History of IAS 16 Date Development Comments: and Equipment in The Context of The Historical Cost System Published

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S 16 Property, Plant and Equipment outlines the accounting treatment for most types of property, plant

and equipment. Property, plant and equipment is initially measured at its cost, subsequently measured
either using a cost or revaluation model, and depreciated so that its depreciable amount is allocated on
a systematic basis over its useful life.

IAS 16 was reissued in December 2003 and applies to annual periods beginning on or after 1 January
2005.

History of IAS 16

Date Development Comments

Exposure Draft E18 Accounting for Property, Plant


August 1980 and Equipment in the Context of the Historical
Cost System published

Operative for financial


IAS 16 Accounting for Property, Plant and statements covering periods
March 1982
Equipment issued beginning on or after 1 January
1983

Exposure Draft E43 Property, Plant and Equipment


1 January 1992
published

Operative for financial


IAS 16 Property, Plant and Equipment issued
statements covering periods
December 1993 (revised as part of the 'Comparability of Financial
beginning on or after 1 January
Statements' project)
1995

Operative for annual financial


Amended to be consistent with IAS 22, IAS 36 and
April and July 1998 statements covering periods
IAS 37
beginning on or after 1 July 1999

Effective for annual periods


18 December 2003 IAS 16 Property, Plant and Equipment issued beginning on or after 1 January
2005

Effective for annual periods


Amended by Improvements to IFRSs (routine sales
22 May 2008 beginning on or after 1 January
of assets held for rental)
2009

Effective for annual periods


Amended by Annual Improvements 2009-2011
17 May 2012 beginning on or after 1 January
Cycle (classification of servicing equipment)
2013

Amended by Annual Improvements to IFRSs 2010–


2012 Cycle (proportionate restatement of Effective for annual periods
12 December 2013
accumulated depreciation under the revaluation beginning on or after 1 July 2014
method)
Amended by Clarification of Acceptable Methods Effective for annual periods
12 May 2014 of Depreciation and Amortisation (Amendments to beginning on or after 1 January
IAS 16 and IAS 38) 2016

Effective for annual periods


Amended by Agriculture: Bearer Plants
30 June 2014 beginning on or after 1 January
(Amendments to IAS 16 and IAS 41)
2016

Amended by Property, Plant and Equipment — Effective for annual periods


14 May 2020 Proceeds before Intended Use (Amendments to IAS beginning on or after 1 January
16) 2022

Related Interpretations

 IFRIC 20 Stripping Costs in the Production Phase of a Surface Mine

 SIC-6 Costs of Modifying Existing Software. SIC-6 was superseded by and incorporated into IAS
16 (2003).

 SIC-14 Property, Plant and Equipment – Compensation for the Impairment or Loss of Items. SIC-
14 was superseded by and incorporated into IAS 16 (2003).

 SIC-23 Property, Plant and Equipment - Major Inspection or Overhaul Costs. SIC-23 was
superseded by and incorporated into IAS 16 (2003).

Amendments under consideration by the IASB

 none

Summary of IAS 16

Objective of IAS 16

The objective of IAS 16 is to prescribe the accounting treatment for property, plant, and equipment. The
principal issues are the recognition of assets, the determination of their carrying amounts, and the
depreciation charges and impairment losses to be recognised in relation to them.

Scope

IAS 16 applies to the accounting for property, plant and equipment, except where another standard
requires or permits differing accounting treatments, for example:

 assets classified as held for sale in accordance with IFRS 5 Non-current Assets Held for Sale and
Discontinued Operations

 biological assets related to agricultural activity accounted for under IAS 41 Agriculture

 exploration and evaluation assets recognised in accordance with IFRS 6 Exploration for and
Evaluation of Mineral Resources

 mineral rights and mineral reserves such as oil, natural gas and similar non-regenerative
resources.
The standard does apply to property, plant, and equipment used to develop or maintain the last three
categories of assets. [IAS 16.3]

The cost model in IAS 16 also applies to investment property accounted for using the cost model under
IAS 40 Investment Property. [IAS 16.5]

The standard does apply to bearer plants but it does not apply to the produce on bearer plants. [IAS
16.3]

Recognition

Items of property, plant, and equipment should be recognised as assets when it is probable that: [IAS
16.7]

 it is probable that the future economic benefits associated with the asset will flow to the entity,
and

 the cost of the asset can be measured reliably.

