Dokumen - Tips - Accounting Auditing Board of Ethiopia Aabe A Ipsas Are Being Developed
Dokumen - Tips - Accounting Auditing Board of Ethiopia Aabe A Ipsas Are Being Developed
Dokumen - Tips - Accounting Auditing Board of Ethiopia Aabe A Ipsas Are Being Developed
(AABE)
www.aabe.gov.et
June 2017
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Presentation Outline
• Why standards nationally?
• Why Reporting?
• Reporting Requirements (GPFS Vs SPFS)
• Users of GPFS
• Reporting frameworks
• Background to IPSAS
• Key considerations to IPSAS
• Summary of IPSASs
Why standards nationally?
• Because we have no reporting standard
• Importance from the perspectives of:
• Organizations
• Professionals
• Others
• The Country
To
Why Financial Reporting?
ensure
Ensuring
Compliance
• Auditors
ACCOUNTABILITY & REGULATIONS/Requirements •AABE
TRANSPARENCY • Gov’t (Proc 847/2014) •Others
•Donor
•Others regulators
•Public
No trust No grant/donation
• Citizens receive services from, and provide resources to, the government and other
public sector entities.
• Therefore, citizens are primary users of GPFRs.
• Some service recipients and some resource providers that rely on GPFRs for
the information they need for accountability and decision-making purposes
may not be citizens―for example, residents who pay taxes and/or receive
benefits but are not citizens; multilateral or bilateral donor agencies and
many lenders and corporations that provide resources to, and transact
with, a government; and those that fund, and/or benefit from, the services
provided by international governmental organizations
• The IPSASB issues IPSAS, guidance, and other resources for use by the
public sector, including not-for profit orgns. around the world
• The IPSASB (and its forerunner, the IFAC Public Sector Committee)
has been developing and issuing accounting standards for the public
sector since 1997
Cont’d
• As transactions are generally common across both the private and public sectors,
there has been an attempt to have IPSAS converged with the equivalent
International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS).
• As a general rule, the IPSAS maintain the accounting treatment and original text of
the IFRS, unless there is a significant public sector issue that warrants a departure.
• The IPSAS are also developed for financial reporting issues that are either not
addressed by adapting an IFRS or for which no IFRS has been developed
• Therefore,
• The IPSASs are a set of independently produced financial
reporting standards:
Designed to apply to Public Sector and not-for-profit
entities for preparation of GPFSs
Based on IFRS developed for private sector profit-making
organizations, which are amended to reflect public sector
and not-for profit specific financial reporting issues
Developed based on a due process
Issued by an independent standard setting body, the IPSAS
Board (IPSASB), which was established by the IFAC
Cont’d
• The increasing importance of IPSAS
• IPSAS) are being developed by the IPSASB, which focuses on the accounting and
financial reporting needs of governments and public sector entities and not-for-
profit organizations
• This ensures that organizations in the public sector that adopt IPSAS have financial
reports that are consistent and comparable with the private sector entities and at
the same time also benefiting from guidance and interpretation for specific public-
sector issues such as revenue from non-exchange transactions, presentation of
budget information in the financial statements, etc.
Cont’d
• Lessons learned from the sovereign debt crisis and the increasing
pressure on governments and public sector organizations to better
manage public resources, have made a global case for action,
highlighting the need for more transparent, consistent and
globally comparable financial reporting in the public sector
IPSAS 1 Presentation of Financial • Sets out the manner in which general-purpose financial IAS 1
Statements statements shall be prepared under the accrual basis of
accounting, including guidance for their structure and the
minimum requirements for content
• Prescribes fundamental principles underlying the preparation
of financial statements, including going-concern assumption,
consistency of presentation and classification, accrual basis of
accounting, and aggregation and materiality
A complete set of financial statements comprises:
•Statement of financial position,
•Statement of financial performance,
•Statement of changes in net assets/equity,
•Cash flow statement ,
• A comparison of budget and accrual amounts and
•Disclosures comprising a summary of significant
accounting policies and other explanatory notes
Cont’d
IPSAS # Name of Standard Description Related
IFRS
/IAS
IPSAS 2 Cash flow statements • Deals with the presentation of information about IAS 7
historical changes in a public sector entity’s cash and
cash equivalents by means of a cash flow statement that
classifies cash flows during the period according to
operating, investing, and financing activities
IPSAS 3 Accounting policies, changes • Prescribes the criteria for selecting and changing IAS 8
in accounting estimates and accounting policies, together with the accounting
errors treatment and disclosure of changes in accounting
policies, changes in accounting estimates, and
corrections of errors
IPSAS 4 The effect of changes in • Prescribes the accounting treatment for an entity’s IAS 21
Foreign exchange rates foreign currency transactions and foreign operations
