and equipment,
and the cost of factory management and administration. Variable production overheads are those
indirect costs of production that vary directly, or nearly directly, with the volume of production,
such as indirect materials and indirect labor.
161 An entity shall allocate fixed production overheads to the costs of conversion on the basis of the
normal capacity of the production facilities. Normal capacity is the production expected to be
achieved on average over a number of periods or seasons under normal circumstances, taking
into account the loss of capacity resulting from planned maintenance. The actual level of
production may be used if it approximates normal capacity. The amount of fixed overhead
allocated to each unit of production is not increased as a consequence of low production or idle
plant. Unallocated overheads are recognized as an expense in the period in which they are
incurred. In periods of abnormally high production, the amount of fixed overhead allocated to
each unit of production is decreased so that inventories are not measured above cost. Variable
production overheads are allocated to each unit of production on the basis of the actual use of the
production facilities.
162 A production process may result in more than one product being produced simultaneously. This is
the case, for example, when joint products are produced or when there is a main product and a
by-product. When the costs of raw materials or conversion of each product are not separately
identifiable, an entity shall allocate them between the products on a rational and consistent basis.
The allocation may be based, for example, on the relative sales value of each product either at
the stage in the production process when the products become separately identifiable, or at the
completion of production. Most by-products, by their nature, are immaterial. When this is the
case, the entity shall measure them at selling price less costs to complete and sell and deduct
this amount from the cost of the main product. As a result, the carrying amount of the main
product is not materially different from its cost.
163 An entity shall include other costs in the cost of inventories only to the extent that they are
incurred in bringing the inventories to their present location and condition.
164 Examples of costs excluded from the cost of inventories and recognized as expenses in the
period in which they are incurred are:
a) abnormal amounts of wasted materials, labor or other production costs;
b) storage costs, unless those costs are necessary during the production process before a
further production stage;
c) administrative overheads that do not contribute to bringing inventories to their present
location and condition; and
d) selling costs.
165 To the extent that service providers have inventories, they measure them at the costs of their
production. These costs consist primarily of the labor and other costs of personnel directly
engaged in providing the service, including supervisory personnel, and attributable overheads.
Labor and other costs relating to sales and general administrative personnel are not included but
are recognized as expenses in the period in which they are incurred. The cost of inventories of a
service provider does not include profit margins or non-attributable overheads that are often
factored into prices charged by service providers.
166 An entity may use techniques such as the standard cost method, the retail method or most recent
purchase price for measuring the cost of inventories if the result approximates cost. Standard
costs take into account normal levels of materials and supplies, labor, efficiency and capacity
utilization. They are regularly reviewed and, if necessary, revised in the light of current conditions.
The retail method measures cost by reducing the sales value of the inventory by the appropriate
percentage gross margin.
Cost formulas
167 An entity shall measure the cost of inventories of items that are not ordinarily interchangeable and
goods or services produced and segregated for specific projects by using specific identification of
their individual costs.
168 An entity shall measure the cost of inventories, other than those dealt with in paragraph 167, by
using the first-in, first-out (FIFO) or weighted average cost formula. An entity shall use the same
cost formula for all inventories having a similar nature and use to the entity. For inventories with a
different nature or use, different cost formulas may be justified. The last-in, first-out method
(LIFO) is not permitted.
Recognition as an expense
169 When inventories are sold, the entity shall recognize the carrying amount of those inventories as
an expense (often referred to as cost of goods sold) in the period in which the related revenue is
recognized.
170 Some inventories may be allocated to other asset accounts, for example, inventory used as a
component of self-constructed property, plant or equipment. Inventories allocated to another
asset in this way are accounted for subsequently in accordance with the section of this
Framework relevant to that type of asset.
Disclosures
172 This section applies to accounting for associates in the following financial statements:
a) consolidated financial statements and financial statements of investors where investments in
subsidiaries are equity-accounted (see paragraph 63); and
b) financial statements of an investor that is not a parent but that has an investment in one or
more associates.
Associates defined
173 An associate is an entity, including an unincorporated entity such as a partnership, over which the
investor has significant influence and that is neither a subsidiary nor an interest in a joint venture.
174 Significant influence is the power to participate in the financial and operating policy decisions of
the associate but is not control or joint control over those policies.
a) If an investor holds, directly or indirectly (e.g., through subsidiaries), 20 per cent or more of
the voting power of the associate, it is presumed that the investor has significant influence,
unless it can be clearly demonstrated that this is not the case.
b) Conversely, if the investor holds, directly or indirectly (e.g., through subsidiaries), less than 20
per cent of the voting power of the associate, it is presumed that the investor does not have
significant influence, unless such influence can be clearly demonstrated.
c) A substantial or majority ownership by another investor does not preclude an investor from
having significant influence.
175 An investor shall account for all of its investments in associates using one of the following:
a) at cost less impairment; or
b) the equity method.
Cost model
176 An investor shall measure its investments in associates at cost less any accumulated impairment
losses.
177 The investor shall recognize dividends and other distributions received from the investment as
income without regard to whether the distributions are from accumulated profits of the associate
arising before or after the date of acquisition.
Equity method
178 Under the equity method of accounting, an equity investment is initially recognized at the
transaction price (including transaction costs) and is subsequently adjusted to reflect the
investor’s share of the profit or loss of the associate.
a) Distributions and other adjustments to carrying amount. Distributions received from the
associate reduce the carrying amount of the investment.
b) Potential voting rights. Although potential voting rights are considered in deciding whether
significant influence exists, an investor shall measure its share of profit or loss of the
associate and its share of changes in the associate’s equity on the basis of present
Disclosures
181 For investments in associates accounted for by the cost model, an investor shall disclose the
amount of dividends and other distributions recognized as income.
182 For investments in associates accounted for by the equity method, an investor shall disclose
separately its share of the profit or loss of such associates.
183 This section applies to accounting for investments in joint arrangements in the following financial
statements:
a) consolidated financial statements and financial statements of investors where investments in
subsidiaries are equity-accounted; and
b) financial statements of an investor that is not a parent but that has an investment in one or
more joint ventures or joint operations.
In the separate financial statements, a venturer with an investment in a joint venture is covered by
the same accounting policy election for investments in subsidiaries presented in paragraph 76.
Joint arrangements
184 A joint arrangement is an arrangement of which two or more parties have joint control.
185 Joint control is the contractually agreed sharing of control of an arrangement, which exists only
when decisions about the relevant activities require the unanimous consent of the parties sharing
control.
187 An entity shall determine the type of joint arrangement in which it is involved. The classification of
a joint arrangement as a joint operation or a joint venture depends upon the rights and obligations
of the parties to the arrangement.
188 A joint operation is a joint arrangement whereby the parties that have joint control of the
arrangement have rights to the assets, and obligations for the liabilities, relating to the
arrangement. Those parties are called joint operators.
189 A joint venture is a joint arrangement whereby the parties that have joint control of the
arrangement have rights to the net assets of the arrangement. Those parties are called joint
venturers.
Joint operations
190 Where the entity is involved in a joint operation, the investors account for their rights and
obligations by recognizing:
a) its assets, including its share of any assets held jointly;
b) its liabilities, including its share of any liabilities incurred jointly;
c) its revenue from the sale of its share of the output arising from the joint operation;
d) its share of the revenue from the sale of the output by the joint operation; and
e) its expenses, including its share of any expenses incurred jointly.
191 A venturer shall account for all of its investment in joint ventures in its consolidated and separate
financial statements using one of the following:
a) the cost model; or
b) the equity method.
Cost model
192 A venturer shall measure its investments in joint ventures at cost less any accumulated
impairment losses.
193 The investor shall recognize distributions received from the investment as income without regard
to whether the distributions are from accumulated profits of the joint venture arising before or after
the date of acquisition.
Equity method
194 A venturer shall measure its investments in joint ventures by the equity method using the
procedures in Section 9 - Investments in Associates.
195 When a venturer contributes or sells assets to a joint venture, recognition of any portion of a gain
or loss from the transaction shall reflect the substance of the transaction. While the assets are
retained by the joint venture, and provided the venturer has transferred the significant risks and
rewards of ownership, the venturer shall recognize only that portion of the gain or loss that is
attributable to the interests of the other venturers. The venturer shall recognize the full amount of
any loss when the contribution or sale provides evidence of an impairment loss.
196 When a venturer purchases assets from a joint venture, the venturer shall not recognize its share
of the profits of the joint venture from the transaction until it resells the assets to an independent
party. A venturer shall recognize its share of the losses resulting from these transactions in the
same way as profits except that losses shall be recognized immediately when they represent an
impairment loss.
197 An investor in a joint venture that does not have joint control shall account for that investment in
accordance with Section 6 - Basic Financial Instruments or, if it has significant influence in the
joint venture, in accordance with Section 9 - Investments in Associates.
Disclosures
198 For each joint arrangement, an entity should disclose the following:
a) the name and type of the joint arrangement.
b) the principal place of business (and country of incorporation, if applicable and different from
the principal place of business) of the joint arrangement.
c) the proportion of ownership interest held by the entity in the joint arrangement.
200 For investments in joint ventures accounted for by the cost model, an investor shall disclose the
amount of dividends and other distributions recognized as income.
201 For investments in joint ventures accounted for by the equity method, an investor shall disclose
separately its share of the profit or loss of such joint ventures.
202 This section applies to accounting for investments in land or buildings that meet the definition of
investment property.
203 Investment property is property (land or a building, or part of a building, or both) held by the
owner to earn rentals or for capital appreciation or both, rather than for:
a) use in the production or supply of goods or services or for administrative purposes, or
b) sale in the ordinary course of business.
204 An entity shall measure investment property at its cost at initial recognition. The cost of a
purchased investment property comprises its purchase price and any directly attributable
expenditure such as legal and brokerage fees, property transfer taxes and other transaction
costs. If payment is deferred beyond normal credit terms, the cost is the present value of all future
payments. An entity shall determine the cost of a self-constructed investment property in
accordance with Section 12 - Property, Plant and Equipment.
205 An entity shall choose as its accounting policy either the cost model in paragraph 206 or the fair
value model in paragraph 207 and shall apply that policy to all of its investment property.
Cost model
206 After initial recognition, an entity that chooses the cost model shall measure all of its investment
properties in accordance with Section 12 - Property, Plant and Equipment requirements for that
model.
207 After initial recognition, an entity that chooses the fair value model shall measure all of its
investment properties at fair value at each reporting date with changes in fair value recognized in
profit or loss. Paragraphs 11 - 14 provide guidance on determining fair value.
208 If a reliable measure of fair value is no longer available without undue cost or effort for an item of
investment property measured using the fair value model, the entity shall thereafter account for
that item under the cost model in accordance with paragraph 206. The carrying amount of the
investment property on the date of the change becomes its cost. Paragraph 211 requires
disclosure of this change. It is a change of circumstances and not a change in accounting policy.
Transfers
209 An entity shall transfer a property to, or from, investment property only when the property first
meets, or ceases to meet, the definition of investment property.
210 Entities applying the cost model shall disclose the following for each class of investment property:
a) the depreciation methods used.
b) the useful lives or the depreciation rates used.
c) the gross carrying amount and the accumulated depreciation (aggregated with accumulated
impairment losses) at the beginning and end of the reporting period.
d) a reconciliation of the carrying amount at the beginning and end of the reporting period
showing separately:
i) additions.
ii) disposals.
iii) acquisitions through business combinations.
iv) impairment losses recognized or reversed in profit or loss
v) depreciation.
vi) other changes.
211 Entities applying the fair value model shall disclose the following:
a) whether an independent valuer was involved;
b) the methods and significant assumptions applied in determining the fair value of investment
property;
c) a reconciliation between the carrying amounts of investment property at the beginning and
end of the period, showing separately:
i) additions, disclosing separately those additions resulting from acquisitions through
business combinations.
ii) net gains or losses from fair value adjustments.
iii) transfers to cost model when a reliable measure of fair value is no longer available
without undue cost or effort (see paragraph 208)
iv) transfers to and from inventories and owner-occupied property.
v) other changes.
212 The entity shall also disclose the existence and carrying amounts of investment property to which
the entity has restricted title or that is pledged as security for liabilities.
213 Property, plant and equipment accounted for under this Section are tangible assets that:
a) are held for use in the production or supply of goods or services, for rental to others, or for
administrative purposes; and
b) are expected to be used during more than one period.
Recognition
214 Items such as spare parts, stand-by equipment and servicing equipment are property, plant and
equipment if the entity expects to use them during more than one period or if they can be used
only in connection with an item of property, plant and equipment. Otherwise, such items are
classified as inventories.
215 Land and buildings are separable assets, and an entity shall account for them separately, even
when they are acquired together.
Measurement at recognition
216 An entity shall measure an item of property, plant and equipment at initial recognition at its cost.
Elements of cost
217 The cost of an item of property, plant and equipment comprises all of the following:
a) its purchase price, including legal and brokerage fees, import duties and non-refundable
purchase taxes, after deducting trade discounts and rebates; and
b) any costs directly attributable to bringing the asset to the location and condition necessary for
it to be capable of operating in the manner intended by management. These can include the
costs of site preparation, initial delivery and handling, installation and assembly, and testing
of functionality.
If payment is deferred beyond normal credit terms, the cost is the present value of all future
payments.
