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International GAAP® 2019: Generally Accepted Accounting Practice under International Financial Reporting Standards

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  financial statements. For example, under IAS 16 the subsidiary may carry property

  at cost while the group uses the revaluation model, or vice versa. [IFRS 1.D16].

  IFRS 1 does not elaborate on exactly what constitutes ‘consolidation adjustments’ but in

  our view it would encompass adjustments required in order to harmonise a subsidiary’s

  accounting policies with those of the group, as well as purely ‘mechanical’ consolidation

  adjustments such as the elimination of intragroup balances, profits and losses.

  The following example, which is based on the guidance on implementation of IFRS 1,

  illustrates how an entity should apply these requirements. [IFRS 1.IG Example 8].

  First-time

  adoption

  291

  Example 5.32: Parent adopts IFRSs before subsidiary

  Entity A presents its (consolidated) first IFRS financial statements in 2012. Its foreign subsidiary B, wholly

  owned by Entity A since formation, prepares information under IFRSs for internal consolidation purposes

  from that date, but Subsidiary B will not present its first IFRS financial statements until 2019.

  If Subsidiary B applies option (a) above, the carrying amounts of its assets and liabilities are the same in

  both its opening IFRS statement of financial position at 1 January 2018 and Entity A’s consolidated

  statement of financial position (except for adjustments for consolidation procedures) and are based on

  Entity A’s date of transition.

  Alternatively, Subsidiary B may apply option (b) above, and measure all its assets or liabilities based on its

  own date of transition to IFRSs (1 January 2018). However, the fact that Subsidiary B becomes a first-time

  adopter in 2019 does not change the carrying amounts of its assets and liabilities in Entity A’s consolidated

  financial statements.

  Under option (b) a subsidiary would prepare its own IFRS financial statements,

  completely ignoring the IFRS elections that its parent used when it adopted IFRSs for

  its consolidated financial statements.

  Under option (a) the numbers in a subsidiary’s IFRS financial statements will be as close

  to those used by its parent as possible. However, differences other than those arising

  from business combinations will still exist in many cases, for example:

  • a subsidiary may have hedged an exposure by entering into a transaction with a

  fellow subsidiary. Such transaction could qualify for hedge accounting in the

  subsidiary’s own financial statements but not in the group’s consolidated financial

  statements; or

  • a pension plan may have to be classified as a defined contribution plan from the

  subsidiary’s point of view, but is accounted for as a defined benefit plan in the

  group’s consolidated financial statements.

  The IASB seems content with the fact that the exemption will ease some practical

  problems, [IFRS 1.BC62], though it will rarely succeed in achieving more than a moderate

  reduction of the number of reconciling differences between a subsidiary’s own

  reporting and the numbers used by its parent.

  More importantly, the choice of option (a) prevents the subsidiary from electing to apply

  all the other voluntary exemptions offered by IFRS 1, since the parent had already made

  the choices for the group at its date of transition. Therefore, option (a) may not be

  appropriate for a subsidiary that prefers to use a different exemption (e.g. fair value as

  deemed cost) for property, plant and equipment due, for example, to a tax reporting

  advantage. Also, application of option (a) would be more difficult when a parent and its

  subsidiary have different financial years. In that case, IFRS 1 would seem to require the

  IFRS information for the subsidiary to be based on the parent’s date of transition to

  IFRSs, which may not even coincide with an interim reporting date of the subsidiary;

  the same applies to any joint venture or associate.

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  5

  Example 5.33 below explains interaction between D16 (a) of IFRS 1 (i.e. option (a) above)

  and the business combination exemptions in Appendix C of IFRS 1 applied by its parent.

  Example 5.33: Interaction between D16 (a) of IFRS 1 and the business

  combination exemptions applied by its parent

  Entity S is a subsidiary of Entity P. Entity G was acquired by Entity S in 2014 and Entity S accounted for the

  acquisition under its previous GAAP. Entity P transitioned from previous GAAP to IFRS in 2015 and decided

  to apply the business combination exemption in Appendix C of IFRS 1 to this acquisition. Entity S adopted

  IFRS from its transition date of 1 January 2018 and chose to apply D16 (a) of IFRS 1.

  Can Entity S apply IFRS 3 retrospectively to the acquisition of Entity G in its first IFRS financial statements?

  In our opinion, Entity S cannot apply IFRS 3 to the acquisition of Entity G because, applying D16 (a) of

  IFRS 1, a subsidiary which becomes a first-time adopter later than its parent measures its assets and liabilities

  at the carrying amount that would be included in the parent`s consolidated financial statements, based on the

  parent`s date of transition to IFRS. Therefore, Entity S cannot apply IFRS 3 retrospectively, meeting the

  primary objective of using the D16 (a) election in keeping one set of books.

