Specific topics
Prior-period information
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An entity makes materiality judgements on the complete set of financial statements, including prior-period[31] information provided in the financial statements.
For this Practice Statement, ‘prior-period’ should be read as ‘prior-periods’ if financial statements include amounts and disclosures for more than one prior period.
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Australian Accounting Standards require an entity to present information in respect of the preceding period for all amounts reported in the current-period financial statements.[32] Furthermore, the Standards require the entity to provide prior-period information for narrative and descriptive information if it is relevant to understanding the current-period financial statements.[33] Finally, the Standards require the entity to present, as a minimum, two statements of financial position, two statements of profit or loss and other comprehensive income, two statements of profit or loss (if presented separately), two statements of cash flows, two statements of changes in equity, and related notes.[34] These requirements are the minimum comparative information identified by the Standards.[35]
Except when Australian Accounting Standards permit or require otherwise. See paragraph 38 of AASB 101.
See paragraph 38 of AASB 101.
See paragraph 38A of AASB 101.
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Assessing whether prior-period information is material to the current-period financial statements might lead an entity to:
(a) provide more prior-period information than was provided in the prior-period financial statements (see paragraph 70); or
(b) provide less prior-period information than was provided in the prior-period financial statements (see paragraph 71).
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An entity also needs to consider any local laws or regulations, in respect of the prior-period information to be provided in financial statements, when making decisions on what prior-period information to provide in the current-period financial statements. Those local laws or regulations might require the entity to provide in the financial statements prior-period information in addition to the minimum comparative information required by the Standards. The Standards permit the inclusion of such additional information, but require that it is prepared in accordance with the Standards[36] and does not obscure material information.[37] However, an entity that wishes to state compliance with Australian Accounting Standards cannot provide less information than required by the Standards, even if local laws and regulations permit otherwise.
See paragraph 38C of AASB 101.
See paragraph 30A of AASB 101 and paragraph BC30F of the Basis for Conclusions on IAS 1.
Prior-period information not previously provided
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An entity must provide prior-period information needed to understand the current-period financial statements,[38] regardless of whether that information was provided in the prior-period financial statements—this requirement is not conditional on whether the prior-period information was provided in the prior-period financial statements. Consequently, the inclusion of prior-period information not previously included would be required if this is necessary for the primary users to understand the current-period financial statements.
Example L—prior-period information not previously provided |
Background In the prior period, an entity had a very small amount of debt outstanding. Information about this debt was appropriately assessed as immaterial in the prior period, and so the entity did not disclose any maturity analysis showing the remaining contractual maturities or other information that would otherwise be required by paragraph 39(a) of AASB 7 Financial Instruments: Disclosures. In the current period, the entity issued a large amount of debt. The entity concluded that information about debt maturity was material information and disclosed it, in the form of a table, in the current-period financial statements. Application The entity might conclude that including a prior-period debt maturity analysis in the financial statements would be necessary for primary users to understand the current-period financial statements. In these circumstances, a narrative description of the maturity of the prior-period balances of the outstanding debt might be sufficient. |
Summarising prior-period information
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Except to the extent required to comply with any local laws or regulations affecting the preparation of financial statements or their audit, an entity does not automatically reproduce in the current-period financial statements all the information provided in the prior-period financial statements. Instead, the entity may summarise prior-period information, retaining the information necessary for primary users to understand the current-period financial statements.
Example M—summarising prior-period information |
Background An entity disclosed, in the prior-period financial statements, details of a legal dispute which led to the recognition, in that period, of a provision. In accordance with AASB 137 Provisions, Contingent Liabilities and Contingent Assets the entity disclosed in the prior-period financial statements a detailed description of uncertainties about the amount and timing of possible cash outflows, in respect of the dispute, together with the major assumptions made concerning future events. Most of the uncertainties have been resolved in the current period, and, even though the liability has not been settled, a court pronouncement confirmed the amount already recognised in the financial statements by the entity. The entity considered the relevant local laws, regulations and other reporting requirements and concluded that there were no locally prescribed obligations relating to the inclusion of prior-period information in the current-period financial statements. Application In these circumstances, on the basis of the requirements in Australian Accounting Standards, the entity may not need to reproduce in the current-period financial statements all of the information about the legal dispute provided in the prior-period financial statements. Because most of the uncertainties have been resolved, users of the financial statements for the current period may no longer need detailed information about those uncertainties. Instead, information about those uncertainties might be summarised and updated to reflect the current-period events and circumstances and the resolution of previously reported uncertainties. |
See paragraph 38 of AASB 101.