This recognition principle is applied to all property, plant, and equipment costs at the time they are
incurred. These costs include costs incurred initially to acquire or construct an item of property, plant
and equipment and costs incurred subsequently to add to, replace part of, or service it.

IAS 16 does not prescribe the unit of measure for recognition – what constitutes an item of property,
plant, and equipment. [IAS 16.9] Note, however, that if the cost model is used (see below) each part of
an item of property, plant, and equipment with a cost that is significant in relation to the total cost of
the item must be depreciated separately. [IAS 16.43]

IAS 16 recognises that parts of some items of property, plant, and equipment may require replacement
at regular intervals. The carrying amount of an item of property, plant, and equipment will include the
cost of replacing the part of such an item when that cost is incurred if the recognition criteria (future
benefits and measurement reliability) are met. The carrying amount of those parts that are replaced is
derecognised in accordance with the derecognition provisions of IAS 16.67-72. [IAS 16.13]

Also, continued operation of an item of property, plant, and equipment (for example, an aircraft) may
require regular major inspections for faults regardless of whether parts of the item are replaced. When
each major inspection is performed, its cost is recognised in the carrying amount of the item of
property, plant, and equipment as a replacement if the recognition criteria are satisfied. If necessary,
the estimated cost of a future similar inspection may be used as an indication of what the cost of the
existing inspection component was when the item was acquired or constructed. [IAS 16.14]

Initial measurement

An item of property, plant and equipment should initially be recorded at cost. [IAS 16.15] Cost includes
all costs necessary to bring the asset to working condition for its intended use. This would include not
only its original purchase price but also costs of site preparation, delivery and handling, installation,
related professional fees for architects and engineers, and the estimated cost of dismantling and
removing the asset and restoring the site (see IAS 37 Provisions, Contingent Liabilities and Contingent
Assets). [IAS 16.16-17]
Proceeds from selling items produced while bringing an item of property, plant and equipment to the
location and condition necessary for it to be capable of operating in the manner intended by
management are not deducted from the cost of the item of property, plant and equipment but
recognised in profit or loss. [IAS 16.20A]

If payment for an item of property, plant, and equipment is deferred, interest at a market rate must be
recognised or imputed. [IAS 16.23]

If an asset is acquired in exchange for another asset (whether similar or dissimilar in nature), the cost
will be measured at the 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. If the acquired
item is not measured at fair value, its cost is measured at the carrying amount of the asset given up. [IAS
16.24]

Measurement subsequent to initial recognition

IAS 16 permits two accounting models:

 Cost model. The asset is carried at cost less accumulated depreciation and impairment. [IAS
16.30]

 Revaluation model. The asset is carried at a revalued amount, being its fair value at the date of
revaluation less subsequent depreciation and impairment, provided that fair value can be
measured reliably. [IAS 16.31]

The revaluation model

Under the revaluation model, revaluations should be carried out regularly, so that the carrying amount
of an asset does not differ materially from its fair value at the balance sheet date. [IAS 16.31]

If an item is revalued, the entire class of assets to which that asset belongs should be revalued. [IAS
16.36]

Revalued assets are depreciated in the same way as under the cost model (see below).