  A subsidiary may become a first-time adopter later than its parent, because it previously

  prepared a reporting package under IFRSs for consolidation purposes but did not present a

  full set of financial statements under IFRSs. The above election may be ‘relevant not only

  when a subsidiary’s reporting package complies fully with the recognition and measurement

  requirements of IFRSs, but also when it is adjusted centrally for matters such as review of

  events after the reporting period and central allocation of pension costs.’ [IFRS 1.IG31].

  Adjustments made centrally to an unpublished reporting package are not considered to be

  corrections of errors for the purposes of the disclosure requirements in IFRS 1. However, a

  subsidiary is not permitted to ignore misstatements that are immaterial to the consolidated

  financial statements of the group but material to its own financial statements.

  If a subsidiary was acquired after the parent’s date of transition to IFRSs then it cannot apply

  option (a) because there are no carrying amounts included in the parent’s consolidated

  financial statements, based on the parent’s date of transition. Therefore, the subsidiary is

  unable to use the values recognised in the group accounts when it was acquired, since push-

  down of the group’s purchase accounting values is not allowed in the subsidiary’s financial

  statements. However, if the subsidiary had recognised those amounts in its previous GAAP

  financial statements, it may be able to use the same amounts as deemed costs under IFRSs

  pursuant to the ‘event-driven’ deemed cost exemption (see 5.5.2 above).

  The exemption is also available to associates and joint ventures. This means that in many

  cases an associate or joint venture that wants to apply option (a) will need to choose which

  shareholder it considers its ‘parent’ for IFRS 1 purposes if more than one investor/joint

  venturer have already applied IFRS and determine the IFRS carrying amount of its assets

  and liabilities by reference to that parent’s date of transition to IFRSs.

  5.9.1.A

  Cumulative
translation differences

  The IFRS Interpretations Committee considered whether, applying paragraph D16 of

  IFRS 1, a subsidiary that becomes a first-time adopter later than its parent and has

  foreign operations, on which translation differences are accumulated as part of a

  separate component of equity, can recognise the cumulative translation differences at

  an amount that would be included in the parent`s consolidated financial statements,

  based on the parent`s date of transition to IFRS.

  First-time

  adoption

  293

  In September 2017, the Committee reached the conclusion that the cumulative

  translation differences are neither assets nor liabilities while the requirement applies to

  assets and liabilities and hence the requirement does not permit the subsidiary to

  recognise the cumulative translation differences at the amount as above. The

  Committee also concluded that the requirement cannot be applied to the cumulative

  translation differences by analogy because paragraph 18 of IFRS 1 clearly prohibits an

  entity from applying the exemptions in IFRS 1 by analogy to other items.

  Accordingly, in this circumstance the subsidiary accounts for the cumulative translation

  differences applying paragraphs D12 – D13 of IFRS 1 (see 5.7 above).

  However, in December 2017 the Board discussed the Committeès recommendation to

  propose an amendment to IFRS 1 to require a subsidiary that applies paragraph D16 (a)

  of IFRS 1 to measure cumulative translation differences using the amounts reported by

  its parent, based on the parent`s date of transition to IFRS (subject to any adjustments

  made for consolidation procedures and for the effects of the business combination in

  which the parent acquired the subsidiary). This amendment will be included in the next

  annual improvements to IFRS.

  5.9.2

  Parent becomes a first-time adopter later than its subsidiary

  If a parent becomes a first-time adopter later than its subsidiary, the parent should, in

  its consolidated financial statements, measure the subsidiary’s assets and liabilities at the

  carrying amounts that are in the subsidiary’s financial statements, after adjusting for

  consolidation and for the effects of the business combination in which the entity

  acquired the subsidiary. The same applies for associates or joint ventures, substituting

  equity accounting adjustments. [IFRS 1.D17].

  Unlike other first-time adoption exemptions, this exemption does not offer a choice

  between different accounting alternatives. In fact, while a subsidiary that adopts IFRSs

  later than its parent can choose to prepare its first IFRS financial statements by

  reference to its own date of transition to IFRSs or that of its parent, the parent itself

  must use the IFRS measurements already used in the subsidiary’s financial statements,

  adjusted as appropriate for consolidation procedures and the effects of the business

  combination in which it acquired the subsidiary. [IFRS 1.BC63]. However, this exemption

  does not preclude the parent from adjusting the subsidiary’s assets and liabilities for a

  different accounting policy, e.g. cost model or revaluation model for accounting for

  property, plant and equipment.

  The following example, which is based on the guidance on implementation of IFRS 1,

  illustrates how an entity should apply these requirements. [IFRS 1.IG Example 9].

  Example 5.34: Subsidiary adopts IFRSs before parent

  Entity C presents its (consolidated) first IFRS financial statements in 2019. Its foreign subsidiary D, wholly

  owned by Entity C since formation, presented its first IFRS financial statements in 2014. Until 2019,

  Subsidiary D prepared information for internal consolidation purposes under Entity C’s previous GAAP.

