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

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by International GAAP 2019 (pdf)


  statement of financial position at each reporting period. [IAS 19.63].

  8.2

  Restriction of assets to their recoverable amounts

  The net defined benefit balance determined under IAS 19 may be an asset. The standard

  asserts that an asset may arise (that is, an asset measured on the basis of IAS 19) where

  a defined benefit plan has been ‘over-funded’ or when actuarial gains have arisen. The

  standard justifies the recognition of an asset in such cases because:

  (a) the entity controls a resource, which is the ability to use the surplus to generate

  future benefits;

  (b) that control is a result of past events (contributions paid by the entity and service

  rendered by the employee); and

  (c) future

  economic

  benefits

  are available to the entity in the form of a reduction in

  future contributions or a cash refund, either directly to the entity or indirectly to

  another plan in deficit; the present value of those benefits is described as the asset

  ceiling. [IAS 19.8, 65].

  In practice, pension plans tend to be funded on a significantly more prudent basis than would

  be the case if a surplus or deficit was measured in accordance with IAS 19. In particular, the

  Employee

  benefits

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  discount rate used for funding purposes is typically lower than the rate required by the

  standard. For this reason, an IAS 19 valuation may produce a surplus, when for funding

  purposes there is a deficit.

  When there is a surplus in a defined benefit plan, the standard requires the net asset

  recognised to be restricted to the lower of the surplus in the plan and the asset ceiling

  discounted using the same discount rate used for determining the defined benefit

  obligation (see 7.6 above). [IAS 19.8, 64, IFRIC 14.1].

  Any adjustment required by the ceiling test is accounted for in other comprehensive

  income (see 10.4 below).

  This limitation has proved quite problematic in practice and as a result was considered

  by the Interpretations Committee, initially in the context of statutory minimum funding

  requirements (‘MFR’). This resulted in the publication, in July 2007, of IFRIC 14 – IAS 19

  – The Limit on a Defined Benefit Asset, Minimum Funding Requirements and their

  Interaction. Whilst dealing with the interaction of the asset ceiling with MFR, IFRIC 14

  also deals more generally with the restriction of an asset on recoverability grounds.

  [IFRIC 14.1-3, 6]. Subsequently, IFRIC 14 was amended to deal with pre-paid MFR –

  see 8.2.3 below. It should also be noted that the IASB has published an exposure draft

  of proposed amendments to IAS 19 and IFRIC 14 which addresses whether other

  parties’ (for example pension trustees) power to enhance benefits for plan members or

  wind up a plan affects the availability of a refund (see 16.2.2 below).

  The Interpretations Committee notes that MFR exist in many countries and normally

  stipulate a minimum amount or level of contribution that must be made to a plan over a

  given period. Therefore, a minimum funding requirement may limit an entity’s ability to

  reduce future contributions. [IFRIC 14.2].

  In addition, the limit on the measurement of a defined benefit asset may cause a

  minimum funding requirement to be onerous. Normally, a requirement to make

  contributions to a plan would not affect the measurement of the defined benefit asset

  or liability. This is because the contributions, once paid, will become plan assets and so

  the additional net liability is nil. However, a minimum funding requirement may give

  rise to a liability if the required contributions will not be available to the entity once

  they have been paid. [IFRIC 14.3].

  The issues addressed by IFRIC 14 are: [IFRIC 14.6]

  • when refunds or reductions in future contributions should be regarded as available

  in accordance with the definition of the asset ceiling (discussed at 8.2.1 and 8.2.2

  below);

  • how a minimum funding requirement might affect the availability of reductions in

  future contributions (discussed at 8.2.3 below); and

  • when a minimum funding requirement might give rise to a liability (discussed

  at 8.2.4 below).

  8.2.1

  IFRIC Interpretation 14 – general requirements concerning the limit

  on a defined benefit asset

  IFRIC 14 clarifies that economic benefits, in the form of refunds or reduced future

  contributions, are available if they can be realised by the entity at some point during the

  2802 Chapter 31

  life of the plan or when the plan liabilities are settled. In particular, such economic

  benefits may be available even if they are not realisable immediately at the end of the

  reporting period. [IFRIC 14.8].

  Furthermore, the benefit available does not depend on how the entity intends to use

  the surplus. The entity should determine the maximum economic benefit that is

  available from refunds, reductions in future contributions or a combination of both.

  However, economic benefits should not be recognised from a combination of refunds

  and reductions in future contributions based on assumptions that are mutually

  exclusive. [IFRIC 14.9]. Perhaps unnecessarily, the interpretation requires the availability

  of a refund or a reduction in future contributions to be determined in accordance with

  the terms and conditions of the plan and any statutory requirements in the jurisdiction

  of the plan. [IFRIC 14.7].