218 The following costs are not costs of an item of property, plant and equipment, and an entity shall
recognize them as an expense when they are incurred:
a) costs of opening a new facility;
b) costs of introducing a new product or service (including costs of advertising and promotional
activities);
c) costs of conducting business in a new location or with a new class of customer (including
costs of staff training); and
d) administration and other general overhead costs.
The income and related expenses of incidental operations during construction or development of
an item of property, plant and equipment are recognized in profit or loss if those operations are
not necessary to bring the item to its intended location and operating condition.
Exchanges of assets
219 An item of property, plant or equipment may be acquired in exchange for a non-monetary asset,
or assets, or a combination of monetary and non-monetary assets. An entity shall measure the
cost of the acquired asset at fair value unless (a) the exchange transaction lacks commercial
220 An entity shall choose as its accounting policy either the cost model in paragraphs 221 - 228 or
the fair value model in paragraphs 229 - 230 and shall apply that policy to an entire class of
property, plant and equipment. A class of property, plant and equipment is a grouping of assets
of similar nature and use in an entity’s operations.
An entity shall recognize the costs of day-to-day servicing (repairs and maintenance) of an item of
investment property in profit or loss in the period in which the costs are incurred.
Cost model
221 An entity shall measure an item of property, plant and equipment after initial recognition at cost
less any accumulated depreciation and any accumulated impairment losses.
222 An entity shall allocate the depreciable amount of an asset on a systematic basis over its useful
life. The depreciable amount is cost minus accumulated depreciation and accumulated
impairment losses, and minus residual value. The residual value of an asset is the estimated
amount that an entity would currently obtain from disposal of an asset, after deducting the
estimated costs of disposal, if the asset was already of the age and in the condition expected at
the end of its useful life.
223 The depreciation charge for each period shall be recognized in profit or loss unless another
section of this Framework requires the cost to be recognized as part of the cost of an asset. For
example, the depreciation of manufacturing property, plant and equipment is included in the costs
of inventories.
224 Factors such as a change in how an asset is used, significant unexpected wear and tear,
technological advancement, and changes in market prices may indicate that the residual value or
useful life of an asset has changed since the most recent annual reporting date. If such indicators
are present, an entity shall review its previous estimates and, if current expectations differ, amend
the residual value, depreciation method or useful life. The entity shall account for the change in
residual value, depreciation method or useful life as a change in an accounting estimate.
225 Depreciation of an asset begins when it is available for use, i.e., when it is in the location and
condition necessary for it to be capable of operating in the manner intended by management.
Depreciation of an asset ceases when the asset is derecognized. Depreciation does not cease
when the asset becomes idle or is retired from active use unless the asset is fully depreciated.
However, under usage methods of depreciation the depreciation charge can be zero while there
is no production.
226 The useful life of an asset is the period over which the asset is expected to be available for use
by the entity or the number of production or similar units expected to be obtained from the asset
by the entity. An entity shall consider all of the following factors in determining the useful life of an
asset:
a) the expected usage of the asset. Usage is assessed by reference to the asset’s expected
capacity or physical output;
With some exceptions, such as quarries and sites used for landfill, land has an unlimited useful
life and therefore is not depreciated.
Depreciation method
227 An entity shall select a depreciation method that reflects the pattern in which it expects to
consume the asset’s future economic benefits. The possible depreciation methods include the
straight-line method, the diminishing balance method and a method based on usage such as the
units of production method.
228 Usually, an asset is depreciated using the same method from period to period. However, if there
is an indication that there has been a significant change since the last annual reporting date in the
pattern by which an entity expects to consume an asset’s future economic benefits, the entity
shall review its present depreciation method and, if current expectations differ, change the
depreciation method to reflect the new pattern. The entity shall account for the change as a
change in an accounting estimate.
229 An entity shall measure an item of property, plant and equipment at fair value at each reporting
date with changes in fair value recognized in profit or loss. Paragraphs 11 - 14 provide guidance
on determining fair value.
230 If a reliable measure of fair value is no longer available without undue cost or effort for an item of
property, plant and equipment measured using the fair value model, the entity shall thereafter
account for that item under the cost model in accordance with paragraphs 221 - 228. The carrying
amount of the property, plant and equipment on that date becomes its cost. Paragraph 236
requires disclosure of this change. It is a change of circumstances and not a change in
accounting policy.
Derecognition
232 An entity shall recognize the gain or loss on the derecognition of an item of property, plant and
equipment in profit or loss when the item is derecognized. The entity shall not classify such gains
as revenue.
233 For a straightforward disposal of an item of property, plant and equipment for cash, the date of
disposal is usually the date when the risks and rewards of ownership of the asset have passed.
For more complex scenarios, an entity determines the date of disposal by applying the criteria in
Section 18 - Revenue for recognizing revenue from the sale of goods.
234 An entity shall determine the gain or loss arising from the derecognition of an item of property,
plant and equipment as the difference between the net disposal proceeds, if any, and the carrying
amount of the item.
235 Entities applying the cost model shall disclose the following for each class of property, plant and
equipment:
a) the depreciation methods used;
b) the useful lives or the depreciation rates used;
c) the gross carrying amount and the accumulated depreciation (aggregated with accumulated
impairment losses) at the beginning and end of the reporting period; and
d) a reconciliation of the carrying amount at the beginning and the end of the reporting period
showing separately:
i) additions;
ii) disposals;
iii) acquisitions through business combinations;
iv) impairment losses recognized or reversed in profit or loss;
v) depreciation;
vi) other changes.
236 Entities applying the fair value model shall disclose the following:
a) whether an independent valuer was involved;
b) the methods and significant assumptions applied in determining the fair value of investment
property;
c) for each class of property, plant and equipment, the carrying amount that would have been
recognized had the assets been carried under the cost model; and
d) a reconciliation between the carrying amounts of property, plant and equipment at the
beginning and end of the period, showing separately:
i) additions, disclosing separately those additions resulting from acquisitions through
business combinations;
ii) net gains or losses from fair value adjustments;
iii) transfers to cost model when a reliable measure of fair value is no longer available
without undue cost or effort (see paragraph 230);
iv) transfers to and from inventories and investment property.
v) other changes.
237 The entity shall also disclose the existence and carrying amounts of property, plant and
equipment to which the entity has restricted title or that is pledged as security for liabilities.
238 This section applies to accounting for all intangible assets other than goodwill.
Definition
240 An entity shall recognize an intangible asset as an asset if, and only if:
a) it is probable that the expected future economic benefits that are attributable to the asset will
flow to the entity;
b) the cost or value of the asset can be measured reliably; and
c) the asset does not result from expenditure incurred internally on an intangible item.
241 An entity shall assess the probability of expected future economic benefits using reasonable and
supportable assumptions that represent management’s best estimate of the economic conditions
that will exist over the useful life of the asset.
242 An entity uses judgment to assess the degree of certainty attached to the flow of future economic
benefits that are attributable to the use of the asset on the basis of the evidence available at the
time of initial recognition, giving greater weight to external evidence.
243 The probability recognition criterion in paragraph 240(a) is always considered satisfied for
intangible assets that are separately acquired.
244 An entity should make an accounting policy choice to account for intangible assets acquired in a
business combination either by:
a) separately recognizing the intangible asset as an identifiable asset; or
b) not separately recognizing the intangible asset as an identifiable asset and subsuming into
goodwill the value of the intangible asset.
245 For an intangible asset to be separately recognized as an identifiable asset, its acquisition-date
fair value should be measured reliably. The acquirer should assign a useful life to the recognized
identifiable intangible asset. When the precise length of an intangible asset’s useful life is not
known, the acquirer should estimate its useful life. If the acquirer cannot reliably measure the
acquisition-date fair value of the intangible asset or cannot estimate its useful life, then separate
recognition of the intangible asset as an identifiable asset is not permitted and the value of the
intangible asset should be subsumed into goodwill.
246 The accounting policy option in paragraph 244 may be made on an individual intangible asset
basis. Once made, the accounting policy chosen for a specific intangible asset cannot be
subsequently reversed.
Separate acquisition
249 If an intangible asset acquired in a business combination, the cost of that intangible asset is its
fair value at the acquisition date.
Exchanges of assets
250 An intangible asset may be acquired in exchange for a non-monetary asset or assets, or a
combination of monetary and non-monetary assets. An entity shall measure the cost of such an
intangible asset at fair value unless (a) the exchange transaction lacks commercial substance, or
(b) the fair value of neither the asset received nor the asset given up is reliably measurable. In
that case, the asset’s cost is measured at the carrying amount of the asset given up.
251 An entity shall recognize expenditure incurred internally on an intangible item, including all
expenditure for both research and development activities, as an expense when it is incurred
unless it forms part of the cost of another asset that meets the recognition criteria under another
section of this Framework.
252 As examples of applying paragraph 251, an entity shall recognize expenditure on the following
items as an expense and shall not recognize such expenditure as intangible assets:
a) internally generated brands, customer lists and items similar in substance;
b) start-up activities (i.e., start-up costs), which include establishment costs such as legal and
secretarial costs incurred in establishing a legal entity, expenditure to open a new facility or
business (i.e., pre-opening costs) and expenditure for starting new operations or launching
new products or processes (i.e., pre-operating costs);
c) training activities;
d) advertising and promotional activities;
e) internally generated software; and
f) internally generated goodwill.
253 Paragraph 252 does not preclude recognizing a prepayment as an asset when payment for
goods or services has been made in advance of the delivery of the goods or the rendering of the
services.
254 Expenditure on an intangible item that was initially recognized as an expense shall not be
recognized at a later date as part of the cost of an asset.
255 An entity shall measure intangible assets at cost less any accumulated amortization and any
accumulated impairment losses. The requirements for amortization are set out in this section. The
requirements for recognition of impairment are set out in Section 21 - Impairment of Assets.
256 For the purpose of this Framework, all intangible assets shall be considered to have a finite useful
life. The useful life of an intangible asset that arises from contractual or other legal rights shall not
exceed the period of the contractual or other legal rights, but may be shorter depending on the
period over which the entity expects to use the asset. If the contractual or other legal rights are
conveyed for a limited term that can be renewed, the useful life of the intangible asset shall
include the renewal period(s) only if there is evidence to support renewal by the entity without
significant cost.
257 If an entity is unable to make a reliable estimate of the useful life of an intangible asset, the life
shall be determined based on management’s best estimate but shall not exceed ten (10) years.
258 An entity shall allocate the depreciable amount of an intangible asset on a systematic basis over
its useful life. The amortization charge for each period shall be recognized as an expense, unless
another section of this Framework requires the cost to be recognized as part of the cost of an
asset such as inventories or property, plant and equipment.
259 Amortization begins when the intangible asset is available for use, i.e., when it is in the location
and condition necessary for it to be usable in the manner intended by management. Amortization
ceases when the asset is derecognized. The entity shall choose an amortization method that
reflects the pattern in which it expects to consume the asset’s future economic benefits. If the
entity cannot determine that pattern reliably, it shall use the straight-line method.
Residual value
260 An entity shall assume that the residual value of an intangible asset is zero unless:
a) there is a commitment by a third party to purchase the asset at the end of its useful life, or
b) there is an active market for the asset and:
i) residual value can be determined by reference to that market, and
ii) it is probable that such a market will exist at the end of the asset’s useful life.
261 Factors such as a change in how an intangible asset is used, technological advancement, and
changes in market prices may indicate that the residual value or useful life of an intangible asset
has changed since the most recent annual reporting date. If such indicators are present, an entity
shall review its previous estimates and, if current expectations differ, amend the residual value,
amortization method or useful life. The entity shall account for the change in residual value,
amortization method or useful life as a change in an accounting estimate in accordance with
Section 5 - Accounting Policies, Estimates and Errors.
262 To determine whether an intangible asset is impaired, an entity shall apply Section 21 -
Impairment of Assets.
263 Section 21 - Impairment of Assets explains when and how an entity reviews the carrying amount
of its assets, how it determines the recoverable amount of an asset, and when it recognizes or
reverses an impairment loss.
264 An entity shall derecognize an intangible asset, and shall recognize a gain or loss in profit or loss:
a) on disposal, or
b) when no future economic benefits are expected from its use or disposal.
Disclosures
265 An entity shall disclose the following for each class of intangible assets:
a) the useful lives or the amortization rates used.
b) the amortization methods used.
c) the gross carrying amount and any accumulated amortization (aggregated with accumulated
impairment losses) at the beginning and end of the reporting period.
d) the line item(s) in the statement of income in which any amortization of intangible assets is
included.
e) a reconciliation of the carrying amount at the beginning and end of the reporting period
showing separately:
i) additions
ii) disposals
iii) acquisitions through business combinations
iv) amortization
v) impairment losses
vi) other changes
266 The existence and carrying amounts of intangible assets to which the entity has restricted title or
that are pledged as security for liabilities.
267 This section applies to accounting for business combinations. It provides guidance on identifying
the acquirer, measuring the cost of the business combination, and allocating that cost to the
assets acquired and liabilities and provisions for contingent liabilities assumed. It also addresses
accounting for goodwill both at the time of a business combination and subsequently.
268 This section specifies the accounting for all business combinations except:
a) combinations of entities or businesses under common control. Common control means that
all of the combining entities or businesses are ultimately controlled by the same party both
before and after the business combination, and that control is not transitory.
b) the formation of a joint venture.
c) acquisition of a group of assets that does not constitute a business.
