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1 © 2006 IASC Foundation, all rights reserved. The IASB Project on Accounting Standards for SMEs Paul Pacter IASB Director of Standards for Small and Medium-sized Entities Council of Securities Regulators of the Americas SME Forum Miami, 16 May 2006
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2 © 2006 IASC Foundation, all rights reserved. COSRA SME Report (p.6) Slow growth of capital markets in Latin America and Caribbean due to the “absence of key ingredients that make equity investments attractive to private investors and pension funds”: 1.Information disclosure 2.Transparency 3.Good accounting and auditing 4.Good corporate governance 5.Investor protection 1, 2, 3 are issues of direct concern to accounting standard-setters.
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3 © 2006 IASC Foundation, all rights reserved. COSRA SME Report Two edged-sword for SMEs: Good accounting and more disclosure add to SME burdens, rather than reduce them. Also, SMEs are often concerned about the competitive harmfulness of greater transparency. At the same time, good accounting and disclosure give investors confidence to provide capital. Solution: Tailor requirements for SMEs. This is what the IASB SME project is all about.
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4 © 2006 IASC Foundation, all rights reserved. COSRA SME Report (p. 25) Options for addressing SME disclosure challenges: 1.Tiered disclosure. 2.Understandable format for disclosure. 3.Investor education. IASB is dealing with 1 and 2 in its SME project.
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5 © 2006 IASC Foundation, all rights reserved. International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRSs) Developed by IASB since 1973. Widely used in both developed and developing countries for reporting in public capital markets. Many regard IFRSs as burdensome for non-publicly accountable entities: Sometimes not cost-beneficial. Sometimes resulting information is not useful to users of SME financial statements.
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6 © 2006 IASC Foundation, all rights reserved. What About Small Listed Companies? IASB tentative view: An entity whose securities are publicly traded has public accountability. Investor protection. Outside non-manager investors lack the clout to demand the information they need. They get the “General Purpose Financial Statements” published by the entity. Full IFRSs, not IFRS for SMEs. But do not despair... More about this in a few minutes.
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7 © 2006 IASC Foundation, all rights reserved. IASB’s Preliminary Views IASB deliberated SME project during second half of 2003 and early 2004: Reached some preliminary views on the approach. Discussion Paper June 2004. 120 responses.
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8 © 2006 IASC Foundation, all rights reserved. January 2005 Decisions Board discussed responses in late 2004. In Jan. 2005 made tentative decisions: 1.Clear demand for IASB SME standards. 2.Focus on non-publicly accountable entities ― unlisted, not banks etc. ― that publish general purpose financial statements for external users. No quantified “size test”.
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9 © 2006 IASC Foundation, all rights reserved. January 2005 Decisions 3.Each jurisdiction should develop detailed guidelines on which entities are eligible to use. 4.Board will consider recognition and measurement simplifications – based on user needs and cost/benefit.
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10 © 2006 IASC Foundation, all rights reserved. January 2005 Decisions 5.“Mandatory fallback” to full IFRS if the SME standard does not address an issue – Yes. 6.All options in IFRSs also available to SMEs. 7.Clear disclosure that SME standards are being followed, rather than full IFRSs – Yes.
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11 © 2006 IASC Foundation, all rights reserved. January 2005 Decisions 8.Organise SME standards by topic, with cross-references to the numbered IASs/IFRSs. 9.Add preparers and users to Working Group. [Done] 10. Conduct round tables with preparers and users. [held on 13-14 October 2005]
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12 © 2006 IASC Foundation, all rights reserved. Recognition and Measurement Questionnaire 1 April 2005: Brief recognition and measurement questionnaire 101 responses received. 28 June 2005: Discussed responses with IASB’s Advisory Council. 29-30 June 2005: IASB SME Working Group met. Discussed responses. Many recommendations to Board.
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13 © 2006 IASC Foundation, all rights reserved. Recognition and Measurement Questionnaire 26 September 2005: Discussion with World Standard Setters from over 40 countries. 13-14 October 2005: Round-table discussions of possible recognition and measurement simplifications. 43 groups participated.
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14 © 2006 IASC Foundation, all rights reserved. Draft Exposure Draft January 2006: IASB staff presented a draft ED to the Board. Preliminary discussion. January 2006: Working Group discussed draft ED two days. 84 recommendations to Board. February and March 2006: ED discussed by Board in detail.
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15 © 2006 IASC Foundation, all rights reserved. Draft Exposure Draft Comments about the draft ED: Organised by topic. 40 sections. Most “black letter” paragraphs from IFRSs are included. Except where there is cross reference back to an IFRS.