  The interpretation observes that an unconditional right to a refund can exist whatever

  the funding level of a plan at the end of the reporting period. The interpretation further

  states that benefits are available as a refund only if the entity has an unconditional right

  to a refund:

  (a) during the life of the plan, without assuming that the plan liabilities must be settled

  in order to obtain the refund; or

  (b) assuming the gradual settlement of the plan liabilities over time until all members

  have left the plan; or

  (c) assuming the full settlement of the plan liabilities in a single event (i.e. as a plan

  wind-up).

  However, if the right to a refund of a surplus depends on the occurrence or non-

  occurrence of one or more uncertain future events not wholly within an entity’s control,

  the entity does not have an unconditional right and should not recognise an asset.

  [IFRIC 14.11-12].

  The economic benefit available as a refund should be measured as the amount of the

  surplus at the end of the reporting period (being the fair value of the plan assets less the

  present value of the defined benefit obligation) that the entity has a right to receive as a

  refund, less any associated costs. For example, if a refund would be subject to a tax other

  than income tax of the reporting entity, it should be measured net of the tax. [IFRIC 14.13].

  Tax on defined benefit pension plans is discussed further in Chapter 29 at 10.7.

  In measuring the amount of a refund available when the plan is wound up (point (c)

  above), the costs to the plan of settling the plan liabilities and making the refund should

  be included. For example, a deduction should be made for professional fees if these are

  paid by the plan rather than the entity, and the costs of any
insurance premiums that

  may be required to secure the liability on wind-up. [IFRIC 14.14].

  It is usually the case that the trustees of a pension fund are independent of the entity.

  Trustees may have a variety of powers to influence a surplus in a plan. For example:

  • setting the investment strategy whereby assets with lower risk and lower return

  would erode a surplus over time; or the purchase of assets in the form of insurance

  policies matching all or some of the cash outflows of the plan; or

  • full or partial settlement of liabilities; or the improvement of benefits under the plan.

  Employee

  benefits

  2803

  IFRIC 14 makes it clear that for future benefit improvements made by the employer and

  actuarial gains and losses, the existence of an asset at the end of the reporting period is

  not affected by possible future changes to the amount of the surplus. If future events

  occur that change the amount of the surplus, their effects are recognised when they

  occur. [IFRIC 14.BC10].

  The standard is also clear that if the right to a refund of a surplus depends on the

  occurrence or non-occurrence of one or more uncertain future events that are not

  wholly within an entity’s control, the entity does not have an unconditional right and

  should not recognise a surplus. [IFRIC 14.11-12].

  However neither IAS 19 nor IFRIC 14 address the question of whether the entity’s right

  to a refund of a surplus which depends on the occurrence or non-occurrence of

  uncertain future events means that no surplus should be recognised in any scenario

  where trustees have the power to ‘spend’ a surplus.

  As noted above, the IASB has published an exposure draft of proposed amendments to

  IFRIC 14 which addresses whether the power of other parties (for example pension

  trustees) to enhance benefits for plan members or wind up a plan affects the availability

  of a refund (see 16.2.2 below). This exposure draft was issued as a response to two

  requests to the Interpretations Committee, suggesting that there is diversity in practice

  in this area. In the Basis for Conclusions on the exposure draft the IASB noted that

  paragraph BC10 of IFRIC 14 had not specifically addressed the circumstances in which

  trustees have such unconditional powers. The exposure draft proposes that the amount

  of the surplus that the entity recognises as an asset on the basis of a future refund shall

  not include amounts that other parties can use for other purposes that affect the benefits

  for plan members, for example by enhancing those benefits without the entity’s consent.

  Until the issue is clarified through the amendment to the standard and interpretation we

  expect diversity in practice to continue in this area.

  If the amount of a refund is determined as the full amount or a proportion of the surplus,

  rather than a fixed amount, an entity should make no adjustment for the time value of

  money, even if the refund is realisable only at a future date. [IFRIC 14.15].

  8.2.2

  Economic benefits available as reduced future contributions when

  there are no minimum funding requirements for future service

  IFRIC 14 addresses separately cases where there are minimum funding requirements

  relating to benefits to be awarded in future periods in exchange for services to be

  rendered in those periods, and cases where there are no such funding requirements.

  This section deals with the situation where there are no such funding requirements. The

  implications of future service minimum funding requirements are discussed at 8.2.3 below.

  IFRIC 14 requires that the economic benefit available by way of reduced future

  contributions be determined as the future service cost to the entity for each period over

  the shorter of the expected life of the plan and the expected life of the entity. The future

  service cost to the entity excludes amounts that will be borne by employees. [IFRIC 14.16].