If a revaluation results in an increase in value, it should be credited to other comprehensive income and
accumulated in equity under the heading "revaluation surplus" unless it represents the reversal of a
revaluation decrease of the same asset previously recognised as an expense, in which case it should be
recognised in profit or loss. [IAS 16.39]

A decrease arising as a result of a revaluation should be recognised as an expense to the extent that it
exceeds any amount previously credited to the revaluation surplus relating to the same asset. [IAS
16.40]

When a revalued asset is disposed of, any revaluation surplus may be transferred directly to retained
earnings, or it may be left in equity under the heading revaluation surplus. The transfer to retained
earnings should not be made through profit or loss. [IAS 16.41]

Depreciation (cost and revaluation models)

For all depreciable assets:


The depreciable amount (cost less residual value) should be allocated on a systematic basis over the
asset's useful life [IAS 16.50].

The residual value and the useful life of an asset should be reviewed at least at each financial year-end
and, if expectations differ from previous estimates, any change is accounted for prospectively as a
change in estimate under IAS 8. [IAS 16.51]

The depreciation method used should reflect the pattern in which the asset's economic benefits are
consumed by the entity [IAS 16.60]; a depreciation method that is based on revenue that is generated
by an activity that includes the use of an asset is not appropriate. [IAS 16.62A]

The depreciation method should be reviewed at least annually and, if the pattern of consumption of
benefits has changed, the depreciation method should be changed prospectively as a change in estimate
under IAS 8. [IAS 16.61] Expected future reductions in selling prices could be indicative of a higher rate
of consumption of the future economic benefits embodied in an asset. [IAS 16.56]

Depreciation should be charged to profit or loss, unless it is included in the carrying amount of another
asset [IAS 16.48].

Depreciation begins when the asset is available for use and continues until the asset is derecognised,
even if it is idle. [IAS 16.55]

Recoverability of the carrying amount

IAS 16 Property, Plant and Equipment requires impairment testing and, if necessary, recognition for
property, plant, and equipment. An item of property, plant, or equipment shall not be carried at more
than recoverable amount. Recoverable amount is the higher of an asset's fair value less costs to sell and
its value in use.

Any claim for compensation from third parties for impairment is included in profit or loss when the claim
becomes receivable. [IAS 16.65]

Derecognition (retirements and disposals)

An asset should be removed from the statement of financial position on disposal or when it is
withdrawn from use and no future economic benefits are expected from its disposal. The gain or loss on
disposal is the difference between the proceeds and the carrying amount and should be recognised in
profit and loss. [IAS 16.67-71]

If an entity rents some assets and then ceases to rent them, the assets should be transferred to
inventories at their carrying amounts as they become held for sale in the ordinary course of business.
[IAS 16.68A]

Disclosure

Information about each class of property, plant and equipment

For each class of property, plant, and equipment, disclose: [IAS 16.73]

 basis for measuring carrying amount


 depreciation method(s) used

 useful lives or depreciation rates

 gross carrying amount and accumulated depreciation and impairment losses

 reconciliation of the carrying amount at the beginning and the end of the period, showing:

o additions

o disposals

o acquisitions through business combinations

o revaluation increases or decreases

o impairment losses

o reversals of impairment losses

o depreciation

o net foreign exchange differences on translation

o other movements

Additional disclosures

The following disclosures are also required: [IAS 16.74]

 restrictions on title and items pledged as security for liabilities

 expenditures to construct property, plant, and equipment during the period

 contractual commitments to acquire property, plant, and equipment

 compensation from third parties for items of property, plant, and equipment that were
impaired, lost or given up that is included in profit or loss.

IAS 16 also encourages, but does not require, a number of additional disclosures. [IAS 16.79]

Revalued property, plant and equipment

If property, plant, and equipment is stated at revalued amounts, certain additional disclosures are
required: [IAS 16.77]

 the effective date of the revaluation

 whether an independent valuer was involved

 for each revalued class of property, the carrying amount that would have been recognised had
the assets been carried under the cost model

 the revaluation surplus, including changes during the period and any restrictions on the
distribution of the balance to shareholders.
Entities with property, plant and equipment stated at revalued amounts are also required to make
disclosures under IFRS 13 Fair Value Measurement.

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