Errors
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Errors are omissions from and/or misstatements in an entity’s financial statements arising from a failure to use, or misuse of, reliable information that is available, or could reasonably be expected to be obtained.[39] Material errors are errors that individually or collectively could reasonably be expected to influence decisions that primary users make on the basis of those financial statements. Errors may affect narrative descriptions disclosed in the notes as well as amounts reported in the primary financial statements or in the notes.
See paragraph 5 of AASB 108 (derived from the definition of prior-period errors).
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An entity must correct all material errors, as well as any immaterial errors made intentionally to achieve a particular presentation of its financial position, financial performance or cash flows, to ensure compliance with Australian Accounting Standards.[40] The entity should refer to AASB 108 Accounting Policies, Changes in Accounting Estimates and Errors for guidance on how to correct an error.
See paragraph 41 of AASB 108.
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Immaterial errors, if not made intentionally to achieve a particular presentation, do not need to be corrected to ensure compliance with Australian Accounting Standards. However, correcting all errors (including those that are not material) in the preparation of the financial statements lowers the risk that immaterial errors will accumulate over reporting periods and become material.
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An entity assesses whether an error is material by applying the same considerations as outlined in the description of the materiality process. Making materiality judgements about errors involves both quantitative and qualitative considerations. The entity identifies information that, if misstated or omitted, could reasonably be expected to influence primary users’ decisions (as described in Step 1 and Step 2 of the materiality process). The entity also considers whether any identified errors are material on a collective basis (as described in Step 4 of the materiality process).
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If an error is judged not to be material on its own, it might be regarded as material when considered in combination with other information. However, in general, if an error is individually assessed as material to an entity’s financial statements, the existence of other errors that affect the entity’s financial position, financial performance or cash flows in the opposite way does not make the error immaterial, nor does it eliminate the need to correct the error.
Example N—individual and collective assessment of errors |
Background An entity has identified measures of its profitability as the measures of great interest to the primary users of its financial statements. During the current reporting period, the entity recognised: (a) an expense accrual of CU100(a) that should not have been recognised. The accrual affected the line item ‘cost of services’. (b) the reversal of a provision of CU80 recognised in the previous period that should not have been reversed. The reversal affected the line item ‘other operating income (expense)’. Application In assessing whether these errors are material to its financial statements, the entity did not identify the presence of any qualitative factors and thus made its materiality judgement solely from a quantitative perspective. The entity concluded that both errors were individually material because of their impact on its profit. In these circumstances, it would be inappropriate to consider the quantitative effect of the errors on a net basis, ie as a CU20 overstatement of expenses, thereby concluding that the identified errors do not need to be corrected. If an error is individually assessed as material to the entity’s financial statements, the existence of other errors that affect the entity’s financial position, financial performance or cash flows in an opposite way, does not eliminate the need to correct it, or make the error immaterial. (a) In this example, currency amounts are denominated in ‘currency units’ (CU). |
Cumulative errors
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An entity may, over a number of reporting periods, accumulate errors that were immaterial, both in individual prior periods and cumulatively over all prior periods. Uncorrected errors that have accumulated over more than one period are sometimes called ‘cumulative errors’.
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Materiality judgements about cumulative errors in prior-period financial statements that an entity made at the time those statements were authorised for issue need not be revisited in subsequent periods unless the entity failed to use, or misused, information that:
(a) was available when financial statements for those periods were authorised for issue; and
(b) could reasonably be expected to have been obtained and taken into account in the preparation of those financial statements.[41]
See paragraph 5 of AASB 108.
