Ias 38 – Unaccompanied Standards (2019)


Acquisition by way of a government grant



tải về 419.96 Kb.
Chế độ xem pdf
trang13/37
Chuyển đổi dữ liệu17.10.2023
Kích419.96 Kb.
#55333
1   ...   9   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   ...   37
IAS38
dttc..
Acquisition by way of a government grant
In some cases, an intangible asset may be acquired free of charge, or for
nominal consideration, by way of a government grant. This may happen when
a government transfers or allocates to an entity intangible assets such as
airport landing rights, licences to operate radio or television stations, import
licences or quotas or rights to access other restricted resources. In accordance
with IAS 20 Accounting for Government Grants and Disclosure of Government
Assistance, an entity may choose to recognise both the intangible asset and the
grant initially at fair value. If an entity chooses not to recognise the asset
initially at fair value, the entity recognises the asset initially at a nominal
amount (the other treatment permitted by IAS 20) plus any expenditure that is
directly attributable to preparing the asset for its intended use.
Exchanges of assets
One or more intangible assets may be acquired in exchange for a
non‑monetary asset or assets, or a combination of monetary and
non‑monetary assets. The following discussion refers simply to an exchange of
one non‑monetary asset for another, but it also applies to all exchanges
described in the preceding sentence. The cost of such an intangible asset is
measured at fair value unless (a) the exchange transaction lacks commercial
substance or (b) the fair value of neither the asset received nor the asset given
up is reliably measurable. The acquired asset is measured in this way even if
an entity cannot immediately derecognise the asset given up. If the acquired
asset is not measured at fair value, its cost is measured at the carrying amount
of the asset given up.
An entity determines whether an exchange transaction has commercial
substance by considering the extent to which its future cash flows are
expected to change as a result of the transaction. An exchange transaction has
commercial substance if:
(a)
the configuration (ie risk, timing and amount) of the cash flows of the
asset received differs from the configuration of the cash flows of the
asset transferred; or
(b)
the entity‑specific value of the portion of the entity’s operations
affected by the transaction changes as a result of the exchange; and
(c)
the difference in (a) or (b) is significant relative to the fair value of the
assets exchanged.
For the purpose of determining whether an exchange transaction has
commercial substance, the entity‑specific value of the portion of the entity’s
operations affected by the transaction shall reflect post‑tax cash flows. The
result of these analyses may be clear without an entity having to perform
detailed calculations.
Paragraph 21(b) specifies that a condition for the recognition of an intangible
asset is that the cost of the asset can be measured reliably. The fair value of an
intangible asset is reliably measurable if (a) the variability in the range of
reasonable fair value measurements is not significant for that asset or (b) the
44
45
46
47
IAS 38
A1450
©
IFRS Foundation


probabilities of the various estimates within the range can be reasonably
assessed and used when measuring fair value. If an entity is able to measure
reliably the fair value of either the asset received or the asset given up, then
the fair value of the asset given up is used to measure cost unless the fair
value of the asset received is more clearly evident.

tải về 419.96 Kb.

Chia sẻ với bạn bè của bạn:
1   ...   9   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   ...   37




Cơ sở dữ liệu được bảo vệ bởi bản quyền ©hocday.com 2024
được sử dụng cho việc quản lý

    Quê hương