269 A business combination is the bringing together of separate entities or businesses into one
reporting entity. The result of nearly all business combinations is that one entity, the acquirer,
obtains control of one or more other businesses, the acquiree. The acquisition date is the date on
which the acquirer effectively obtains control of the acquiree.
270 A business combination may be structured in a variety of ways for legal, taxation or other
reasons. It may involve the purchase by an entity of the equity of another entity, the purchase of
all the net assets of another entity, the assumption of the liabilities of another entity, or the
purchase of some of the net assets of another entity that together form one or more businesses.
271 A business combination may be effected by the issue of equity instruments, the transfer of cash,
cash equivalents or other assets, or a mixture of these. The transaction may be between the
shareholders of the combining entities or between one entity and the shareholders of another
entity. It may involve the establishment of a new entity to control the combining entities or net
assets transferred, or the restructuring of one or more of the combining entities.
Accounting
272 All business combinations shall be accounted for by applying the purchase method.
274 An acquirer shall be identified for all business combinations. The acquirer is the combining entity
that obtains control of the other combining entities or businesses.
275 Control is the power to govern the financial and operating policies of an entity or business so as
to obtain benefits from its activities. Control of one entity by another is described in Section 4 -
Subsidiaries.
277 The acquirer shall measure the cost of a business combination as the aggregate of:
(a) the fair values, at the date of acquisition, of assets given, liabilities incurred or assumed and
equity instruments issued by the acquirer, in exchange for control of the acquiree; plus
(b) any costs directly attributable to the business combination.
278 When a business combination agreement provides for an adjustment to the cost of the
combination contingent on future events, the acquirer shall include the estimated amount of that
adjustment in the cost of the combination at the acquisition date if the adjustment is probable and
can be measured reliably.
279 However, if the potential adjustment is not recognized at the acquisition date but subsequently
becomes probable and can be measured reliably, the additional consideration shall be treated as
an adjustment to the cost of the combination.
Allocating the cost of a business combination to the assets acquired and liabilities and
contingent liabilities assumed
280 The acquirer shall, at the acquisition date, allocate the cost of a business combination by
recognizing the acquiree’s identifiable assets and liabilities and a provision for those contingent
liabilities that satisfy the recognition criteria in paragraph 281 at their fair values at that date. Any
difference between the cost of the business combination and the acquirer’s interest in the net fair
value of the identifiable assets, liabilities and provisions for contingent liabilities so recognized
shall be accounted for in accordance with paragraphs 285 - 287 (as goodwill or so-called
‘negative goodwill’). Any non-controlling interest in the acquiree is measured at the non-
controlling interest’s proportionate share of the recognized amounts of the acquiree’s identificable
net assets.
281 The acquirer shall recognize separately the acquiree’s identifiable assets, liabilities and
contingent liabilities at the acquisition date only if they satisfy the following criteria at that date:
a) In the case of an asset other than an intangible asset, it is probable that any associated
future economic benefits will flow to the acquirer, and its fair value can be measured reliably.
b) In the case of a liability other than a contingent liability, it is probable that an outflow of
resources will be required to settle the obligation, and its fair value can be measured reliably.
c) In the case of a contingent liability, its fair value can be measured reliably.
d) In the case of an intangible asset, its fair value and useful life can be estimated reliably in
accordance with Section 13 - Intangible Assets Other than Goodwill.
282 The acquirer’s statement of income shall incorporate the acquiree’s profits and losses after the
acquisition date by including the acquiree’s income and expenses based on the cost of the
business combination to the acquirer. For example, depreciation expense included after the
283 Application of the purchase method starts from the acquisition date, which is the date on which
the acquirer obtains control of the acquiree. Because control is the power to govern the financial
and operating policies of an entity or business so as to obtain benefits from its activities, it is not
necessary for a transaction to be closed or finalized at law before the acquirer obtains control. All
pertinent facts and circumstances surrounding a business combination shall be considered in
assessing when the acquirer has obtained control.
284 If the initial accounting for a business combination is incomplete by the end of the reporting period
in which the combination occurs, the acquirer shall recognize in its financial statements
provisional amounts for the items for which the accounting is incomplete. Within twelve months
after the acquisition date, the acquirer shall retrospectively adjust the provisional amounts
recognized as assets and liabilities at the acquisition date (i.e., account for them as if they were
made at the acquisition date) to reflect new information obtained. Beyond twelve months after the
acquisition date, adjustments to the initial accounting for a business combination shall be
recognized only to correct an error in accordance with Section 5 - Accounting Policies, Estimates
and Errors.
Goodwill
286 After initial recognition, the acquirer shall measure goodwill acquired in a business combination at
cost less accumulated amortization and accumulated impairment losses:
a) An entity shall amortize goodwill on a systematic basis over its useful life. The life shall be
determined based on management’s best estimate but shall not exceed ten (10) years.
b) An entity shall follow Section 21 - Impairment of Assets for recognizing and measuring the
impairment of goodwill.
Excess over cost of acquirer’s interest in the net fair value of acquiree’s identifiable
assets, liabilities and contingent liabilities
287 If the acquirer’s interest in the net fair value of the identifiable assets, liabilities and provisions for
contingent liabilities exceeds the cost of the business combination (sometimes referred to as
‘negative goodwill’ or ‘gain from a bargain purchase’), the acquirer shall recognize such excess
immediately in profit or loss.
Disclosures
288 For each business combination that was effected during the period, the acquirer shall disclose the
following:
a) the names and descriptions of the combining entities or businesses.
b) the acquisition date.
c) the percentage of voting equity instruments acquired.
d) the cost of the combination and a description of the components of that cost (such as cash,
equity instruments and debt instruments).
289 An acquirer shall disclose a reconciliation of the carrying amount of goodwill at the beginning and
end of the reporting period, showing separately:
a) changes arising from new business combinations
b) amortization
c) impairment losses
d) disposals of previously acquired businesses.
e) other changes
290 A lease is an agreement whereby the lessor conveys to the lessee in return for a payment or
series of payments the right to use an asset for an agreed period of time.
291 Some arrangements do not take the legal form of a lease but convey rights to use assets in return
for payments. Such arrangements are in substance leases of assets, and they should be
accounted for under this section.
292 A lessee shall recognize all lease payments as expense in profit or loss in the period in which
they are incurred.
293 A lessor shall recognize all lease receipts as income in profit or loss in the period in which they
are earned.
294 Lessors and lessees shall make the following disclosures for leases:
a) lease receipts or payments recognized in profit or loss; and
b) a general description of the lease’s significant leasing arrangements including, for example,
information about contingent rent, renewal, and purchase options.
295 This section applies to all provisions (i.e., liabilities of uncertain timing or amount), contingent
liabilities and contingent assets except those provisions covered by other sections of this
Framework. These include provisions relating to:
a) employee benefit obligations (Section 22 - Employee Benefits); and
b) income tax (Section 23 - Income Tax).
296 The requirements in this Section do not apply to executory contracts. Executory contracts are
contracts under which neither party has performed any of its obligations or both parties have
partially performed their obligations to an equal extent.
297 The word ‘provision’ is sometimes used in the context of such items as depreciation, impairment
of assets, and uncollectible receivables. Those are adjustments of the carrying amounts of
assets, rather than recognition of liabilities, and therefore are not covered by this Section.
Initial recognition
299 The entity shall recognize the provision as a liability in the statement of financial position and shall
recognize the amount of the provision as an expense, unless another section of this Framework
requires the cost to be recognized as part of the cost of an asset such as inventories or property,
plant and equipment.
300 The condition in paragraph 298(a) (obligation at the reporting date as a result of a past event)
means that a loss event has already occurred and the entity has no realistic alternative to settling
the obligation. This can happen either when the entity has a legal obligation that can be enforced
by law or when a past event (for example, a history of settling similar obligations in the past) has
resulted in other parties having a valid expectation that the entity will settle the obligation.
Obligations that will arise from the entity’s future actions (i.e., the future conduct of its business)
do not satisfy the condition in paragraph 298(a), no matter how likely they are to occur and even if
they are contractual. To illustrate, because of commercial pressures or legal requirements, an
entity may intend or need to carry out expenditure to operate in a particular way in the future (for
example, by fitting smoke filters in a particular type of factory). Because the entity can avoid the
future expenditure by its future actions, for example by changing its method of operation or selling
the factory, it has no present obligation for that future expenditure, and no provision is
recognized.
301 An entity shall not recognize a provision for future operating losses. Expected future losses do not
meet the definition of a liability. The expectation of future operating losses may be an indicator
that one or more assets are impaired.
302 An entity shall measure a provision at the best estimate of the amount required to settle the
obligation at the reporting date. The best estimate is the amount an entity would rationally pay to
settle the obligation at the end of the reporting period or to transfer it to a third party at that time.
a) When the provision involves a large population of items, the estimate of the amount reflects
the weighting of all possible outcomes by their associated probabilities. Where there is a
continuous range of possible outcomes, and each point in that range is as likely as any other,
the mid-point of the range is used.
b) When the provision arises from a single obligation, the individual most likely outcome may be
the best estimate of the amount required to settle the obligation. However, even in such a
case, the entity considers other possible outcomes. When other possible outcomes are either
mostly higher or mostly lower than the most likely outcome, the best estimate will be a higher
or lower amount than the single most likely outcome.
303 When the effect of the time value of money is material, the amount of a provision shall be the
present value of the amount expected to be required to settle the obligation. The discount rate (or
rates) shall be a pre-tax rate (or rates) that reflect(s) current market assessments of the time
value of money. The risks specific to the liability should be reflected either in the discount rate or
in the estimation of the amounts required to settle the obligation, but not both.
304 An entity shall exclude gains from the expected disposal of assets from the measurement of a
provision.
305 When some or all of the amount required to settle a provision may be reimbursed by another
party (for example, through an insurance claim), the entity shall recognize the reimbursement as
a separate asset only when it is virtually certain that the entity will receive the reimbursement on
settlement of the obligation. The amount recognized for the reimbursement shall not exceed the
amount of the provision. The reimbursement receivable shall be presented in the statement of
financial position as an asset and shall not be offset against the provision. In the statement of
income, the entity may offset any reimbursement from another party against the expense relating
to the provision.
Subsequent measurement
306 An entity shall charge against a provision only those expenditures for which the provision was
originally recognized.
307 An entity shall review provisions at each reporting date and adjust them to reflect the current best
estimate of the amount that would be required to settle the obligation at that reporting date. Any
adjustments to the amounts previously recognized shall be recognized in profit or loss unless the
provision was originally recognized as part of the cost of an asset (see paragraph 299). When a
provision is measured at the present value of the amount expected to be required to settle the
obligation, the subsequent reduction in the present value that results from the passing of time
shall be recognized in profit or loss in the period it arises.
Contingent liabilities
308 A contingent liability is either a possible but uncertain obligation or a present obligation that is not
recognized because it fails to meet one or both of the conditions (b) and (c) in paragraph 298. An
entity shall not recognize a contingent liability as a liability. When an entity is jointly and severally
liable for an obligation, the part of the obligation that is expected to be met by other parties is
treated as a contingent liability.
309 A contingent asset is a possible asset that arises from past events and whose existence will be
confirmed only by the occurrence or non-occurrence of one or more uncertain future events not
wholly within the control of the entity. An entity shall not recognize a contingent asset as an asset.
When the flow of future economic benefits to the entity is virtually certain, then the related asset is
not a contingent asset, and its recognition is appropriate.
Disclosures
310 For each class of provision, an entity shall disclose all of the following:
a) a reconciliation showing:
i) the carrying amount at the beginning and end of the period;
ii) additions during the period, including adjustments that result from changes in
measuring the discounted amount;
iii) amounts charged against the provision during the period; and
iv) unused amounts reversed during the period;
b) a brief description of the nature of the obligation and the expected amount and timing of any
resulting payments;
c) an indication of the uncertainties about the amount or timing of those outflows; and
d) the amount of any expected reimbursement, stating the amount of any asset that has been
recognized for that expected reimbursement.
311 Unless the possibility of any outflow of resources in settlement is remote, an entity shall disclose,
for each class of contingent liability at the reporting date, a brief description of the nature of the
contingent liability and, when practicable:
a) an estimate of its financial effect, measured in accordance with paragraphs 302 - 307;
b) an indication of the uncertainties relating to the amount or timing of any outflow; and
c) the possibility of any reimbursement.
If after making every reasonable effort to do so, an entity cannot make one or more of these
disclosures, that fact shall be stated.
312 If an inflow of economic benefits is probable (more likely than not) but not virtually certain, an
entity shall disclose a description of the nature of the contingent assets at the end of the reporting
period, and, when practicable without undue cost or effort, an estimate of their financial effect,
measured using the principles set out in paragraphs 302 - 307. If after making every reasonable
effort to do so, an entity cannot make this disclosure, that fact shall be stated.
Prejudicial disclosures
313 In extremely rare cases, disclosure of some or all of the information required by paragraphs 310 -
312 can be expected to seriously prejudice the position of the entity in a dispute with other parties
on the subject matter of the provision, contingent liability or contingent asset. In such cases, an
entity need not disclose the information, but shall disclose the general nature of the dispute,
together with the fact that, and reason why, the information has not been disclosed.
