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  • Thomas Müller-Marqués Berger Re-Elected as Chair of the IPSASB Consultative Advisory Group

    English

    The Consultative Advisory Group (CAG) of the International Public Sector Accounting Standards Board (IPSASB) has re-elected Thomas Müller-Marqués Berger as its Chair until June 2023.

    In his role as Chair, Mr. Müller-Marqués Berger will continue to lead the IPSASB CAG, which he has done since its inception in June 2016. The CAG is composed of 25 representatives of public and private sector organizations and individuals that are interested in, or affected by, the IPSASB’s work, including those engaged in the preparation, audit, or evaluation of public sector financial reports. The CAG advises the IPSASB on technical projects and issues, as well as on its Strategy, adoption of standards, and other pressing issues.

    Mr. Müller-Marqués Berger is a distinguished public sector accounting expert. Currently Global Head of International Public Sector Accounting for Ernst & Young, Mr. Müller-Marqués Berger’s deep experience in accounting standard-setting includes chairmanship of the Public Sector Group of Accountancy Europe since 2011, membership of the German Public Sector Committee since 2002, and service to global standard setting as an IPSASB member from 2009–2014.

    “I am delighted that Mr. Müller-Marqués Berger will continue to serve as CAG Chair. He has played a key role in the CAG’s development into an influential advisor for the IPSASB. He will be a great asset to both the IPSASB and its CAG as we address the challenges created by the current environment, while continuing to make progress with our wide-ranging work program,” said IPSASB Chair Ian Carruthers. “I look forward to continuing to work closely with Thomas and the CAG.”

    “I am very appreciative of the trust CAG members have placed in me, and I believe that the CAG’s journey has just begun,” said Mr. Müller-Marqués Berger. “I am honored to lead this exceptional group of public sector experts as it continues to serve as the IPSASB’s strategic advisor, helping to set priorities and to advance the public interest, especially during this uniquely challenging time. It gives me great pleasure to continue the ongoing partnership with Ian and the IPSASB.”  

    About the IPSASB
    The International Public Sector Accounting Standards Board (IPSASB) works to strengthen public financial management globally through developing and maintaining accrual-based International Public Sector Accounting Standards® (IPSAS®) and other high-quality financial reporting guidance for use by governments and other public sector entities. It also raises awareness of IPSAS and the benefits of accrual adoption. The Board receives support from the Asian Development Bank, the Chartered Professional Accountants of Canada, the New Zealand External Reporting Board, and the governments of Canada and New Zealand. The structures and processes that support the operations of the IPSASB are facilitated by the International Federation of Accountants (IFAC). For copyright, trademark, and permissions information, please go to permissions or contact permissions@ifac.org.

    About the Public Interest Committee
    The governance and standard-setting activities of the IPSASB are overseen by the Public Interest Committee (PIC), to ensure that they follow due process and reflect the public interest. The PIC is comprised of individuals with expertise in public sector or financial reporting, and professional engagement in organizations that have an interest in promoting high-quality and internationally comparable financial information.

  • New IPSASB Staff Q&A Addresses Climate Change

    English

    Climate change presents an existential threat for individuals, societies and economies. Compounded by the economic losses that the COVID-19 pandemic presents, there is a need for financial reporting and information that provides a clear, forward-looking, long-term view of an organization’s finances and sustainability – particularly for governments and other public sector entities.

    As principles-based standards, governments and public sector entities can apply existing IPSAS literature to report on sustainability issues, including climate change risks, and to communicate progress towards achieving goals such as the SDGs.

    To help stakeholders understand how to apply the Board’s current guidance to provide clear, comparable, and relevant information on climate change, the IPSASB Staff have published a Questions & Answers (Q&A) document highlighting the relevant standards and guidance for the public sector. The Staff Q&A addresses key questions such as:

    • Is there any existing IPSASB literature relevant to consider for climate change reporting?
    • When governments or public sector entities have strategies and programs in place to manage climate change risks, how should these be treated?
    • When governments or public sector entities adopt the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), what IPSAS financial reporting guidance should be considered?