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To assess whether a cumulative error has become material to the current-period financial statements, an entity considers whether, in the current period:
(a) the entity’s circumstances have changed, leading to a different materiality assessment for the current period; or
(b) further accumulation of a current-period error onto the cumulative error has occurred.
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An entity must correct cumulative errors if they have become material to the current-period financial statements.
Example O—current-period assessment of cumulative errors |
Background An entity, three years ago, purchased a plant. The plant has a useful life of 50 years and a residual value amounting to 20 per cent of the plant cost. The entity started to use the plant three years ago, but has not recognised any depreciation for it (cumulative error). In each prior period, the entity assessed the error of not depreciating its plant as being individually and cumulatively immaterial to the financial statements for that period. There is no indication that the materiality judgements of prior periods were wrong. In the current period, the entity started depreciating the plant. In the same period, the entity experienced a significant reduction in profitability (the type of circumstance referred to in paragraph 79(a) of the Practice Statement). Application When making its materiality judgements in the preparation of the current-period financial statements, the entity concluded that the cumulative error was material to the current-period financial statements. In this scenario, the entity does not need to revisit the materiality assessments it made in prior periods. However, because in the current period the cumulative error has become material to the current-period financial statements, the entity must apply the requirements in AASB 108 to correct it. |
Information about covenants
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An entity assesses the materiality of information about the existence and terms of a loan agreement clause (covenant), or of a covenant breach, to decide whether to provide information related to the covenant in the financial statements. This assessment is made in the same way as for other information, that is, by considering whether that information could reasonably be expected to influence decisions that its primary users make on the basis of the entity’s financial statements (see ‘A four-step materiality process’, from paragraph 33).
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In particular, when a covenant exists, an entity considers both:
(a) the consequences of a breach occurring, that is, the impact a covenant breach would have on the entity’s financial position, financial performance and cash flows. If those consequences would affect the entity’s financial position, financial performance or cash flows in a way that could reasonably be expected to influence primary users’ decisions, then the information about the existence of the covenant and its terms is likely to be material. Conversely, if the consequences of a covenant breach would not affect the entity’s financial position, financial performance or cash flows in such a way, then disclosures about the covenant might not be needed.
(b) the likelihood of a covenant breach occurring. The more likely it is that a covenant breach would occur, the more likely it is that information about the existence and terms of the covenant would be material.
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In assessing whether information about a covenant is material, a combination of the considerations in paragraph 82(a)–82(b) applies. Information about a covenant for which the consequences of a breach would affect an entity’s financial position, financial performance or cash flows in a way that could reasonably be expected to influence primary users’ decisions, but for which there is only a remote likelihood of the breach occurring, is not material.