314 Equity is the residual interest in the assets of an entity after deducting all its liabilities. A liability is
a present obligation of the entity arising from past events, the settlement of which is expected to
result in an outflow from the entity of cash or other resources (for example, an instrument that
obligates the entity to pay cash to another party or gives another party the right to demand cash
from the entity is a liability of the entity). Equity includes investments by the owners of the entity,
plus additions to those investments earned through profitable operations and retained for use in
the entity’s operations, minus reductions to owners’ investments as a result of unprofitable
operations and distributions to owners.
315 Members’ shares in co-operative entities and similar instruments are equity if:
a) the co-operative entity has an unconditional right to refuse redemption of the members’
shares; or
b) redemption is unconditionally prohibited by local law, regulation or the entity’s governing
charter.
316 An entity shall recognize the issue of shares or other equity instruments as equity when it issues
those instruments and when another party is obliged to provide cash or other resources to the
entity in exchange for the instruments:
a) if the equity instruments are issued before the entity receives the cash or other resources, the
entity shall present the amount receivable as an offset to equity in its statement of financial
position, not as an asset.
b) if the entity receives the cash or other resources before the equity instruments are issued,
and the entity cannot be required to repay the cash or other resources received, the entity
shall recognize the corresponding increase in equity to the extent of consideration received.
c) to the extent that the equity instruments have been subscribed for but not issued, and the
entity has not yet received the cash or other resources, the entity shall not recognize an
increase in equity.
317 An entity shall measure the equity instruments at the amount of cash received. If payment is
deferred and the time value of money is material, the initial measurement shall be on a present
value basis. If the equity instruments are exchanged for resources other than cash, the equity
instruments shall be recognized at the fair value of those resources.
318 An entity shall account for the transaction costs (i.e., incremental costs that are directly
attributable to the issue) of an equity transaction as a deduction from equity, net of any related
income tax benefit.
Distributions to owners
319 An entity shall reduce equity for the amount of distributions to its owners (holders of its equity
instruments), net of any related income tax benefits.
320 Sometimes an entity distributes assets other than cash as dividends to its owners. When an entity
declares such a distribution and has an obligation to distribute non-cash assets to its owners, it
shall recognize a liability. It shall measure the liability at the fair value of the assets to be
distributed. At the end of each reporting period and at the date of settlement, the entity shall
review and adjust the carrying amount of the dividend payable to reflect changes in the fair value
of the assets to be distributed, with any changes recognized in equity as adjustments to the
The requirement does not apply to the distribution of a non-cash asset that is ultimately controlled
by the same party or parties before and after the distribution. This exclusion applies to the
separate, individual, consolidated, and equity-accounted financial statements of an entity that
makes the distribution
321 Revenue is the gross inflow of economic benefits during the period arising in the course of the
ordinary activities of an entity when those inflows result in increases in equity, other than
increases relating to contributions from equity participants. This section shall be applied in
accounting for revenue arising from the following transactions and events:
a) the sale of goods (whether produced by the entity for the purpose of sale or purchased for
resale);
b) the rendering of services;
c) construction contracts in which the entity is the contractor. A construction contract is a
contract specifically negotiated for the construction of an asset or a combination of assets
that are closely interrelated or interdependent in terms of their design, technology and
function or their ultimate purpose or use;
d) deposits or receivables yielding interest; and
e) dividends from investments in shares of stock that are not accounted for using the equity
method.
Measurement of revenue
322 An entity shall measure revenue at the fair value of the consideration received or receivable. The
fair value of the consideration received or receivable is after deducting the amount of any trade
discounts, prompt settlement discounts and volume rebates allowed by the entity. The fair value
also takes into account the time value of money.
323 An entity shall include in revenue only the gross inflows of economic benefits received and
receivable by the entity on its own account. An entity shall exclude from revenue all amounts
collected on behalf of third parties, for example sales taxes, goods and services taxes and value
added taxes collected on behalf of a government. In an agency relationship, an entity shall
include in revenue only the amount of its commission. The amounts collected on behalf of the
principal are not revenue of the entity.
Deferred payment
324 When the inflow of cash or cash equivalents is deferred, and the arrangement constitutes in effect
a financing transaction, the fair value of the consideration is the present value of all future
receipts determined using an imputed rate of interest. A financing transaction arises when, for
example, an entity provides interest-free credit to the buyer or accepts a note receivable bearing
a below-market interest rate from the buyer as consideration for the sale of goods. The imputed
rate of interest is the more clearly determinable of either:
a) the prevailing rate for a similar instrument of an issuer with a similar credit rating; or
b) a rate of interest that discounts the nominal amount of the instrument to the current cash
sales price of the goods or services.
An entity shall recognize the difference between the present value of all future receipts and the
nominal amount of the consideration as interest revenue in accordance with paragraph 338 and
Section 6 - Basic Financial Instruments.
325 An entity usually applies the revenue recognition criteria in this Section separately to each
transaction. However, an entity applies the recognition criteria to the separately identifiable
components of a single transaction when necessary to reflect the substance of the transaction.
For example, an entity applies the recognition criteria to the separately identifiable components of
a single transaction when the selling price of a product includes an identifiable amount for
subsequent servicing. Conversely, an entity applies the recognition criteria to two or more
transactions together when they are linked in such a way that the commercial effect cannot be
understood without reference to the series of transactions as a whole. For example, an entity
applies the recognition criteria to two or more transactions together when it sells goods and, at
the same time, enters into a separate agreement to repurchase the goods at a later date, thus
negating the substantive effect of the transaction.
Sale of goods
326 An entity shall recognize revenue from the sale of goods when all the following conditions are
satisfied:
a) the entity has transferred to the buyer the significant risks and rewards
of ownership of the goods;
b) the entity retains neither continuing managerial involvement to the degree usually associated
with ownership nor effective control over the goods sold;
c) the amount of revenue can be measured reliably;
d) it is probable (i.e., more likely than not) that the economic benefits associated with the
transaction will flow to the entity; and
e) the costs incurred or to be incurred in respect of the transaction can be measured reliably.
For a straightforward sale of goods for cash or on credit, revenue is generally recognized on the
date when the goods are delivered to the customer.
327 The assessment of when an entity has transferred the significant risks and rewards of ownership
to the buyer requires an examination of the circumstances of the transaction. In most cases, the
transfer of the risks and rewards of ownership coincides with the transfer of the legal title or the
passing of possession to the buyer. This is the case for most retail sales. An entity does not
recognize revenue if it retains significant risks and rewards of ownership, for example, if the
receipt of the revenue from a particular sale is contingent on the buyer selling the goods. If an
entity retains only an insignificant risk of ownership, the transaction is a sale and the entity
recognizes the revenue. For example, an entity recognizes revenue on the sale of goods if it
offers a refund if the customer finds the goods faulty or is not satisfied for other reasons, and the
entity can estimate the returns reliably. In such cases, the entity recognizes a provision for returns
in accordance with Section 16 - Provisions and Contingencies.
Rendering of services
328 When the outcome of a transaction involving the rendering of services can be estimated reliably,
an entity shall recognize revenue associated with the transaction by reference to the stage of
completion of the transaction at the end of the reporting period (sometimes referred to as the
percentage of completion method). The outcome of a transaction can be estimated reliably when
all the following conditions are satisfied:
a) the amount of revenue can be measured reliably;
b) it is probable that the economic benefits associated with the transaction will flow to the entity;
c) the stage of completion of the transaction at the end of the reporting period can be measured
reliably; and
d) the costs incurred for the transaction and the costs to complete the transaction can be
measured reliably.
329 When services are performed by an indeterminate number of acts over a specified period of time,
an entity recognizes revenue on a straight-line basis over the specified period unless there is
evidence that some other method better represents the stage of completion. When a specific act
is much more significant than any other act, the entity postpones recognition of revenue until the
significant act is executed.
330 When the outcome of the transaction involving the rendering of services cannot be estimated
reliably, an entity shall recognize revenue only to the extent of the expenses recognized that are
recoverable.
Construction contracts
331 When the outcome of a construction contract can be estimated reliably, an entity shall recognize
contract revenue and contract costs associated with the construction contract as revenue and
expenses respectively by reference to the stage of completion of the contract activity at the end of
the reporting period (often referred to as the percentage of completion method). Reliable
estimation of the outcome requires reliable estimates of the stage of completion, future costs and
collectability of billings. Paragraphs 332 - 337 provide guidance for applying the percentage of
completion method.
332 This method is used to recognize revenue from rendering services (see paragraphs 328 - 330)
and from construction contracts (see paragraph 331). An entity shall review and, when
necessary, revise the estimates of revenue and costs as the service transaction or construction
contract progresses.
333 An entity shall determine the stage of completion of a transaction or contract using the method
that most reliably measures the work performed. Possible methods include:
a) the proportion that costs incurred for work performed to date bear to the estimated total costs.
Costs incurred for work performed to date do not include costs relating to future activity, such
as for materials or prepayments;
b) surveys of work performed; and
c) completion of a physical proportion of the service transaction or contract work.
Progress payments and advances received from customers often do not reflect the work
performed.
334 An entity shall recognize costs that relate to future activity on the transaction or contract, such as
for materials or prepayments, as an asset if it is probable that the costs will be recovered.
335 An entity shall recognize as an expense immediately any costs whose recovery is not probable.
337 If the collectibility of an amount already recognized as contract revenue is no longer probable, the
entity shall recognize the uncollectible amount as an expense rather than as an adjustment of the
amount of contract revenue.
338 Interest shall be recognized using the effective interest method as described in paragraphs 104 -
109. Dividends shall be recognized when the shareholder’s right to receive payment is
established.
Disclosures
342 Borrowing costs are interest and other costs that an entity incurs in connection with the borrowing
of funds. Borrowing costs include interest expense calculated using the effective interest method
as described in Section 6 - Basic Financial Instruments.
Recognition
343 An entity shall recognize all borrowing costs as an expense in profit or loss in the period in which
they are incurred.
Disclosures
344 Disclosure requirements for financial liabilities are provided in Section 6 - Basic Financial
Instruments.
345 This section specifies the accounting for all share-based payment transactions including:
a) equity-settled share-based payment transactions, in which the entity acquires goods or
services as consideration for equity instruments of the entity (including shares or share
options);
b) cash-settled share-based payment transactions, in which the entity acquires goods or
services by incurring liabilities to the supplier of those goods or services for amounts that are
based on the price (or value) of the entity’s shares or other equity instruments of the entity;
and
c) transactions in which the entity receives or acquires goods or services and the terms of the
arrangement provide either the entity or the supplier of those goods or services with a choice
of whether the entity settles the transaction in cash (or other assets) or by issuing equity
instruments.
Recognition
346 An entity shall recognize the goods or services received or acquired in a share-based payment
transaction when it obtains the goods or as the services are received. The entity shall recognize a
corresponding increase in equity if the goods or services were received in an equity-settled
share-based payment transaction, or a liability if the goods or services were acquired in a cash-
settled share-based payment transaction.
347 When the goods or services received or acquired in a share-based payment transaction do not
qualify for recognition as assets, the entity shall recognize them as expenses.
348 If the share-based payments granted to employees vest immediately, the employee is not
required to complete a specified period of service before becoming unconditionally entitled to
those share-based payments. In the absence of evidence to the contrary, the entity shall presume
that services rendered by the employee as consideration for the share-based payments have
been received. In this case, on grant date, the entity shall recognize the services received in full,
with a corresponding increase in equity or liabilities.
349 If the share-based payments do not vest until the employee completes a specified period of
service, the entity shall presume that the services to be rendered by the counterparty as
consideration for those share-based payments will be received in the future, during the vesting
period. The entity shall account for those services as they are rendered by the employee during
the vesting period, with a corresponding increase in equity or liabilities.
Measurement principle
350 For equity-settled share-based payment transactions, an entity shall measure the goods or
services received, and the corresponding increase in equity, with reference to the net asset value
of the equity instruments granted. Net asset value is derived by dividing the total assets of the
entity less any liabilities, by the number of shares outstanding at measurement date.
352 A grant of equity instruments might be conditional on employees satisfying specified vesting
conditions related to service or performance. For example, a grant of shares or share options to
an employee is typically conditional on the employee remaining in the entity’s employ for a
specified period of time. There might be performance conditions that must be satisfied, such as
the entity achieving a specified growth in profit (a non-market vesting condition) or a specified
increase in the entity’s share price (a market vesting condition). All vesting conditions related to
solely employee service or to a non-market performance condition shall be taken into account
when estimating the number of equity instruments expected to vest. Subsequently, the entity shall
revise that estimate, if necessary, if new information indicates that the number of equity
instruments expected to vest differs from previous estimates. On vesting date, the entity shall
revise the estimate to equal the number of equity instruments that ultimately vested. All market
vesting conditions and non-vesting conditions shall be taken into account when estimating the fair
value of the shares or share options at the measurement date, with no subsequent adjustment
irrespective of the outcome.
353 An entity shall account for a cancellation or settlement of an equity-settled share-based payment
award as an acceleration of vesting, and therefore shall recognize immediately the amount that
otherwise would have been recognized for services received over the remainder of the vesting
period.
354 For cash-settled share-based payment transactions, an entity shall measure the goods or
services acquired and the liability incurred at the fair value of the liability. Until the liability is
settled, the entity shall remeasure the fair value of the liability at each reporting date and at the
date of settlement, with any changes in fair value recognized in profit or loss for the period.