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16 © 2006 IASC Foundation, all rights reserved. Draft Exposure Draft Comments about the draft ED: About 250 pages. Full IFRSs now 2,400 pages. ED developed by considering needs of a company with about 50 employees. Which companies are required or permitted to use is up to each individual jurisdiction.
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17 © 2006 IASC Foundation, all rights reserved. SME Concerns: Tax Reporting and Distributable Income IFRSs for SMEs – general purpose financial statements (GPFS) for: Outside investors, banks, vendors, customers, credit rating agencies. Global standards cannot directly deal with tax reporting or measuring distributable income. These are based on local law. Can easily be addressed by reconciliations at national level.
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18 © 2006 IASC Foundation, all rights reserved. SME Concerns: SME Managers as Users of Financial Statements SMEs say managers are the primary users of their financial statements. That may be true, but the objective of GPFS is to provide information to outside investors, banks, vendors, customers, credit rating agencies. Managers can get whatever information they need to run their business. GPFS may serve managers’ needs as well.
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19 © 2006 IASC Foundation, all rights reserved. SME Concerns: Fair Value Fair value (FV) for non-financial assets: Full IFRSs do not require FV for any non-financial assets except agriculture. FV is only an option for PP&E, intangibles, investment property. Not allowed for most inventory. SME agribusiness say they know FV and manage using FV. Always is a reliability exception. FV has long been used by SMEs for impairments and write-downs.
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20 © 2006 IASC Foundation, all rights reserved. SME Concerns: Fair Value Financial assets – IFRS for SMEs: Two categories of financial assets: (1) Cost and (2) FV through P&L. FV through P&L only if: a. Observable market price and either (1) intend to sell or (2) liquid market. b. Plus all derivatives. All other financial assets at cost. If impairment is indicated, must calculate recoverable amount. Share-based payment: SME can use intrinsic value.
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21 © 2006 IASC Foundation, all rights reserved. SME Concerns: References to Full IFRSs in the IFRS for SMEs Cross-references to full IFRSs: Mandatory fallback: Big dilemma for IASB. Pervasive principles added, to minimise need for fallback. Realistically, IASB cannot say “do whatever you want” if an IFRS addresses the issue.
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22 © 2006 IASC Foundation, all rights reserved. SME Concerns: References to Full IFRSs in the IFRS for SMEs Cross-references to full IFRSs: Transactions unusual for SMEs: Omit from IFRS for SMEs, but refer back to IFRS. Such as defined benefit pension. Accounting policy options: Include simple option in IFRS for SMEs. Allow complex option by referring back to IFRS. Examples: –Fair Value for investment property. –Revaluation of PP&E and intangibles. –Capitalisation of borrowing cost.
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23 © 2006 IASC Foundation, all rights reserved. SME Concerns: Options Accounting policy options: Each jurisdiction may choose to eliminate options. Therefore reval option for PP&E and intangibles can be deleted from national adoption of IFRS for SMEs. Likewise for FV for investment property. Likewise equity method and proportionate consolidation. SME financial statements would still conform to IFRS for SMEs.
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24 © 2006 IASC Foundation, all rights reserved. SME Concerns: “Maintenance” Worried about frequent updating of IFRS for SMEs: Board has not yet decided frequency. We recognise need for stability, and limited resources of SMEs. Staff proposal is every 2 or 3 years. Not every new or revised IFRS or Interpretation will trigger a revision of IFRS for SMEs. Occasionally a new IFRS may require quicker updating.
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25 © 2006 IASC Foundation, all rights reserved. What About Small Listed Companies? IASB tentative view is that the IFRS for SMEs is not appropriate for any listed companies large or small: Full IFRSs are designed for public capital markets. Reporting to non-management investors. Investor protection. The solution: NEXT SLIDE...
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26 © 2006 IASC Foundation, all rights reserved. What About Small Listed Companies? A jurisdiction could adopt the IFRS for SMEs in its entirety as national GAAP for SMEs including small listed companies. Auditor’s report and basis of presentation note would refer to conformity with “Country X financial reporting standards for SMEs”, not to “IFRS for SMEs”. The note could even say that “Country X financial reporting standards for SMEs are identical to the IFRS for SMEs developed by the IASB”.
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27 © 2006 IASC Foundation, all rights reserved. Next Steps Please understand that these dates are tentative: Exposure Draft – by 30 June 2006 (maybe later in summer). Field tests? Visits to SMEs? Final Standard – by 30 June 2007. Effective – 2008.
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28 © 2006 IASC Foundation, all rights reserved. Thank you. There will be time for questions and comments after Nelson, Carlos, and Franco make their presentations.
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