    The Staff Q&A on Climate Change is intended to help drive transparency and sustainability in reporting on public finances. Further guidance on the recognition, measurement, presentation and disclosure of natural resources is also being considered by the IPSASB as part of its project on Natural Resources.

    About the IPSASB
    The International Public Sector Accounting Standards Board (IPSASB) works to strengthen public financial management globally through developing and maintaining accrual-based International Public Sector Accounting Standards® (IPSAS®) and other high-quality financial reporting guidance for use by governments and other public sector entities. It also raises awareness of IPSAS and the benefits of accrual adoption. The Board receives support from the Asian Development Bank, the Chartered Professional Accountants of Canada, the New Zealand External Reporting Board, and the governments of Canada and New Zealand. The structures and processes that support the operations of the IPSASB are facilitated by the International Federation of Accountants (IFAC). For copyright, trademark, and permissions information, please go to permissions or contact permissions@ifac.org.

    About the Public Interest Committee
    The governance and standard-setting activities of the IPSASB are overseen by the Public Interest Committee (PIC), to ensure that they follow due process and reflect the public interest. The PIC is comprised of individuals with expertise in public sector or financial reporting, and professional engagement in organizations that have an interest in promoting high-quality and internationally comparable financial information.

  • Climate Change: Relevant IPSASB Guidance

    This Questions and Answers (Q&A) publication is issued by the Staff of the IPSASB to discuss the relevance of International Public Sector Accounting Standards (IPSAS) and related Recommended Practice Guidelines (RPG) for reporting on both climate change and the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in the general purpose financial reports of public sector entities. 


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  • IPSASB eNews: March 2020

    English

    The IPSASB held its first meeting of 2020 from March 10-13, 2020 at the IFAC offices in New York, USA. 


    Infrastructure Assets

    The IPSASB decided that infrastructure assets are a subset of property, plant and equipment and considered the characteristics which differentiate them. The IPSASB will agree the infrastructure assets characteristics after analyzing the remaining issues. The IPSASB also considered the issues of depreciation, spare parts and dismantling costs. The IPSASB will continue these discussions at its June meeting.
    Access Presentation >>

    Heritage

    The IPSASB considered whether heritage items are resources and controlled for financial reporting purposes. The IPSASB decided that tangible heritage items are assets when they meet the definition of property, plant and equipment and concluded they should be depreciated and tested for impairment, except under certain specific circumstances. 

    Revised guidance related to these issues will be developed for the IPSASB’s consideration at its June meeting.

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    Measurement

    The IPSASB reviewed the responses to the Measurement Consultation Paper. The IPSASB agreed that the existing accounting policy choice in IPSAS 5, Borrowing Costs, which allows borrowing costs that are directly attributed to qualifying assets to be either expensed as incurred or capitalized, should be retained. Additional guidance will be developed for the IPSASB’s consideration at its June meeting. 

    The IPSASB identified several themes in its review of the responses and will further address these during its June and September meetings. 

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    Conceptual Framework - Limited Scope Update

    The IPSASB approved a project brief on the Limited Scope Update of the Conceptual Framework (the Framework) subject to minor drafting and editorial changes. The project addresses specified issues identified from the IPSASB’s experience in using the Framework, as well as considering relevant developments in the finalized Conceptual Framework of the International Accounting Standards Board, which was published in March 2018. It is not an extensive review.

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    Natural Resources

    The IPSASB approved a project brief on Natural Resources subject to minor drafting and editorial changes. The first part of this project will develop a comprehensive consultation paper covering the recognition, measurement, and disclosure of subsoil resources, living resources and water. 
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    Leases

    The IPSASB decided to continue the project in phases, firstly, by developing an ED based on IFRS 16, followed by a second phase addressing the accounting for concessionary leases, which is a prevalent public sector issue. The IPSASB also agreed that the exposure draft based on IFRS 16 should request constituent input on concessionary leases to help with the second phase of the project. 
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    Accounting for Non-Current Assets Held for Sale and Discontinued Operations in the Public Sector

    The Board reviewed a proposal for a project to align with IFRS 5, Non-current Assets Held for Sale and Discontinued Operations. The IPSASB agreed that the project should proceed and identified public sector issues for further consideration. The IPSASB also recommended that the project be discussed with the Consultative Advisory Group at its June 2020 meeting. It will then be discussed with the IPSASB at its June 2020 meeting.
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    Meeting Podcast

    A podcast highlighting key points of the March 2020 meeting is now available here.