Group plans
355 If a share-based payment award is granted by a parent entity to the employees of one or more
subsidiaries in the group, and the parent presents consolidated financial statements using either
the full IFRS/PFRS or IFRS/PFRS for SME, such subsidiaries are permitted to recognize and
measure share-based payment expense (and the related capital contribution by the parent) on
the basis of a reasonable allocation of the expense recognized for the group.
356 An entity shall disclose the following information about the nature and extent of share-based
payment arrangements that existed during the period:
a) a description of each type of share-based payment arrangement that existed at any time
during the period, including the general terms and conditions of each arrangement, such as
vesting requirements, the maximum term of options granted, and the method of settlement
(e.g., whether in cash or equity). An entity with substantially similar types of share-based
payment arrangements may aggregate this information.
b) the number and weighted average exercise prices of share options for each of the following
groups of options:
i. outstanding at the beginning of the period.
ii. granted during the period.
iii. forfeited during the period.
iv. exercised during the period.
v. expired during the period.
vi. outstanding at the end of the period.
vii. exercisable at the end of the period.
357 For cash-settled share-based payment arrangements, an entity shall disclose information about
how the liability was measured.
358 For share-based payment arrangements that were modified during the period, an entity shall
disclose an explanation of those modifications.
359 If the entity is part of a group share-based payment plan, and it recognizes and measures its
share-based payment expense on the basis of a reasonable allocation of the expense recognized
for the group, it shall disclose that fact and the basis for the allocation.
360 An entity shall disclose the following information about the effect of share-based payment
transactions on the entity’s profit or loss for the period and on its financial position:
a) the total expense recognized in profit or loss for the period; and
b) the total carrying amount at the end of the period for liabilities arising from share-based
payment transactions.
361 An impairment loss occurs when the carrying amount of an asset exceeds its recoverable
amount. This Section shall be applied in accounting for the impairment of all assets other than the
following, for which other sections of this Framework establish impairment requirements:
a) assets arising from employee benefits (see Section 22 - Employee Benefits); and
b) financial assets within the scope of Section 6 - Basic Financial Instruments.
Impairment of inventories
362 An entity shall assess at each reporting date whether any inventories are impaired. The entity
shall make the assessment by comparing the carrying amount of each item of inventory (or group
of similar items) with its market value. If an item of inventory (or group of similar items) is
impaired, the entity shall reduce the carrying amount of the inventory (or the group) to its market
value. Market value is determined as the probable selling price to willing buyers as of reporting
date. That reduction is an impairment loss and it is recognized immediately in profit or loss.
363 If, after making every reasonable effort to do so, an entity is unable to determine the market value
for inventories item by item, the entity may group items of inventory relating to the same product
line that have similar purposes or end uses and are produced and marketed in the same
geographical area for the purpose of assessing impairment.
Reversal of impairment
364 An entity shall make a new assessment of market value at each subsequent reporting date.
When the circumstances that previously caused inventories to be impaired no longer exist, or
when there is clear evidence of an increase in market value because of changed economic
circumstances, the entity shall reverse the amount of the impairment (i.e., the reversal is limited
to the amount of the original impairment loss) so that the new carrying amount is the lower of the
cost and the revised market value.
General principles
365 If, and only if, the recoverable amount of an asset is less than its carrying amount, the entity shall
reduce the carrying amount of the asset to its recoverable amount. That reduction is an
impairment loss. Paragraphs 371 - 380 provide guidance on measuring recoverable amount.
Indicators of impairment
367 An entity shall assess at each reporting date whether there is any indication that an asset may be
impaired. If any such indication exists, the entity shall estimate the recoverable amount of the
asset. If there is no indication of impairment, it is not necessary to estimate the recoverable
amount.
369 In assessing whether there is any indication that an asset may be impaired, an entity shall
consider, as a minimum, the following indications:
a) During the period, an asset’s market value has declined significantly more than would be
expected as a result of the passage of time or normal use.
b) Significant changes with an adverse effect on the entity have taken place during the period,
or will take place in the near future, in the technological, market, economic or legal
environment in which the entity operates or in the market to which an asset is dedicated.
c) Market interest rates or other market rates of return on investments have increased during
the period, and those increases are likely to affect materially the discount rate used in
calculating an asset’s value in use and decrease the asset’s fair value less costs to sell.
d) The carrying amount of the net assets of the entity is more than the estimated fair value of
the entity as a whole (such an estimate may have been made, for example, in relation to the
potential sale of part or all of the entity).
370 If there is an indication that an asset may be impaired, this may indicate that the entity should
review the remaining useful life, the depreciation method or the residual value for the asset and
adjust it in accordance with the section of this Framework applicable to the asset, even if no
impairment loss is recognized for the asset.
371 The recoverable amount of an asset or a cash-generating unit is the higher of its fair value less
costs to sell and its value in use. If it is not possible to estimate the recoverable amount of an
individual asset, references in paragraphs 372 - 380 to an asset should be read as references
also to an asset’s cash-generating unit.
372 It is not always necessary to determine both an asset’s fair value less costs to sell and its value in
use. If either of these amounts exceeds the asset’s carrying amount, the asset is not impaired
and it is no longer necessary to estimate the other amount.
374 Fair value less costs to sell is the amount obtainable from the sale of an asset in an arm’s length
transaction between knowledgeable, willing parties, less the costs of disposal. (See guidance in
Section 2 - Concepts and Pervasive Principles).
Value in use
375 Value in use is the present value of the future cash flows expected to be derived from an asset
(or cash-generating unit). This present value calculation involves the following steps:
a) estimating the future cash inflows and outflows to be derived from continuing use of the asset
and from its ultimate disposal; and
b) applying the appropriate discount rate to those future cash flows.
376 The following elements shall be reflected in the calculation of an asset’s value in use:
a) an estimate of the future cash flows the entity expects to derive from the asset;
b) expectations about possible variations in the amount or timing of those future cash flows;
c) the time value of money, represented by the current market risk-free rate of interest;
d) the price for bearing the uncertainty inherent in the asset; and
e) other factors, such as illiquidity, that market participants would reflect in pricing the future
cash flows the entity expects to derive from the asset.
377 In measuring value in use, estimates of future cash flows shall include:
a) projections of cash inflows from the continuing use of the asset;
b) projections of cash outflows that are necessarily incurred to generate the cash inflows from
continuing use of the asset (including cash outflows to prepare the asset for use) and can be
directly attributed, or allocated on a reasonable and consistent basis, to the asset; and
c) net cash flows, if any, expected to be received (or paid) for the disposal of the asset at the
end of its useful life in an arm’s length transaction between knowledgeable, willing parties.
The entity may wish to use any recent financial budgets or forecasts to estimate the cash flows, if
available. To estimate cash flow projections beyond the period covered by the most recent
budgets or forecasts an entity may wish to extrapolate the projections based on the budgets or
forecasts using a steady or declining growth rate for subsequent years, unless an increasing rate
can be justified.
379 Future cash flows shall be estimated for the asset in its current condition. Estimates of future
cash flows shall not include estimated future cash inflows or outflows that are expected to arise
from:
a) a future restructuring to which an entity is not yet committed; or
b) improving or enhancing the asset’s performance.
380 The discount rate (rates) used in the present value calculation shall be a pre-tax rate (rates) that
reflect(s) current market assessments of:
a) the time value of money; and
b) the risks specific to the asset for which the future cash flow estimates have not been
adjusted.
381 An impairment loss shall be recognized for a cash-generating unit if, and only if, the recoverable
amount of the unit is less than the carrying amount of the unit. The impairment loss shall be
allocated first to the goodwill and then pro-rated to the other assets of the unit on the basis of the
carrying amount of each asset in the cash-generating unit.
382 However, an entity shall not reduce the carrying amount of any asset in the cash-generating unit
below the highest of:
a) its fair value less costs to sell (if determinable);
b) its value in use (if determinable); and
c) zero.
383 Any excess amount of the impairment loss that cannot be allocated to an asset because of the
restriction in paragraph 382 shall be allocated to the other assets of the unit pro rata on the basis
of the carrying amount of those other assets.
384 An entity shall assess at each reporting date whether there is any indication that an impairment
loss recognized in prior periods may no longer exist or may have decreased. Indications that an
impairment loss may have decreased or may no longer exist are generally the opposite of those
set out in paragraph 369. If any such indication exists, the entity shall determine whether all or
part of the prior impairment loss should be reversed.
385 An entity shall include in profit or loss compensation from third parties for assets that were
impaired, lost or given up only when the compensation becomes a receivable.
Disclosures
386 An entity shall disclose the amount of impairment loss recognized in profit or loss during the
period and the line item in the statement of income in which the impairment loss is included for
each asset that was tested for impairment in accordance with this Section.
387 Employee benefits are all forms of consideration given by an entity in exchange for service
rendered by employees, including directors and management. An entity shall recognize the cost
of all employee benefits to which its employees have become entitled as a result of service
rendered to the entity during the reporting period:
a) as a liability, after deducting amounts that have been paid directly to the employees; and
b) as an expense, unless another section of this Framework requires the cost to be recognized
as part of the cost of an asset.
In other words, employee benefits are recognized when the employee earns those benefits, not
when those benefits are paid in cash.
388 Short-term employee benefits are employee benefits (other than termination benefits) that are
wholly due within twelve months after the end of the period in which the employees render the
related service, for example, wages, salaries, annual bonus payable, social security contributions
and non-monetary benefits such as cars. When an employee has rendered service to an entity
during the reporting period, the entity shall measure the amounts recognized in accordance with
paragraph 387 at the undiscounted amount of short-term employee benefits expected to be paid
in exchange for that service.
389 An entity may compensate employees for absence for various reasons including annual vacation
leave and sick leave. Some short-term compensated absences accumulate - they can be carried
forward and used in future periods if the employee does not use the current period’s entitlement
in full. An entity shall recognize the expected cost of accumulating compensated absences when
the employees render service that increases their entitlement to future compensated absences.
The entity shall measure the expected cost of accumulating compensated absences at the
undiscounted additional amount that the entity expects to pay as a result of the unused
entitlement that has accumulated at the end of the reporting period. The entity shall present this
amount as a current liability at the reporting date.
390 An entity shall recognize the cost of other (non-accumulating) compensated absences when the
absences occur. The entity shall measure the cost of non-accumulating compensated absences
at the undiscounted amount of salaries and wages paid or payable for the period of absence.
391 An entity shall recognize the expected cost of profit-sharing and bonus payments only when:
a) as a result of past events, the entity either has:
i) a present legal obligation; or
ii) an obligation arising from the entity’s past actions (for example, history of making
payments) that has created a valid expectation in other parties that the entity will
make such payments (this means the entity has no realistic alternative but to make
the payments); and
b) a reliable estimate of the obligation can be made.
392 Post-employment benefits are employee benefits (other than termination benefits) that are
payable after the completion of employment, for example, retirement benefits, such as pensions.
Arrangements whereby an entity provides post-employment benefits are post-employment benefit
plans.
394 Other long-term employee benefits are employee benefits (other than post-employment benefits
and termination benefits) that are not wholly due within twelve months after the end of the period
in which the employees render the related service, for example, long-service benefits, long-term
compensated absences such as long service or sabbatical leave, and bonuses payable twelve
months or more after the end of the period in which the employees render the related service.
395 An entity shall recognize a liability for other long-term employee benefits measured at the net total
of the following amounts:
a) the present value of the benefit obligation at the reporting date; less
b) the fair value of plan assets (if any) at the reporting date out of which the obligations are to be
settled directly.
396 An entity shall recognize the change in the liability in profit or loss as an expense unless another
section of this Framework requires the cost to be recognized as part of the cost of an asset such
as inventories or property, plant and equipment.
Termination benefits
397 Termination benefits are employee benefits payable as a result of either an entity’s decision to
terminate an employee’s employment before the normal retirement date, or an employee’s
decision to accept voluntary redundancy in exchange for those benefits. Because termination
benefits do not provide an entity with future economic benefits, an entity shall recognize them as
an expense in profit or loss immediately. This will normally be on payment of the benefits unless
formal plans are developed in advance.
Disclosures
398 An entity shall disclose the amount recognized in profit or loss as an expense for post-
employment benefit plans, the amount of its obligation, and the extent of funding at the reporting
date.
399 For each category of other long-term benefits that an entity provides to its employees, the entity
shall disclose the nature of the benefit, the amount of its obligation and the extent of funding at
the reporting date.
400 For each category of termination benefits that an entity provides to its employees, the entity shall
disclose the nature of the benefit and its accounting policy.
401 This section establishes principles for the recognition, measurement, presentation, and disclosure
of income taxes in an entity’s financial statements.
Accounting policy
402 An entity should make an accounting policy choice to account for income taxes using either
a) the taxes payable method or
b) the deferred income taxes method.
403 Under the taxes payable method, an entity shall recognize a current tax liability for tax payable on
taxable profit for the current and past periods. If the amount paid for the current and past periods
exceeds the amount payable for those periods, the entity shall recognize the excess as a current
tax asset.
404 An entity shall measure its current tax liabilities (assets) using the tax rates and laws that have
been enacted or substantively enacted by the reporting date. An entity shall regard tax rates as
substantively enacted when future events required by the enactment process historically have not
affected the outcome and are unlikely to do so.
