As part of the International Accounting Standards Board’s initiative to improve disclosures in financial statements (Disclosure Initiative), amendments have been made to AASB 101 Presentation of Financial Statements to facilitate ‘decluttering’ of financial statements by allowing preparers to apply judgement when deciding which mandatory disclosures are relevant to users, and which are not.
The ‘decluttering’ requirements apply to your 31 December 2016 financial statements. |
While ‘decluttering’ is not normally associated with half-year financial statements prepared under AASB 134 Interim Financial Reporting, if you are preparing annual financial statements at 31 December 2016, we recommend that you commence this process now.
The changes to AASB 101 clarify that:
If your financial statements include any of the following features, it is likely that your financial statements are ‘overweight’, and therefore in need of ‘decluttering:
Too much useless information about immaterial items that are not relevant to users (e.g. small profit or loss item disclosures, detailed reconciliations of PPE where movements are minimal during the period) |
Accounting policies describing transactions and events that do not occur in the entity (e.g. hedging, certain types of financial instruments, consolidations, equity accounting, joint arrangements, revaluing assets, etc.) |
Accounting policies that are so boilerplate that users are unable to really understand how transactions are recognised and measured (e.g. revenue recognition) |
Information about sources of estimation uncertainty that is so boilerplate it tells the user nothing about the specific assumptions made in the estimate that could impact the estimation of the carrying amount of assets and liabilities in the next financial year |
Providing information about estimates that are not significant to the financial statements (e.g. employee leave provisions), or will not result in a material adjustment to assets and liabilities in the next financial year (e.g. share-based payment estimations) |
Boilerplate information about judgements made that do not explain, in plain English, what the judgement was (e.g. choice of accounting policy A instead of accounting policy B because …) |
Laundry lists of detailed information about standards that are only effective in future years which are unlikely to have a material impact on the entity, or indeed could never vaguely apply to the entity because they do not operate in a particular industry, or engage in the relevant types of transactions |
Comparative information carried forward which has no relevance to the current period financial statements (e.g. including detailed disclosures for a business combination that occurred two years ago, or a share-based payment that was granted three years ago) |
Too much narrative when a tabular format of disclosure would enable the user to better understand disclosures |
Technical accounting or other jargon which is not explained, rather than using plain English wherever possible |
Notes about the most important transactions and events buried in the financial statements, making them hard to find. |
Our November 2015 Accounting News provides a detailed step by step approach, which we call ‘the Four Rs’, which will help you to start your ‘decluttering’ process.
To summarise, you should:
While the number of disclosures required in special purpose financial statements, and general purpose financial statements applying reduced disclosures is obviously significantly less than for full general purpose financial statements, our experience shows that most entities have some work to do, including:
For periods beginning on or after 1 January 2017, changes have been made to AASB 107 Statement of Cash Flows to require that you disclose additional information to provide users with information to evaluate changes in liabilities arising from financing activities, including changes arising from cash flows and non-cash flows.
An example of what these disclosures might look like is shown below:
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Non-cash changes | |||||
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2016 | Cash flows | Acquisition | Foreign exchange movement | Fair value changes | 2017 |
|
$ | $ | $ | $ | $ | $ |
Long-term borrowings | 22,000 | (1,000) | - | - | - | 21,000 |
Short-term borrowings | 10,000 | (500) | - | 200 | - | 9,700 |
Lease liabilities | 4,000 | (800) | 300 | - | - | 3,500 |
Assets held to hedge long-term borrowings | (675) | 150 | - | - | (25) | (550) |
Total liabilities from financing liabilities | 35,325 | (2,150) | 300 | 200 | (25) | 33,650 |
For more information on the Disclosure Initiative, please refer to the IASB Disclosure Initiative section of our Issues and Trends page on our web site.