IAS 16 Property, Plant and Equipment – summary

IAS 16 Property plant and equipment

IAS 16 Property plant and equipment

Standard IAS 16 prescribes the accounting treatment for property, plant and equipment and therefore it is one of the most important and commonly applied standards.

The main issues dealt in IAS 16 are recognition of property, plant and equipment, measurement at and after recognition, impairment of property, plant and equipment (although IAS 36 deals with impairment in more detail) and derecognition.

Recognition of Property, Plant and Equipment

Property, plant and equipment are tangible items that are held for use in the production or supply of goods or services, for rental to others, or for administrative purposes; and are expected to be used during more than one period.

IAS 16 states that the cost of an item of property, plant and equipment shall be recognized as an asset if, and only if:

This recognition principle shall be applied to all costs at the time they are incurred, both incurred initially to acquire or construct an item of property, plant and equipment and incurred subsequently after recognition to add to, replace part of or service it.

Special For You! Have you already checked out the  IFRS Kit ? It’s a full IFRS learning package with more than 40 hours of private video tutorials, more than 140 IFRS case studies solved in Excel, more than 180 pages of handouts and many bonuses included. If you take action today and subscribe to the IFRS Kit, you’ll get it at discount! Click here to check it out!
 

Initial costs

Some items of property, plant and equipment might be necessary to acquire for safety or environmental reasons.

Although they do not directly increase the future economic benefits, they might be inevitable to obtain future economic benefits from other assets and therefore, should be recognized as an asset.

For example, water cleaning station might be necessary in order to proceed with some chemical processes within chemical manufacturer.

Subsequent costs

Day-to-day servicing of the item shall be recognized in profit or loss as incurred, because they just maintain (not enhance) item’s capacity to bring future economic benefits.

However, some parts of the item of property, plant and equipment may require replacement at regular intervals, for example, aircraft interiors.

In such a case, an entity derecognizes carrying amount of older part and recognizes the cost of new part into the carrying amount of the item. The same applies to major inspections for faults, overhauling and similar items.

 Measurement

Initial Measurement

An item of property, plant and equipment that qualifies for recognition as an asset shall be measured at its cost.

The cost of an item of property, plant and equipment comprises:

  1. its purchase price including import duties, non-refundable purchase taxes, after deducting trade discounts and rebates
  2. any costs directly attributable to bringing the asset to the location and condition necessary for it to be capable of operating in the manner intended by management. Examples of these costs are: costs of site preparation, professional fees, initial delivery and handling, installation and assembly, etc.,
  3. the initial estimate of the costs of dismantling and removing the item and restoring the site on which it is located.

The cost of an item of property, plant and equipment is the cash price equivalent at the recognition date.

If payment is deferred beyond normal credit terms, the difference between the cash price equivalent and the total payment is recognized as interest over the period of credit (unless such interest is capitalized in accordance with IAS 23).

If an asset is acquired in exchange for another non-monetary asset, the cost will be measured at the fair value unless:

If the acquired item is not measured at fair value, its cost is measured at the carrying amount of the asset given up.

Subsequent Measurement

An entity may choose 2 accounting models for its property plant and equipment:

  1. Cost model: An entity shall carry an asset at its cost less any accumulated depreciation and any accumulated impairment losses.
  2. Revaluation model:An entity shall carry an asset at a revalued amount. Revalued amount is its fair value at the date of the revaluation less any subsequent accumulated depreciation and subsequent accumulated impairment losses.

An entity shall revalue its assets with sufficient regularity so that the carrying amount does not differ materially from its fair value at the end of the reporting period. If an item of property, plant and equipment is revalued, the entire class of property, plant and equipment to which that asset belongs shall be revalued.

The change of asset’s carrying amount as a result of revaluation shall be treated in the following way:

Change in Carying Amount Where
Increase Other comprehensive income (heading “Revaluation surplus”) Profit or loss if reverses previous revaluation decrease of the same value
Decrease Profit or loss Other comprehensive income if reduces previously recognized revaluation surplus (heading “Revaluation surplus”)

You can learn more about the revaluation model in this video:

Depreciation (both models)

Depreciation is defined as the systematic allocation of the depreciable amount of an asset over its useful life.

The items of property, plant and equipment are usually depreciated in order to maintain matching principle – as they are in operation for more than 1 year, they assist in producing the revenues in more than 1 year and therefore, their cost shall be spread among those years in order to match the revenue they help to produce.

When dealing with the depreciation please do have 3 basic things in mind:

Impairment

Here, IAS 16 refers to another standard, IAS 36 Impairment of Assets that prescribes rules for reviewing the carrying amount of assets, determining their recoverable amount and impairment loss, recognizing and reversing impairment loss and more.

IAS 16 states that compensation from third parties for items of property, plant and equipment that were impaired, lost or given up shall be included in profit or loss when the compensation becomes receivable.

For example, claim for compensation of damage on insured property from insurance company is recognized to profit or loss when insurance company accepts claim, closes the case and agrees to compensate (or after whatever procedure is agreed in the insurance contract).

Derecognition

IAS 16 prescribes that the carrying amount of an item of property, plant and equipment shall be derecognized on disposal; or when no future economic benefits are expected from its use or disposal.

The gain (not classified as revenue!) or loss arising from the derecognition of an item of property, plant and equipment shall be included in profit or loss when the item is derecognized. The gain or loss from the derecognition is calculated as the net disposal proceeds (usually income from sale of item) less the carrying amount of the item.

Further reading

The following articles about IAS 16 were published on CPDbox (worth to read):

Related posts

What closing rate to apply when more rates are available?

by Silvia
4 years ago

How to present leases under IFRS 16 in the statement of cash flows (IAS 7)

by Silvia
3 years ago

Top 5 IFRS 2014 and 2013 Changes

by Silvia
11 years ago
Exit mobile version