405 An entity shall not discount current tax assets and liabilities.
406 Under deferred income taxes method, an entity shall recognize the current and future tax
consequences of transactions and other events that have been recognized in the financial
statements. These recognized tax amounts comprise current tax and deferred tax.
a) Current tax is determined in accordance with is the amount reported on an entity’s income tax
return for the period in conformity with tax laws or regulations.
b) Deferred tax is income tax payable (recoverable) in respect of the taxable profit (tax loss) for
future reporting periods as a result of past transactions or events. The past transactions or
events are those that:
i) have not yet been included in the entity’s income tax return although they have been
included when measuring profit or loss in conformity with this Framework; or
ii) have been included in the entity’s income tax return although they have been not yet
been included when measuring profit or loss in conformity with this Framework.
These differences between amounts reflected in current tax and amounts reflected in deferred tax
are known as temporary differences (explained in more detail in paragraph 414).
407 An entity shall recognize a deferred tax liability for all temporary differences that are expected to
increase taxable profit in the future (and therefore result in higher future tax payments). An entity
shall recognize a deferred tax asset for all temporary differences that are expected to reduce
taxable profit in the future (and will therefore benefit the entity by lowering future tax payments).
408 An entity shall recognize a deferred tax asset or liability for tax recoverable or payable in future
periods as a result of past transactions or events. Such tax arises from the difference between
the amounts recognized for the entity’s assets and liabilities in the statement of financial position
and the recognition of those assets and liabilities by the tax authorities, and the carryforward of
currently unused tax losses and tax credits. In most cases, those differences between the
amounts in the statement of financial position and the amounts recognized by the tax authorities
are accompanied by corresponding differences between profit or loss as measured by this
Framework and taxable profit or loss.
409 An entity shall account for deferred tax by following the steps (a)–(e) below:
a) identify which assets and liabilities would be expected to affect taxable profit if they were
recovered or settled for their present carrying amounts (paragraph 410);
b) determine the tax basis of the following at the end of the reporting period:
i) the assets and liabilities in (a) (paragraphs 411 - 412); and
ii) other items that have a tax basis (paragraph 413).
c) compute any temporary differences, unused tax losses and unused tax credits
(paragraph 414);
d) recognize deferred tax assets and deferred tax liabilities arising from the temporary
differences, unused tax losses and unused tax credits (paragraph 415); and
e) measure deferred tax assets and liabilities (paragraphs 417 - 419).
Assets and liabilities whose recovery or settlement will not affect taxable profit
410 If the entity expects to recover the carrying amount of an asset or settle the carrying amount of a
liability without affecting taxable profit, no deferred tax arises in respect of the asset or liability.
Therefore, paragraphs 412 - 419 apply only to assets and liabilities for which the entity expects
the recovery or settlement of the carrying amount to affect taxable profit and to other items that
have a tax basis. Examples of transactions that will not affect taxable profit include:
a) trade receivables for which revenue has already been included in taxable income as well as
in profit or loss under this Framework. Associated cash receipt will have no tax consequence;
b) bank loan payable. Repayment of the loan has no tax consequence; and
c) a non-tax deductible penalty incurred but not yet paid. The expense and related liability were
recognized under this Framework when incurred. The payment of the fine will have no tax
consequence.
Tax basis
411 An entity shall determine the tax basis of an asset, liability or other item in accordance with
enacted or substantively enacted law.
412 The tax basis determines the amounts that will be included in taxable profit on recovery or
settlement of the carrying amount of an asset or liability. Specifically:
a) the tax basis of an asset equals the amount that would have been deductible in arriving at
taxable profit if the carrying amount of the asset had been recovered through sale at the end
of the reporting period. If the recovery of the asset through sale does not increase taxable
profit, the tax basis shall be deemed to be equal to the carrying amount.
b) the tax basis of a liability equals its carrying amount less any amounts deductible in
determining taxable profit (or plus any amounts included in taxable profit) that would have
arisen if the liability had been settled for its carrying amount at the end of the reporting period.
413 Some items have a tax basis but are not recognized as assets or liabilities. For example,
research costs are recognized as an expense when they are incurred but may not be permitted
as a deduction in determining taxable profit until a future period. Thus, the carrying amount of the
research costs is nil and the tax basis is the amount that will be deducted in future periods. An
equity instrument issued by the entity may also give rise to deductions in a future period. There is
no asset or liability in the statement of financial position, but the tax basis is the amount of the
future deductions.
Temporary differences
416 An entity shall measure its deferred tax liabilities (assets) using the tax rates and laws that have
been enacted or substantively enacted by the reporting date. When different tax rates apply to
different levels of taxable profit, an entity shall measure deferred tax expense (income) and
related deferred tax liabilities (assets) using the average enacted or substantively enacted rates
that it expects to be applicable to the taxable profit (tax loss) of the periods in which it expects the
deferred tax asset to be realized or the deferred tax liability to be settled.
417 The measurement of deferred tax liabilities and deferred tax assets shall reflect the tax
consequences that would follow from the manner in which the entity expects, at the reporting
date, to recover or settle the carrying amount of the related assets and liabilities. For example, if
the temporary difference arises from an item of income that is expected to be taxable as a capital
gain in a future period, the deferred tax expense is measured using the capital gain tax rate.
418 An entity shall not discount deferred tax assets and liabilities.
419 The carrying amount of a deferred tax asset shall be reviewed at the end of each reporting
period. An entity shall reduce the carrying amount of a deferred tax asset to the extent that it is no
longer probable that sufficient taxable profit will be available to allow the benefit of part or all of
420 Carry-forward benefit of unused tax losses (net operating loss carryover or NOLCO) and unused
tax credits (excess minimum corporate income tax or MCIT) arising in the current period which
can be applied against the entity’s future taxable income and future tax liability, respectively,
should be recognized as an asset to the extent that it is probable that sufficient taxable profit will
allow the unused tax losses or unused tax credits be utilized.
421 When an entity pays dividends to its shareholders, it may be required to pay a portion of the
dividends to taxation authorities on behalf of the shareholders. Such an amount paid or payable
to taxation authorities is charged to equity as a part of the dividends.
Presentation
422 An entity shall recognize tax expense (income) in profit or loss or equity as the transaction or
other event that resulted in the tax expense (income).
Current/non-current distinction
423 An entity shall classify deferred tax assets (liabilities) as non-current assets (liabilities).
Offsetting
424 An entity shall offset current tax assets and current tax liabilities, or offset deferred tax assets and
deferred tax liabilities, only when it has a legally enforceable right to set off the amounts and it
intends either to settle on a net basis or to realize the asset and settle the liability simultaneously.
Deferred tax assets and liabilities will generally meet these criteria if they arise within a single
taxable entity and in a single jurisdiction.
Disclosures
425 If taxes payable method is adopted, an entity should disclose the following:
a) current tax expense (income);
b) any adjustments recognized in the period for current tax of prior periods; and
c) The amount and expiry dates of unused tax losses and unused tax credits.
426 If deferred income tax method is selected, an entity should disclose the following:
a) current tax expense (income);
b) any adjustments recognized in the period for current tax of prior periods;
c) the amount of deferred tax expense (income) relating to the origination and reversal of
temporary differences;
d) the amount of deferred tax expense (income) relating to changes in tax rates or the
imposition of new taxes; and
e) adjustments to deferred tax expense arising from a change in the tax status of the entity or its
shareholders.
f) aggregate current and deferred tax relating to items that are charged or credited directly to
equity
g) the amount (and expiry date, if any) of deductible temporary differences, unused tax losses
and unused tax credits for which no deferred tax asset is recognized in the statement of
financial position.
430 The Section does not apply to translation of operations or investments that are based or
conducted in a different country with different functional currency.
Functional Currency
431 An entity recognizes and measures transactions in the currency of the primary economic
environment in which the entity operates (known as the functional currency). This is usually the
one in which it primarily generates and expends cash.
432 An entity may buy or sell an item, or a service, where the price is denominated in a foreign
currency. An entity shall record the foreign currency transaction on initial recognition in its
functional currency, by applying to the foreign currency amount the spot exchange rate between
the functional currency and the foreign currency at the date of the transaction.
433 At the end of each reporting period, an entity shall translate any foreign currency monetary items
using the closing rate. An entity shall recognize, in profit or loss in the period in which they arise,
exchange differences arising on the settlement of monetary items or on translating monetary
items at rates different from those at which they were translated on initial recognition during the
period or in previous periods.
434 An entity may present its financial statements in a currency different from the one in which it
recognizes and measures transactions. In that case, the entity shall translate its items of income
and expense and financial position into the presentation currency.
Disclosure
435 The amount of an exchange gain or loss included in net income should be disclosed.
436 Events after the end of the reporting period are those events, favorable and unfavorable, that
occur between the end of the reporting period and the date when the financial statements are
authorized for issue.
437 An entity shall adjust the amounts recognized in its financial statements, or recognize items that
were not previously recognized, including related disclosures, to reflect adjusting events after the
end of the reporting period. Adjusting events after the end of the reporting period are those
events that provide evidence of conditions that existed at the end of the period.
439 An entity shall not adjust the amounts recognized in its financial statements to reflect non-
adjusting events after the end of the reporting period. Non-adjusting events after the end of the
reporting period are those events that are indicative of conditions that arose after the end of the
reporting period.
440 An example of a non-adjusting event after the end of the reporting period is a loss caused by
flood, fire, or other event that occurred after the end of the reporting period.
Dividends
441 If an entity declares dividends to holders of its equity instruments after the end of the reporting
period, the entity shall not recognize those dividends as a liability at the end of the reporting
period. The amount of the dividend may be presented as a segregated component of retained
earnings at the end of the reporting period.
442 An entity shall disclose the date when the financial statements were authorized for issue and who
gave that authorization. If the entity’s owners or others have the power to amend the financial
statements after issue, the entity shall disclose that fact.
443 An entity shall disclose the following for each category of non-adjusting event after the end of the
reporting period:
a) the nature of the event; and
b) an estimate of its financial effect or a statement that such an estimate cannot be made.
444 The following are examples of non-adjusting events after the end of the reporting period that
would generally result in disclosure; the disclosures will reflect information that becomes known
after the end of the reporting period but before the financial statements are authorized for issue:
a) major purchases or disposals of assets;
b) the destruction of a major production plant by a fire;
c) commencement of a major restructuring;
d) issues or repurchases of an entity’s equity instruments or the taking out or paying off of
significant loans;
e) changes in tax rates or tax laws enacted or announced that have a significant effect on
current and deferred tax assets and liabilities;
f) entering into significant commitments or contingent liabilities; and
g) commencement of major litigation arising solely out of events that occurred after the end of
the reporting period.
445 Disclosures about an entity’s related parties are necessary in the entity’s financial statements to
draw attention to the possibility that its financial position and profit or loss may have been affected
by the existence of related parties and by transactions and outstanding balances with those
parties. The definition of a related party is set out below. There are no specific measurement
requirements for related party transactions.
446 A related party transaction is a transfer of resources, services or obligations between a reporting
entity and a related party, regardless of whether a price is charged. Examples of related party
transactions that an entity may encounter include, but are not limited to:
a) transactions between the entity and its principal owner(s);
b) transactions between the entity and another entity when both entities are under the common
control of a single entity or person; and
c) transactions in which an entity or person that controls the reporting entity incurs expenses
directly that otherwise would have been borne by the reporting entity.
447 A related party is a person or entity that is related to the entity that is preparing its financial
statements (the reporting entity).
a) A person or a close member of that person’s family is related to a reporting entity if that
person:
i) is a member of the key management personnel of the reporting entity or of a parent
of the reporting entity;
ii) has control over the reporting entity; or
iii) has joint control or significant influence over the reporting entity or has significant
voting power in it.
b) An entity is related to a reporting entity if any of the following conditions applies:
i) the entity and the reporting entity are members of the same group (which means that
each parent, subsidiary and fellow subsidiary is related to the others);
ii) either entity is an associate or joint venture of the other entity (or of a member of a
group of which the other entity is a member);
iii) both entities are joint ventures of a third entity;
iv) one entity is a joint venture of a third entity and the other entity is an associate of the
third entity;
v) the entity is a post-employment benefit plan for the benefit of employees of either the
reporting entity or an entity related to the reporting entity. If the reporting entity is
itself such a plan, the sponsoring employers are also related to the plan;
vi) the entity is controlled or jointly controlled by a person identified in (a);
vii) a person identified in (a)(i) has significant voting power in the entity;
viii) a person identified in (a)(ii) has significant influence over the entity or significant
voting power in it;
ix) a person or a close member of that person’s family has both significant influence over
the entity or significant voting power in it and joint control over the reporting entity; or
x) a member of the key management personnel of the entity or of a parent of the entity,
or a close member of that member’s family, has control or joint control over the
reporting entity or has significant voting power in it.
448 In considering each possible related party relationship, an entity shall assess the substance of the
relationship and not merely the legal form.
450 Key management personnel are those persons having authority and responsibility for planning,
directing and controlling the activities of the entity, directly or indirectly, including any director
(whether executive or otherwise) of that entity. Compensation includes all forms of consideration
paid, payable or provided by the entity, or on behalf of the entity (for example, by its parent or
owner), in exchange for services rendered to the entity. It also includes such consideration paid
on behalf of a parent of the entity in respect of goods or services provided to the entity.