Example P—assessing whether information about covenants is material |
Background An entity has rapidly grown over the past five years and recently suffered some liquidity problems. A long-term loan was granted to the entity in the current reporting period. The loan agreement includes a clause that requires the entity to maintain a ratio of debt to equity below a specified threshold, to be measured at each reporting date (the covenant). According to the loan agreement, the debt-to-equity ratio has to be calculated on the basis of debt and equity figures as presented in the entity’s Australian-Accounting-Standards financial statements. If the entity breaches the covenant, the entire loan becomes payable on demand. The disclosure of covenant terms in an entity’s financial statements is not required by any local laws or regulations. Application Paragraph 31 of AASB 7 Financial Instruments: Disclosures requires an entity to disclose information that enables users of its financial statements to evaluate the nature and extent of risk arising from financial instruments to which the entity is exposed at the end of the reporting period. In the preparation of its financial statements, the entity assesses whether information about the existence of the covenant and its terms is material information, considering both the consequences and the likelihood of a breach occurring. In these circumstances, the entity concluded that, considering its recent liquidity problem, any acceleration of the long-term loan repayment plan (the consequence of the covenant breach occurring) would affect the entity’s financial position and cash flows in a way that could reasonably be expected to influence primary users’ decisions. The entity also considered the likelihood of a breach occurring. Scenario 1—the lender defined the covenant threshold on the basis of the three-year business plan prepared by the entity, adding a 10 per cent tolerance to the forecast figures In this scenario, even though the entity has historically met its past business plans, it assessed the likelihood of a breach occurring as higher than remote. Therefore, information about the existence of the covenant and its terms was assessed as material and disclosed in the entity’s financial statements. Scenario 2—the lender defined the covenant threshold on the basis of the three-year business plan prepared by the entity, adding a 200 per cent tolerance to the forecast figures In this scenario, the entity assessed the likelihood of a breach occurring as remote, on the basis of its historical track record of meeting its past business plans and the magnitude of the tolerance included in the covenant threshold. Therefore, although the consequences of the covenant breach would affect the entity’s financial position and cash flows in a way that could reasonably be expected to influence primary users’ decisions, the entity concluded that information about the existence of the covenant and its terms was not material. |
Aus83.1
For not-for-profit entities, information about the existence and terms of a grant agreement is assessed similarly to the approach to loan agreement covenants. An entity assesses the materiality of information about the consequences of a breach of a grant agreement occurring, that is, the impact a breach would have on the entity’s financial position, financial performance and cash flows, as well as the likelihood of a breach occurring.
Example AusP.1—assessing whether information about grant conditions is material |
Background A not-for-profit entity receives an annual grant from a government department under a three-year program that represents a material portion of the funding required by the entity in carrying out its activities. The grant agreement requires the funds to be spent by the entity in providing specified health services to nominated groups in regional areas of the State. If the entity breaches the grant agreement, the grantor can require the entity to repay the grant received for the current period in whole or in part or alternatively can decide not to provide further funding to the entity under the grant program. The entity recognises revenue under the grant agreement as the services are provided, in accordance with AASB 1058 Income of Not-for-Profit Entities, given the specificity of the health services to be provided. The entity has noted that other charities are now also providing significant health services in the areas in which it has traditionally worked. Consequently, the entity spent only 70 per cent of the grant in year two of the grant program. Application In the preparation of its financial statements, the entity assesses whether information about the existence of the grant agreement and its terms is material information, considering both the consequences and the likelihood of a breach occurring. In the circumstances, the entity concluded that its breach of the conditions of the grant would affect the entity’s financial position and cash flows in a way that could reasonably be expected to influence primary users’ decisions, especially if the department decided to cease providing the annual grant. Therefore, information about the existence of the grant agreement and its terms was assessed as material and disclosed in the entity’s financial statements. |
Materiality judgements for interim reporting
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An entity makes materiality judgements in preparing both annual financial statements and interim financial reports prepared in accordance with AASB 134 Interim Financial Reporting. In either case, the entity could apply the materiality process described in paragraphs 29–65. For its interim financial report, the entity considers the same materiality factors as in its annual assessment. However, it takes into consideration that the time period and the purpose of an interim financial report differ from those of the annual financial statements.
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In making materiality judgements on its interim financial report, an entity focuses on the period covered by that report, that is:
(a) it assesses whether information in the interim financial report is material in relation to the interim period financial data, not annual data.[42]
(b) it applies the materiality factors on the basis of both the current interim period data and also, whenever there is more than one interim period (eg in the case of quarterly reporting), the data for the current financial year to date.[43]
(c) it may consider whether to provide in the interim financial report information that is expected to be material to the annual financial statements. However, information that is expected to be material to the annual financial statements need not be provided in the interim financial report if it is not material to the interim financial report.