  The carrying amounts of Subsidiary D’s assets and liabilities at 1 January 2018 are the same in both Entity C’s

  (consolidated) opening IFRS statement of financial position and Subsidiary D’s own financial statements

  (except for adjustments for consolidation procedures) and are based on Subsidiary D’s date of transition to

  IFRSs. The fact that Entity C becomes a first-time adopter in 2019 does not change the carrying amounts of

  Subsidiary D’s assets and liabilities in the consolidated group financial statements.

  294 Chapter

  5

  When a subsidiary adopts IFRSs before its parent, this will limit the parent’s ability to

  choose first-time adoption exemptions in IFRS 1 freely as related to that subsidiary, as

  illustrated in the example below. However, this does not mean that the parent’s ability

  to choose first-time adoption exemptions will always be limited. For example, a parent

  may still be able to deem a subsidiary’s cumulative translation differences to be zero

  because IFRS 1 specifically states that under the option ‘the cumulative translation

  differences for all [emphasis added] foreign operations are deemed to be zero at the

  date of transition to IFRSs’ (see 5.7 above). [IFRS 1.D13].

  Example 5.35: Limited ability to choose first-time adoption exemptions

  Entity E will adopt IFRSs for the first time in 2019 and its date of transition is 1 January 2018. Subsidiary F

  adopted IFRSs in 2014 and its date of transition was 1 January 2013:

  (a) Subsidiary F and Entity E both account for their property, plant and equipment at historical cost under IAS 16.

  Upon first-time adoption, Entity E may only adjust carrying amounts of Subsidiary F’s assets and

  liabilities to adjust for the effects of consolidation and business combinations. Entity E can therefore not

  apply the exemption to use fair value as deemed cost for Subsidiary F’s property, plant and equipment

  as at its own date of transition (1 January 2018);

  (b) Subsidiary F accounts for its property, plant and equipment at revalued amounts under IAS 16, while

  Entity E accounts for its property, plant and equipment at historical cost under IAS 16.

  In this case, Entity E would not be allowed to apply the exemption to use fair value as deemed cost of

  Subsidiary F’s property, plant and equipment because paragraph D17 of IFRS 1 would only permit adjustments

  for the effects of consolidation and business combinations. Although a consolidation adjustment would be

  necessary, this would only be to adjust Subsidiary F’s revalued amounts to figures based on historical cost.

  (c) Subsidiary F may have deemed the cumulative translation difference for all its foreign subsidiaries to be

  zero at its date of transition (i.e. 1 January 2013).

  When Entity E adopts IFRSs it can deem Subsidiary F’s cumulative translation differences to be zero at

  its date of transition (1 January 2018).

  5.9.3

  Implementation guidance on accounting for assets and liabilities of

  subsidiaries, associates and joint ventures

  The requirements of IFRS 1 for a parent and subsidiary with different dates of transition

  do not override the following requirements of IFRS 1: [IFRS 1.IG30]

  • the parent’s election to use the business combinations exemption in Appendix C

  discussed at 5.2 above, which applies to assets and liabilities of a subsidiary

  acquired in a business combination that occurred before the parent’s date of

  transition to IFRSs. However, the rules summarised at 5.9.2 above (parent adopting

  IFRSs after subsidiary) apply only to assets acquired and liabilitie
s assumed by the

  subsidiary after the business combination and still held and owned by it at the

  parent’s date of transition to IFRSs;

  • to apply the requirements in IFRS 1 in measuring all assets and liabilities for which

  the provisions in paragraphs D16 and D17 of IFRS 1 are not relevant (for example,

  the use of the exemption in D16(a) to measure assets and liabilities at the carrying

  amounts in the parent’s consolidated financial statements does not affect the use

  of the exemption in D12-13 to deem the cumulative translation differences for all

  foreign operations are zero at its date of transition, discussed in 5.7 above); and

  • a first-time adopter must give all the disclosures required by IFRS 1 as of its own

  date of transition to IFRSs – see 6 below.

  First-time

  adoption

  295

  5.9.4

  Adoption of IFRSs on different dates in separate and consolidated

  financial statements

  An entity may sometimes become a first-time adopter for its separate financial

  statements earlier or later than for its consolidated financial statements. Such a situation

  may arise, for example, when a parent avails itself of the exemption under paragraph 4

  of IFRS 10 from preparing consolidated financial statements and prepares its separate

  financial statements under IFRSs. Subsequently, the parent may cease to be entitled to

  the exemption or may choose not to use it and would, therefore, be required to apply

  IFRS 1 in its first consolidated financial statements.

  Another example might be that, under local law, an entity is required to prepare its

  consolidated financial statements under IFRSs, but is required (or permitted) to prepare

  its separate financial statements under local GAAP. Subsequently the parent chooses,

  or is required, to prepare its separate financial statements under IFRSs.

  If a parent becomes a first-time adopter for its separate financial statements earlier or

  later than for its consolidated financial statements, it must measure its assets and

  liabilities at the same amounts in both financial statements, except for consolidation

  adjustments. [IFRS 1.D17]. As drafted, the requirement is merely that the ‘same’ amounts

 

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