Disclosures
451 Relationships between a parent and its subsidiaries shall be disclosed irrespective of whether
there have been related party transactions. An entity shall disclose the name of its parent and, if
different, the ultimate controlling party. If neither the entity’s parent nor the ultimate controlling
party produces financial statements available for public use, the name of the next most senior
parent that does so (if any) shall also be disclosed.
453 If an entity has related party transactions, it shall disclose the nature of the related party
relationship as well as information about the transactions, outstanding balances and
commitments necessary for an understanding of the potential effect of the relationship on the
financial statements. Those disclosure requirements are in addition to the requirements in
paragraph 452 to disclose key management personnel compensation. At a minimum, disclosures
shall include:
a) the amount of the transactions;
b) the amount of outstanding balances;
i) their terms and conditions, including whether they are secured, and the nature of the
consideration to be provided in settlement; and
ii) details of any guarantees given or received;
c) provisions for uncollectible receivables related to the amount of outstanding balances; and
d) the expense recognized during the period in respect of bad or doubtful debts due from related
parties.
Such transactions could include purchases, sales, or transfers of goods or services; leases;
guarantees; and settlements by the entity on behalf of the related party or vice versa.
454 An entity shall make the disclosures required by paragraph 453 separately for each of the
following categories:
a) entities with control, joint control or significant influence over the entity;
b) entities over which the entity has control, joint control or significant influence;
c) key management personnel of the entity or its parent (in the aggregate); and
d) other related parties.
456 An entity shall not state that related party transactions were made on terms equivalent to those
that prevail in arm’s length transactions unless such terms can be substantiated.
457 An entity may disclose items of a similar nature in the aggregate except when separate disclosure
is necessary for an understanding of the effects of related party transactions on the financial
statements of the entity.
458 This Section shall be applied to account for the following when they relate to agricultural activity:
a) biological assets; and
b) agricultural produce at the point of harvest.
Recognition
459 An entity shall recognize a biological asset or agricultural produce when, and only when:
a) the entity controls the asset as a result of past events;
b) it is probable that future economic benefits associated with the asset will flow to the entity; and
c) the fair value or cost of the asset can be measured reliably without undue cost or effort.
Measurement
460 An entity that is engaged in agricultural activity has an option to measure its biological assets
applying either:
a) the current market price model in paragraph 461; or
b) the cost model in paragraph 463.
461 An entity shall measure a biological asset on initial recognition and at each reporting date at its
current market price or the probable selling price to willing buyers as of reporting date. Changes
in current market price shall be recognized in profit or loss.
462 Agricultural produce harvested from an entity’s biological assets shall be measured at its current
market price at the point of harvest. Such measurement is the cost at that date when applying
Section 8 - Inventories or another applicable section of this Framework.
Cost model
463 The entity shall measure a biological asset at cost less any accumulated depreciation and any
accumulated impairment losses. Refer to Section 12 - Property, Plant and Equipment for
guidance on the application of cost model.
Disclosures
464 An entity shall disclose the following with respect to its biological assets measured using the fair
value model:
a) a description of each class of its biological assets.
b) the methods and significant assumptions applied in determining the current market price of
each category of agricultural produce at the point of harvest and each category of biological
assets.
c) a reconciliation of changes in the carrying amount of biological assets between the beginning
and the end of the current period. The reconciliation shall include:
i) the gain or loss arising from changes in current market price
ii) increases resulting from purchases.
iii) decreases resulting from harvest.
iv) other changes.
466 This section specifies the accounting for all government grants. A government grant is assistance
by government in the form of a transfer of resources to an entity in return for past or future
compliance with specified conditions relating to the operating activities of the entity.
467 Government grants exclude those forms of government assistance that cannot reasonably have a
value placed upon them and transactions with government that cannot be distinguished from the
normal trading transactions of the entity.
468 This section does not cover government assistance that is provided for an entity in the form of
benefits that are available in determining taxable profit or tax loss, or are determined or limited on
the basis of income tax liability. Examples of such benefits are income tax holidays and
investment tax credits.
470 A government grant may take the form of a transfer of a non-monetary asset, such as land or
other resources, for the use of the entity. In these circumstances, an entity should make an
accounting policy to either:
a) not recognize the non-monetary grant; or
b) recognize the non-monetary grant at fair value.
Disclosures
471 An entity shall disclose the following about monetary government grants:
a) the nature and amounts of government grants recognized in the financial statements.
b) unfulfilled conditions and other contingencies attaching to government grants that have not
been recognized in income.
472 For non-monetary grants, an entity shall disclose the accounting policy taken in accordance with
paragraph 471, the nature of the government grant and any unfulfilled conditions or contingencies
attached. Where fair value measurement is elected in accordance with paragraph 471(b) or fair
value is voluntarily disclosed, valuation hierarchy in accordance with paragraph 12 must be
applied and the financial statements must describe how fair values were derived.
473 This Section applies to a first-time adopter of this Framework regardless of whether its previous
accounting framework was full PFRSs or PFRS for SMEs.
474 An entity can be a first-time adopter of this Framework only once. If an entity using this
Framework stops using it for one or more reporting periods and then is required, or chooses, to
adopt it again later, the special exemptions, simplifications and other requirements in this Section
do not apply to the re-adoption.
First-time adoption
475 An entity’s first financial statements that conform to this Framework are the first annual financial
statements in which the entity makes an explicit and unreserved statement in those financial
statements of compliance with this Framework. Financial statements prepared in accordance with
this Framework are an entity’s first such financial statements if, for example, the entity:
a) did not present financial statements for previous periods;
b) presented its most recent previous financial statements under national requirements that are
not consistent with this Framework in all respects; or
c) presented its most recent previous financial statements in conformity with full PFRSs or
PFRS for SMEs.
476 An entity’s date of transition to this Framework is the beginning of the earliest period for which the
entity presents full comparative information in accordance with this Framework.
477 Except as provided in paragraphs 479 - 481, an entity shall, in its opening statement of financial
position as of its date of transition to this Framework:
a) recognize all assets and liabilities whose recognition is required by this Framework;
b) not recognize items as assets or liabilities if this Framework does not permit such recognition;
c) reclassify items that it recognized under its previous financial reporting framework as one
type of asset, liability or component of equity, but are a different type of asset, liability or
component of equity under this Framework; and
d) apply this Framework in measuring all recognized assets and liabilities.
478 The accounting policies that an entity uses in its opening statement of financial position under this
Framework may differ from those that it used for the same date using its previous financial
reporting framework. The resulting adjustments arise from transactions, other events or
conditions before the date of transition to this Framework. Therefore, an entity shall recognize
those adjustments directly in retained earnings (or, if appropriate, another category of equity) at
the date of transition to this Framework.
479 On first-time adoption of this Framework, an entity shall not retrospectively change the accounting
that it followed under its previous financial reporting framework for either of the following
transactions:
a) derecognition of financial assets and financial liabilities. Financial assets and liabilities
derecognized under an entity’s previous accounting framework before the date of transition
should not be recognized upon adoption of this Framework. Conversely, for financial assets
and liabilities that would have been derecognized under this Framework in a transaction that
took place before the date of transition, but that were not derecognized under an entity’s
480 An entity may use one or more of the following exemptions in preparing its first financial
statements that conform to this Framework:
a) Fair value as deemed cost. A first-time adopter may elect to measure an item of property,
plant and equipment on the date of transition to this Framework at its fair value and use that
fair value as its deemed cost at that date.
b) Revaluation as deemed cost. A first-time adopter may elect to use a previous GAAP
revaluation of an item of property, plant and equipment at, or before, the date of transition to
this Framework as its deemed cost at the revaluation date.
c) Deferred income tax. A first-time adopter is not required to recognize, at the date of transition
to this Framework, deferred tax assets or deferred tax liabilities relating to differences
between the tax basis and the carrying amount of any assets or liabilities for which
recognition of those deferred tax assets or liabilities would involve undue cost or effort.
d) Arrangements containing a lease. A first-time adopter may elect to determine whether an
arrangement existing at the date of transition to this Framework contains a lease (see
paragraph 291 on the basis of facts and circumstances existing at that date, rather than when
the arrangement was entered into).
481 If it is impracticable for an entity to restate the opening statement of financial position at the date
of transition for one or more of the adjustments required by paragraph 478 (i.e., the entity cannot
restate after making every reasonable effort to do so), the entity shall apply paragraphs 478 - 481
for such adjustments in the earliest period for which it is practicable to do so.
Disclosures
482 If it is impracticable for an entity to restate the opening statement of financial position at the date
of transition for one or more of the adjustments required by paragraph 477, the entity shall
disclose which line items in the financial statements are affected. If it is impracticable for an entity
to provide any disclosures required by this Framework, including for comparative periods, the
omission shall be disclosed.
483 An entity shall explain how the transition from its previous financial reporting framework to this
Framework affected its reported financial position, financial performance and cash flows.
Reconciliations
484 To comply with paragraph 483, an entity’s first financial statements prepared using this
Framework shall include:
a) a description of the nature of each change in accounting policy;
b) reconciliations of its equity determined in accordance with its previous financial reporting
framework to its equity determined in accordance with this Framework for both of the
following dates:
i) the date of transition to the Framework;
ii) the end of the latest period presented in the entity’s most recent annual financial
statements determined in accordance with its previous financial reporting framework;
and
c) a reconciliation of the profit or loss determined in accordance with its previous financial
reporting framework for the latest period in the entity’s most recent annual financial
statements to its profit or loss determined in accordance with this Framework for the same
period.
486 If an entity did not present financial statements for previous periods, it shall disclose that fact in its
first financial statements that conform to the Framework.
Effective date
487 An entity shall apply this Framework in its annual financial statements for periods beginning on or
after 1 January 2019. Earlier application is permitted. If an entity applies this Framework in its
financial statements for a period before 1 January 2019, it shall disclose that fact.
accounting policies The specific principles, bases, conventions, rules and practices applied by an
entity in preparing and presenting financial statements.
accrual basis of accounting The effects of transactions and other events are recognized when they occur
(and not as cash or its equivalent is received or paid) and they are recorded in
the accounting records and reported in the financial statements of the periods to
which they relate.
accumulating compensated Compensated absences that are carried forward and can be used in future
absences periods if the current period’s entitlement is not used in full.
active market A market in which transactions for the asset or liability take place with sufficient
frequency and volume to provide pricing information on an ongoing basis.
amortization The systematic allocation of the depreciable amount of an asset over its useful
life.
amortized cost of a financial asset or The amount at which the financial asset or financial liability is measured at initial
financial liability recognition minus principal repayments, plus or minus the cumulative
amortization using the effective interest method of any difference between that
initial amount and the maturity amount, and minus any reduction (directly or
through the use of an allowance account) for impairment or uncollectibility.
asset A resource controlled by the entity as a result of past events and from which
future economic benefits are expected to flow to the entity.
borrowing costs Interest and other costs incurred by an entity in connection with the borrowing of
funds.
business An integrated set of activities and assets conducted and managed for the
purpose of providing:
(a) a return to investors; or
(b) lower costs or other economic benefits directly and proportionately to
policyholders or participants.
A business generally consists of inputs, processes applied to those inputs, and
resulting outputs that are, or will be, used to generate revenues. If goodwill is
business combination The bringing together of separate entities or businesses into one reporting
entity.
carrying amount The amount at which an asset or liability is recognized in the statement of
financial position.
cash equivalent Short-term, highly liquid investments that are readily convertible to known
amounts of cash and that are subject to an insignificant risk of changes in value.
cash-generating unit The smallest identifiable group of assets that generates cash inflows that are
largely independent of the cash inflows from other assets or groups of assets.
cash-settled share-based payment A share-based payment transaction in which the entity acquires goods or
transaction services by incurring a liability to transfer cash or other assets to the supplier of
those goods or services for amounts that are based on the price (or value) of
equity instruments (including shares or share options) of the entity or another
group entity.
change in accounting estimate An adjustment of the carrying amount of an asset or a liability, or the amount of
the periodic consumption of an asset, that results from the assessment of the
present status of, and expected future benefits and obligations associated with,
assets and liabilities. Changes in accounting estimates result from new
information or new developments and, accordingly, are not corrections of errors.
class of assets A grouping of assets of a similar nature and use in an entity’s operations.
close members of the family of a Those family members who may be expected to influence, or be influenced by,
person that person in their dealings with the entity, including:
(a) that person’s children and spouse or domestic partner;
(b) children of that person’s spouse or domestic partner; and of that person or
that person’s spouse or domestic partner
consolidated financial statements The financial statements of a parent and its subsidiaries presented as those of a
single economic entity.
contingent liability (a) A possible obligation that arises from past events and whose existence will
be confirmed only by the occurrence or non-occurrence of one or more
uncertain future events not wholly within the control of the entity; or
(b) a present obligation that arises from past events but is not recognized
because:
(i) it is not probable that an outflow of resources embodying economic
benefits will be required to settle the obligation, or
(ii) the amount of the obligation cannot be measured with sufficient
reliability.
control (of an entity) The power to govern the financial and operating policies of an entity so as to
obtain benefits from its activities.
current tax The amount of income tax payable (recoverable) in respect of the taxable profit
(tax loss) for the current period or past periods.
date of transition to the PFRS for The beginning of the earliest period for which an entity presents full comparative
Small Entities information under the PFRS for Small Entities in its first financial statements that
comply with the PFRS for Small Entities.