Example Q—information that is expected to be material to the annual financial statements |
Background An entity sells mainly standardised products to private customers in its home market. In the first half of the reporting period, 98 per cent of the entity’s revenue was generated by sales of Product X. The remaining revenue was principally derived from a pilot sale of a new product line—Product Y—that the entity planned to launch in the third quarter of the year. The entity expects revenue from Product Y to increase significantly by the end of the annual reporting period, so that Product Y will provide approximately 20 per cent of the entity’s revenue for the full annual period. Application Paragraph 114 of AASB 15 Revenue from Contracts with Customers requires an entity to disaggregate revenue recognised from contracts into categories that depict how the nature, amount, timing and uncertainty of revenue and cash flows are affected by economic factors. The entity did not identify any qualitative factors that made the amount of revenues from Product Y material to the interim period. In these circumstances, the entity concluded that the information about disaggregation of revenue by product lines was not material to the interim financial report and did not disclose it. In the preparation of the interim financial report, the entity is not required to disaggregate its revenue by product lines even if a greater level of disaggregation is expected to be required for the subsequent annual financial statements. In other words, although the entity expects that revenue by product lines will be material information for the annual financial statements, that fact does not influence the materiality assessment in the preparation of the entity’s interim financial report. |
See paragraphs 23 and 25 of AASB 134 Interim Financial Reporting.
Paragraph 20 of AASB 134 requires an entity to include in the interim financial report the statements of profit or loss and other comprehensive income for both periods, the current interim period and the current financial year to date.
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Similarly, an entity may consider whether to provide information in the annual financial statements that is only material to the interim financial report. However, if information is material to the interim financial report, it need not be presented or disclosed subsequently in the annual financial statements if it is not material to those statements.
Example R—information that is only material to the interim financial report |
Background An entity has identified measures of its profitability and cash flows as the measures of great interest to the primary users of its financial statements. During the interim period, the entity constructed a new chemical handling process to enable it to comply with environmental requirements for the production and storage of dangerous chemicals. Such an item of property, plant and equipment (PP&E) qualifies for recognition as an asset in accordance with paragraph 11 of AASB 116 Property, Plant and Equipment. Application Paragraph 74(b) of AASB 116 requires the disclosure of the expenditure recognised in the carrying amount of an item of PP&E in the course of its construction. In the preparation of the interim financial report, the entity assessed, both from a quantitative and qualitative perspective, the information about expenditure recognised in the carrying amount of the chemical handling process, concluded that information was material to the interim financial report and disclosed it. The entity incurred no further expenditure related to the chemical handling process in the second half of the annual reporting period. In the preparation of its annual financial statements, the entity assessed the expenditure recognised in the carrying amount of the chemical handling process against its annual profitability and cash flow measures and concluded that this information was not material to the annual financial statements. In reaching that conclusion, the entity did not identify any qualitative factors leading to a different assessment. The entity is not required to disclose information about the expenditure recognised in the carrying amount of its chemical handling process in its annual financial statements. |
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In assessing materiality, an entity also considers the purpose of interim financial reports, which differs from the purpose of annual financial statements. An interim financial report is intended to provide an update on the latest complete set of annual financial statements.[44] Information that is material to the interim period, but was already provided in the latest annual financial statements, does not need to be reproduced in the interim financial report, unless something new occurs or an update is needed.[45]
See paragraph 6 of AASB 134.
See paragraphs 15–15A of AASB 134.
Interim reporting estimates
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When an entity concludes that information about estimation uncertainty is material, the entity needs to disclose that information. Measurements included in interim financial reports often rely more on estimates than measurements included in the annual financial statements.[46] That fact does not, in itself, make the estimated measurements material. Nevertheless, relying on estimates for interim financial data to a greater extent than for annual financial data might result in more disclosures about such uncertainties being material, and thus being provided in the interim financial report, compared with the annual financial statements.
See paragraph 41 of AASB 134.
Paragraph 10(f) of AASB 101 also requires an entity to provide a statement of financial position as at the beginning of the preceding period when the entity applies an accounting policy retrospectively or makes a retrospective restatement of items in its financial statements, or when it reclassifies items in its financial statements in accordance with paragraphs 40A–40D of AASB 101. (This is not required of entities applying Australian Accounting Standards – Simplified Disclosures)