  Future service costs should be determined using assumptions consistent with those used

  to determine the defined benefit obligation and with the situation that exists at the end

  of the reporting period as determined by IAS 19. Accordingly, no future changes to the

  2804 Chapter 31

  benefits to be provided by a plan should be assumed until the plan is amended, and a

  stable workforce in the future should be assumed unless the entity makes a reduction in

  the number of employees covered by the plan. In the latter case, the assumption about

  the future workforce should include the reduction. The present value of the future

  service cost should be determined using the same discount rate as that used in the

  calculation of the defined benefit obligation (discount rates are discussed at 7.6 above).

  [IFRIC 14.17].

  8.2.3

  IFRIC Interpretation 14 – the effect of a minimum funding

  requirement on the economic benefit available as a reduction in

  future contributions

  IFRIC 14 defines minimum funding requirements as ‘any requirements to fund a post-

  employment or other long-term defined benefit plan’. [IFRIC 14.5]. This is clearly quite a

  wide definition encompassing more than just statutory regimes.

  Some minimum funding arrangements require periodic reappraisal (for example,

  every three years). Should such an arrangement cover a longer period, all payments

  over this longer period constitute the minimum funding requirement, not just the

  three years until the next reappraisal. In its March 2015 meeting the Interpretations

  Committee, following a request for clarification, discussed whether an entity should

  assume that the minimum funding requirement for contributions to cover future

  services (see below) would continue over the estimated life of the pension plan. The

  Interpretations Committee tentatively decided not to add this issue to its agenda as it

  believed that sufficient guidance existed and that neither an Interpretation nor an

  amendment to the standard was necessary.14 In its July 2015 meeting, the

  Interpretations Committee noted that the entity should assume a continuation of

  existing funding principles because15:

  • For any factors not specified by the minimum funding basis (for example, the

  period to continue the plan is not specified by the existing funding principles), the

  assumptions for determining future service costs and those used to estimate the

  future minimum funding requirement contributions for future service must be

  consistent. This is because the Interpretation requires an entity to use assumptions

  that are consistent with those used to determine the defined benefit obligation and

  with the situation that exists at the end of the reporting period. [IFRIC 14.17, 21].

  • The estimate should not include changes to the funding principles to determine

  contributions for future service, if such changes require future negotiations with

  pension trustees. [IFRIC 14.21, BC30].

  The interpretation requires any minimum funding requirement at a given date to be

  analysed into contributions that are required to cover: [IFRIC 14.18]

  (a) any existing shortfall for past service on the minimum funding basis. These

  contributions do not affect future contributions for future service. However, they

  may give rise to a liability under IFRIC 14 (see 8.2.4 below); [IF
RIC 14.19] and

  (b) future

  service.

  Employee

  benefits

  2805

  If there is a minimum funding requirement for contributions relating to future service,

  the economic benefit available as a reduction in future contributions is the sum of:

  [IFRIC 14.20]

  (a) any amount that reduces future minimum funding requirement contributions for

  future service because the entity made a pre-payment (that is, it paid the amount

  before being required to do so); and

  (b) the estimated future service cost in each period (as discussed at 8.2.2 above) less the

  estimated minimum funding requirement contributions that would be required for

  future service in those periods if there were no pre-payment as described in (a).

  The future minimum funding contributions required in respect of future service should

  be calculated:

  • taking into account the effect of any existing surplus on the minimum funding

  requirement basis but excluding the pre-payment discussed in (a) immediately above;

  • using assumptions consistent with the minimum funding requirement basis. For

  any factors not specified by the minimum funding requirement, the assumptions

  used should be consistent with those used to determine the defined benefit

  obligation and with the situation that exists at the end of the reporting period as

  determined by IAS 19;

  • including any changes expected as a result of the entity paying the minimum

  contributions when they are due; and

  • excluding the effect of expected changes in the terms and conditions of the

  minimum funding basis that are not substantively enacted or contractually agreed

  at the end of the reporting period. [IFRIC 14.21].

  If the future minimum funding contribution required in respect of future service

  exceeds the future IAS 19 service cost in any given period, the present value of that

  excess reduces the amount of the asset available as a reduction in future contributions.

  However, the amount of the asset available as a reduction in future contributions can

  never be less than zero. [IFRIC 14.22].

  The mechanics of the above requirements are illustrated in the following two

  examples based on the illustrative examples accompanying IFRIC 14. [IFRIC 14.IE9-IE27].

  Example 31.4 also illustrates the requirement in certain circumstances to recognise an

 

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