• Deals with the accounting for foreign currency
transactions & foreign operations,
•Sets out the requirement for determining which
exchange rates to use for the recognition of certain
transactions and balances, & prescribe how to recognize
the financial effects of changes in exchange rates within
the FSs
Cont’d
IAS 5 Borrowing Cost • Prescribes the accounting treatment for borrowing IAS 23
costs and require either the immediate expensing of
borrowing costs or as an allowed alternative
treatment, the capitalization of BCs that are directly
attributable to the acquisition, construction or
production of a qualifying asset
IPSAS 25 Employee Benefits • Prescribe the accounting and disclosure for employee IAS 19
benefits, including short-term benefits (wages, annual leave,
sick leave, bonuses, profit-sharing and non-monetary
benefits); pensions; post-employment life insurance and
medical benefits; termination benefits and other longterm
employee benefits (long-service leave, disability, deferred
compensation, and bonuses and long-term profit-sharing),
except for share based transactions and employee retirement
Benefit plans
• Note: This is replaced by IPSAS 39 from January 1, 2018
IPSAS 26 Impairment of Cash- • Prescribe the procedures that an entity applies to IAS 36
Generating Assets determine whether a cash-generating asset is impaired and
to ensure that impairment losses are recognized
• This Standard also specifies when an entity shall reverse an
impairment loss and prescribes disclosures
IPSAS 27 Agriculture • Prescribes the accounting treatment and disclosures for IAS 41
biological assets & agricultural products at the point of
harvest when they relate to agricultural activity
Cont’d
IPSAS # Name of Standard Description Related
IFRS
/IAS
IPSAS 28 Financial Instruments: • Prescribe principles for classifying and presenting financial IAS
Presentation 32/IFRS 7
instruments as liabilities or net assets/equity, and for
offsetting financial assets and liabilities
IPSAS 29 Financial Instruments: • Establishes principles for recognizing, derecognizing and IFRS 9
Recognition & measuring financial assets and financial
Measurement liabilities
IPSAS 30 Financial Instruments: • Prescribe disclosures that enable financial statement users IFRS 7
Disclosure to evaluate the significance of financial instruments to an
entity, the nature and extent of their risks, and how the
entity manages those risks
IPSAS 31 Intangible Assets • Prescribes the accounting treatment for recognizing and IAS 38
measuring intangible assets
IPSAS 32 Service concession • Prescribes the accounting for service concession arrangements by IFRIC 12
arrangements: Grantor the grantor, a public sector entity
• Does not address the accounting for the operator side of such
arrangements. The standard provides a mirror image of IFRIC 12
Service concession arrangements, which addresses the accounting for
the operator side
Cont’d
IPSAS # Name of Standard Description Related
IFRS
/IAS
IPSAS 33 First-Time adoption of • Deals with granting transitional exemptions to entities IFRS 1
Accrual basis of IPSAS adopting accrual basis IPSAS for first time, providing a major
tool to help entities along their journey to implement IPSAS
• An entity shall apply those amendments for annual FS
covering periods beginning on or after 1, January 2017
IPSAS 34 Separate Financial • Requires all controlling entities to prepare consolidated FSs, IAS 27
Statements which consolidate all controlled entities on a line-by-line
basis
•An entity shall apply this standard for annual FSs covering
periods on or after 1 January 2017
IPSAS 35 Consolidated FSs • This standard still requires that control be assessed having IFRS 10
regard to benefits and power, but the definition of control
have changed and the standard now provides considerably
more guidance on assessing control
•An entity shall apply this standard for annual FSs covering
periods on or after 1 January 2017
IPSAS 36 Investments in Associates • Explains the application of the equity method of accounting IAS 28
& joint ventures which is used to account for investments in associates and
JVs
•An entity shall apply this standard for annual FSs covering
Cont’d
IPSAS # Name of Standard Description Related
IFRS
/IAS
IPSAS 37 Joint Arrangements (JA) • Establishes requirements for classifying Jas & accounting for IFRS 11
those different types of Jas
•Are classified as either joint operations or JVs
• An entity shall apply this standard for annual FSs covering
periods on or after 1 January 2017
IPSAS 38 Disclosure of interests of • Brings together the disclosure previously included in IPSAS 6-8 IFRS 12
other entities •It also introduces new disclosure requirements including those
related to structured entities that are not consolidated and controlling
interests acquired with the intention of disposal
•An entity shall apply this standard for annual FSs covering periods on
or after 1 January 2017
IPSAS 39 Employees Benefits • Prescribes the accounting treatment & disclosure IAS 19
requirements of employee benefits, including the timing for
recognition of liabilities and expenses
•Effective date is January 1, 2018 with encouraging earlier
application
IPSAS 40 Public sector • Classifies public sector combinations as either amalgamations or IFRS 3
combinations acquisitions taking in to account control and other factors and sets
criteria for recognition and measurement of amalgamations
•Effective date is January 1, 2019 with encouraging earlier application
THANK YOU!!!
Questions or Comments?