1. are held for use in the production or supply of goods or services
2. are expected to be used during more than one period
disclosure purposes
1. Recognition of assets
2. Initial measurement of assets
3. Measurement subsequent to initial recognition
4. Derecognition of the Asset
1. It is probable that future economic benefits associated with the item will flow to the entity
2. The cost of the item can be measured reliably
Under the Conceptual Framework, an asset can be recognised when the cost or value can be measured with reliability
Under IAS 16, recognition can occur only if the cost can be measured reliably
The total property, plant and equipment of an entity may be broken down into separate assets
the exercise of judgement and an analysis of what is going to happen in the future
1. Purchase price
2. Directly attributable costs
3. Initial estimate of costs of dismantling and removing the item, or restoring the site on which it is located
1. import duties
2. non-refundable purchase taxes
all calculated after deducting trade discounts and rebates.
cost is the amount of cash or cash equivalents paid or the fair value of the other consideration given to acquire an asset
reference to the fair value of what is given up by the acquirer rather than by the fair value of the item acquired
fair value
deducting from the proceeds on sale the carrying amount of the asset and related selling expenses
the asset acquired is measured at the carrying amount of the asset given up
1. The configuration of the cash flows (risk, timing and amount) of the asset received, differs from the configuration of the cash flows of the asset transferred
2. The entity-specific value of the portion of the entity’s operations affected by the transaction, changes as a result of the exchange.
These differences need to be significant, relative to the fair value of the assets exchanged
the acquirer obtains control of the asset
1. incurred before the asset is used
2. and are necessary in order for the asset to be usable by the entity
1. Costs of opening a new facility
2. Costs of introducing a new product or service
3. Costs of conducting business in a new location or with a new class of customer
4. Administration and other general overhead costs
5. Costs incurred while an item capable of operating has yet to be brought into use or is operated at less than full capacity
6. Intial operating losses
7. Costs of relocating or reorganizing operations
are measured on a present value basis
depreciated over the life of the asset.
The cost model
The revaluation model
accounting policy decision
1. The change is required by IFRS
2. The results in the financial statements provide a more reliable view
1. Straight line method
2. Diminishing-balance method (NRC)
3. Units-of-production method
1. The usage of the asset by the entity
2. The physical wear and tear
3. Technical or commercial obsolescence
4. Legal or other limits on the use of the asset
that is, what could be obtained at the time of the estimate — not at the expected date of disposal at the end of the useful life
what could be obtained from disposal of similar assets that are currently, at the date of the estimate, at the end of their useful lives
shall be carried at a revalued amount
a class of assets
to apply the cost model or the revaluation model
1. It limits the ability of the management to selectively choose which assets to revalue
2. Consistent measurement for the same type of assets in the entity
the increase shall be recognised in other comprehensive income and accumulated in equity under the heading of revaluation surplus.
the gain on revaluation is accumulated in equity
the reserve section of the statement of financial position
1. Restate proportionately with the change in the gross carrying amount of the asset so that the carrying amount of the asset after revaluation equals its revalued amount; or
2. Eliminate the accumulated depreciation balance against the gross carrying amount of the asset and then restate the net amount to the fair value of the asset
increased probable future economic benefit
a class-by-class basis, an individual asset-by-asset basis.
other comprehensive income, equity, revaluation surplus
an immediate recognition of a loss in the period of the revaluation
the surplus must be eliminated before any expense is recognised.
1. The asset is derecognised
2. An asset is used up over its usefull life (a proportion of the revaluation surplus may be transferred to retained earnings)
1. Higher realiability & increased relevance
2. Higher price of assets and equity value
3. Higher depreciation amount
More costs associated (costs of reviewing the carrying amounts)
1. Entities with debt convenants that often face constraints relating to their debt - asset ration
2. An entity's reported profit figure may be under strict regulation from a specific source
the revaluation of non-current assets
1. On disposal, such as the sale of the asset
2. When no future economic benefits are expected
non-current assets classified as held for sale
1. To earn rentals or for capital appreciation or both
2. Rather than for use in the production or supply of goods or services or for administrative purposes or sale
3. Always used in the ordinary course of the business
1. Property held for long-term capital appreciation;
2. Leased out to a third party under an operating lease
3. A property being developed for future use as an investment property
4. Land whose use is undecided
1. Property that is owner-occupied
2. Property that is leased out to a third party under a finance lease
3. Property held for sale in the ordinary course of business
each portion is classified separately
the entire property is classified as PPE, insignificant portion, investment property
depreciated or tested for impairment, in profit or loss