deferred tax Income tax payable (recoverable) in respect of the taxable profit (tax loss) for
future periods as a result of past transactions or events.
deferred tax assets The amounts of income tax recoverable in future periods in respect of:
(a) deductible temporary differences;
(b) the carryforward of unused tax losses; and
(c) the carryforward of unused tax credits.
deferred tax liabilities The amounts of income tax payable in future periods in respect of taxable
temporary differences.
depreciable amount The cost of an asset, or other amount substituted for cost (in the financial
statements), less its residual value.
depreciation The systematic allocation of the depreciable amount of an asset over its useful
life.
development The application of research findings or other knowledge to a plan or design for
the production of new or substantially improved materials, devices, products,
processes, systems or services before the start of commercial production or
use.
effective interest rate The rate that exactly discounts estimated future cash payments or receipts
through the expected life of the financial instrument or, when appropriate, a
shorter period to the net carrying amount of the financial asset or financial
liability.
effectiveness of a hedge The degree to which changes in the fair value or cash flows of the hedged item
that are attributable to a hedged risk are offset by changes in the fair value or
cash flows of the hedging instrument.
employee benefits All forms of consideration given by an entity in exchange for service
rendered by employees.
equity The residual interest in the assets of the entity after deducting all its liabilities.
equity-accounted financial The financial statements of a parent in which investments in subsidiaries are
statements equity-accounted.
errors Omissions from, and misstatements in, the entity’s financial statements for one
or more prior periods arising from a failure to use, or misuse of, reliable
information that:
(a) was available when financial statements for those periods were
authorized for issue; and
(b) could reasonably be expected to have been obtained and taken into
account in the preparation and presentation of those financial statements.
expenses Decreases in economic benefits during the reporting period in the form of
outflows or depletions of assets or incurrences of liabilities that result in
decreases in equity, other than those relating to distributions to owners.
fair presentation Faithful representation of the effects of transactions, other events and conditions
in accordance with the definitions and recognition criteria for assets, liabilities,
income and expenses.
fair value The amount for which an asset could be exchanged, a liability settled or an
equity instrument granted could be exchanged, between knowledgeable, willing
parties in an arm’s length transaction.
fair value less costs to sell The amount obtainable from the sale of an asset or cash-generating unit in an
arm’s length transaction between knowledgeable, willing parties, less the costs
of disposal.
financial instrument A contract that gives rise to a financial asset of one entity and a financial liability
or equity instrument of another entity.
financial position The relationship of the assets, liabilities and equity of an entity as reported in the
statement of financial position.
financial statements Structured representation of the financial position, financial performance and
cash flows of an entity.
financing activities Activities that result in changes in the size and composition of the contributed
equity and borrowings of the entity.
first-time adopter of the PFRS for An entity that presents its first annual financial statements that conform to the
Small Entities PFRS for Small Entities, regardless of whether its previous accounting
framework was full PFRSs, PFRS for SMEs or another set of accounting
standards.
functional currency The currency of the primary economic environment in which the entity operates.
gains Increases in economic benefits that meet the definition of income but are not
revenue.
going concern An entity is a going concern unless management either intends to liquidate the
entity or to cease operations, or has no realistic alternative but to do so.
goodwill Future economic benefits arising from assets that are not capable of being
individually identified and separately recognized.
grant date The date at which the entity and another party (including an employee) agree to
a share-based payment arrangement, being when the entity and the
counterparty have a shared understanding of the terms and conditions of the
arrangement. At the grant date, the entity confers on the counterparty the right
to cash, other assets or equity instruments of the entity, provided the specified
vesting conditions, if any, are met. If that agreement is subject to an approval
process (for example, by shareholders), the grant date is the date when that
approval is obtained.
hedged item For the purpose of special hedge accounting by Small Entities under Section 7
of this Standard, a hedged item is:
(a) interest rate risk of a debt instrument measured at amortized cost;
(b) foreign exchange or interest rate risk in a firm commitment or a highly
probable forecast transaction; or
(c) price risk of a commodity that it holds or in a firm commitment or highly
probable forecast transaction to purchase or sell a commodity.
hedging instrument For the purpose of special hedge accounting by Small Entities under Section 7
of this Standard, a hedging instrument is a financial instrument that meets all of
the following terms and conditions:
(a) it is an interest rate swap, a foreign currency swap, a foreign currency
forward exchange contract or a commodity forward exchange contract
that is expected to be highly effective in offsetting a risk identified in
joint venturer A party to a joint venture that has joint control over that joint venture.
impairment (loss) The amount by which the carrying amount of an asset exceeds:
(a) in the case of inventories, its selling price less costs to complete and sell;
or
(b) in the case of other non-financial assets, its recoverable amount.
impracticable Applying a requirement is impracticable when the entity cannot apply it after
making every reasonable effort to do so.
income Increases in economic benefits during the reporting period in the form of inflows
or enhancements of assets or decreases of liabilities that result in increases in
equity, other than those relating to contributions from owners.
income tax All domestic and foreign taxes that are based on taxable profits. Income tax also
includes taxes, such as withholding taxes, that are payable by a subsidiary,
associate or joint arrangement on distributions to the reporting entity.
investing activities The acquisition and disposal of long-term assets and other investments not
included in cash equivalents.
investment property Property (land or a building, or part of a building, or both) held by the owner to
earn rentals or for capital appreciation or both, instead of for:
(a) use in the production or supply of goods or services or for administrative
purposes; or
(b) sale in the ordinary course of business.
joint control The contractually agreed sharing of control of an arrangement, which exists only
when decisions about the relevant activities require the unanimous consent of
the parties sharing control
joint operation A joint arrangement whereby the parties that have joint control of the
arrangement have rights to the assets, and obligations for the liabilities, relating
to the arrangement. Those parties are called joint operators.
joint venture A joint arrangement whereby the parties that have joint control of the
arrangement have rights to the net assets of the arrangement. Those parties are
called joint venturers.
lease An agreement whereby the lessor conveys to the lessee in return for a payment
or series of payments the right to use an asset for an agreed period of time.
liability A present obligation of the entity arising from past events, the settlement of
which is expected to result in an outflow from the entity of resources embodying
economic benefits.
loans payable Financial liabilities other than short-term trade payables on normal credit terms.
market price or value Market price or value is the probable selling price to willing buyers as of
reporting date.
market vesting condition A condition upon which the exercise price, vesting or exercisability of an equity
instrument depends that is related to the market price of the entity’s equity
instruments, such as attaining a specified share price or a specified amount of
intrinsic value of a share option, or achieving a specified target that is based on
the market price of the entity’s equity instruments relative to an index of market
prices of equity instruments of other entities.
monetary items Units of currency held and assets and liabilities to be received or paid in a fixed
or determinable number of units of currency.
non-controlling interest The equity in a subsidiary not attributable, directly or indirectly, to a parent.
notes (to financial statements) Notes contain information in addition to that presented in the statement of
financial position, statement of income, combined statement of income and
retained earnings (if presented), statement of changes in equity and
statement of cash flows. Notes provide narrative descriptions or disaggregations
of items presented in those statements and information about items that do not
qualify for recognition in those statements.
notional amount The quantity of currency units, shares, bushels, pounds or other units specified
in a financial instrument contract.
objective of financial statements To provide information about the financial position, performance and cash flows
of an entity that is useful for economic decision-making by a broad range of
users who are not in a position to demand reports tailored to meet their
particular information needs.
operating activities The principal revenue-producing activities of the entity and other activities that
are not investing or financing activities.
performance The relationship of the income and expenses of an entity, as reported in the
statement of income.
PFRS for SMEs Philippine Financial Reporting Standard for Small and Medium-sized Entities
post-employment benefits Employee benefits (other than termination benefits) that are payable after the
completion of employment.
post-employment benefit plans Formal or informal arrangements under which an entity provides post-
employment benefits for one or more employees.
present value A current estimate of the present discounted value of the future net cash flows
in the normal course of business.
presentation currency The currency in which the financial statements are presented.
prudence The inclusion of a degree of caution in the exercise of the judgements needed in
making the estimates required under conditions of uncertainty, such that assets
or income are not overstated and liabilities or expenses are not understated.
publicly traded (debt or equity Traded, or in process of being issued for trading, in a public market (a domestic
instruments) or foreign stock exchange or an over-the-counter market, including local and
regional markets).
recoverable amount The higher of an asset’s (or cash-generating unit’s) fair value less costs to sell
and its value in use.
related party A related party is a person or entity that is related to the entity that is preparing
its financial statements (the reporting entity):
(a) a person or a close member of that person’s family is related to a reporting
entity if that person:
(i) is a member of the key management personnel of the reporting entity
or of a parent of the reporting entity;
(ii) has control over the reporting entity; or
(iii) has joint control or significant influence over the reporting entity or has
significant voting power in it.
(b) an entity is related to a reporting entity if any of the following conditions
applies:
(i) the entity and the reporting entity are members of the same group
(which means that each parent, subsidiary and fellow subsidiary is
related to the others).
(ii) one entity is an associate or joint venture of the other entity (or an
associate or joint venture of a member of a group of which the other
entity is a member).
(iii) both entities are joint ventures of the same third entity.
(iv) one entity is a joint venture of a third entity and the other entity is an
associate of the third entity.
(v) the entity is a post-employment benefit plan for the benefit of
employees of either the reporting entity or an entity related to the
reporting entity. If the reporting entity is itself such a plan, the
sponsoring employers are also related to the plan.
(vi) the entity is controlled or jointly controlled by a person identified in (a).
related party transaction A transfer of resources, services or obligations between related parties,
regardless of whether a price is charged.
relevance The quality of information that allows it to influence the economic decisions of
users by helping them evaluate past, present or future events or confirming, or
correcting, their past evaluations.
reliability The quality of information that makes it free from material error and bias and
represent faithfully that which it either purports to represent or could reasonably
be expected to represent.
reporting date The end of the latest period covered by financial statements
research Original and planned investigation undertaken with the prospect of gaining new
scientific or technical knowledge and understanding.
residual value (of an asset) The estimated amount that an entity would currently obtain from disposal of an
asset, after deducting the estimated costs of disposal, if the asset was already
of the age and in the condition expected at the end of its useful life.
retrospective application (of a Applying a new accounting policy to transactions, other events and conditions
change in accounting policy) as if that policy had always been applied.
revenue The gross inflow of economic benefits during the period arising in the course of
the ordinary activities of an entity when those inflows result in increases in
equity, other than increases relating to contributions from equity participants.
separate financial statements Those presented by an entity, in which the entity could elect, in accordance with
Section 4, to account for its investments in subsidiaries, joint ventures and
associates either at cost less impairment or using the equity method.
share-based payment arrangement An agreement between the entity (or another group entity or any shareholder of
any group entity) and another party (including an employee) that entitles the
other party to receive:
(a) cash or other assets of the entity for amounts that are based on the price
(or value) of equity instruments (including shares or share options) of the
entity or another group entity; or
(b) equity instruments (including shares or share options) of the entity or
another group entity, provided the specified vesting conditions, if any, are
met.
statement of cash flows A financial statement that provides information about the changes in cash and
cash equivalents of an entity for a period, showing separately changes during
the period from operating, investing and financing activities.
statement of changes in equity A financial statement that presents the profit or loss for a period, items of
income and expense recognized directly in equity for the period, the effects of
changes in accounting policy and corrections of errors recognized in the period
and (depending on the format of the statement of changes in equity chosen by
the entity) the amounts of transactions with owners acting in their capacity as
owners during the period.
statement of financial position A financial statement that presents the relationship of an entity’s assets,
liabilities and equity as of a specific date (also called the balance sheet).
statement of income A financial statement that presents all items of income and expense recognized
in a reporting period
statement of income and retained A financial statement that presents the profit or loss and changes in retained
earnings earnings for a period.
tax basis The tax basis of an asset or liability is the amount attributed to that asset or
liability for tax purposes.
tax expense The aggregate amount included in total comprehensive income or equity for the
reporting period in respect of current tax and deferred tax.
taxable profit (tax loss) The profit (loss) for a reporting period upon which income taxes are payable or
recoverable, determined in accordance with the rules established by the
taxation authorities. Taxable profit equals taxable income less amounts
deductible from taxable income.
temporary differences Differences between the carrying amount of an asset or liability in the statement
of financial position and its tax basis.
transaction costs (financial Incremental costs that are directly attributable to the acquisition, issue or
instruments) disposal of a financial instrument. An incremental cost is one that would not
useful life The period over which an asset is expected to be available for use by an entity
or the number of production or similar units expected to be obtained from the
asset by an entity.
value in use The present value of the future cash flows expected to be derived from an asset
or cash-generating unit.
vested benefits Benefits, the rights to which, under the conditions of a retirement benefit plan,
are not conditional on continued employment.
vesting conditions The conditions that determine whether the entity receives the services that
entitle the counterparty to receive cash, other assets or equity instruments of the
entity, under a share-based payment arrangement. Vesting conditions are either
service conditions or performance conditions. Service conditions require the
counterparty to complete a specified period of service. Performance conditions
require the counterparty to complete a specified period of service and specified
performance targets to be met (such as a specified increase in the entity’s profit
over a specified period of time). A performance condition might include a market
vesting condition.
vesting period The period during which all the specified vesting conditions of a share-based
payment arrangement are to be satisfied.