    Next Meeting

    The next meeting of the IPSASB will be in Toronto, Canada from June 23-26, 2020 with the Consultative Advisory Group Meeting on June 22, 2020. For more information, or to register as an observer, visit the IPSASB website.

  • How Accounting Transparency Can Help with the Tough Decisions Ahead After Covid-19

    English

    This article was originally published in Public Finance Focus.

    Last week, the International Monetary Fund announced a grim economic outlook for the world, predicting that the global economy will likely suffer the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression—with a global economic contraction of 3% in 2020 alone.

    Governments are taking swift action to tackle the unprecedented combination of major simultaneous public health and economic crises. Among the G20 revenue and expenditure measures have totalled on average 3.5% of GDP, with further loans and guarantees totalling an additional 10% of GDP in some countries. While interventions have varied, there has been a concerted effort to get cash and resources to where they are most needed—quickly.

    The scale of these interventions means that the pandemic will also have profound and long-lasting impacts on government finances, the ramifications of which will need to be thoroughly analysed. This is important to everyone, since government finances are already a significant part of each country’s economy, and this will increase following the crisis. High-quality financial reporting helps ensure that all stakeholders, from everyday taxpayers and recipients of government services, to policy makers, businesses, and investors, receive reliable and transparent information about their government’s activities. It also results in increased economic stability and greater societal trust—two things the world desperately needs right now.

    Many of the current economic debates are over how long and deep the looming recession will be, and the extent to which government interventions will minimise economic ‘scarring’ through job losses and business and personal bankruptcies. These macroeconomic impacts will inevitably have both short and longer-term consequences for future government revenues. However, there is a myriad other questions about the detailed financial impacts of Covid-19 related government interventions. Only high-quality financial reporting can provide the full answers required for good decision-making.

    Unfortunately, unlike in the private sector, high quality accrual-based financial reports are not a tool currently available to many governments around the world. In 2018, only 25% of the governments reported using accrual-based accounting, though this number is predicted to rise to 65% in the coming years. .

    Using the analysis provided by the IMF, key questions about the impact of the broad–ranging fiscal measures being implemented by governments include:

    • Are the payments made to support businesses—for example to ‘furlough’ staff—irrecoverable current expenditure or are they potentially recoverable? If so, what proportion will be recoverable, and over what period?
    • Should tax measures, such as delayed payment dates, be recorded as normal, albeit longer-term receivables? Or will there be permanent revenue losses as business insolvencies increase?
    • What is the nature and scale of the various government guarantees being provided? Does the support provided for some organisations mean they are now state owned?
    • What is the relationship between the government and its central bank, and how should additional ‘quantitative easing’ be reported?

    These are very real, and highly material, questions to which conventional debt-based economic indicators can only give partial answers. The International Public Sector Accounting Standards (IPSAS) that the International Public Sector Accounting Standards Board (IPSASB) has developed - the equivalent of the private sector IFRS that the majority of listed companies globally use, can help provide more complete answers to these.

    Any real economic comparators for the impacts of the pandemic date back to the Second World War. And even then, the economic shift was not as rapid we have seen with Covid-19.

    Another point in time that bears some similarities—the 2008 global banking crisis—had smaller and more concentrated impacts than are likely to result from Covid-19. An idea of the extent of what is to come, however, can be seen in the UK government’s consolidated public sector accounts. During the banking crisis, the government was forced to acquire significant parts of the financial sector. This caused an ‘explosion’ in both sides of its balance sheet, which has even now not been fully unwound as the timeline shows.

    Covid-19 will undoubtedly have even larger, more complex, and more long-lasting adverse impacts around world, which will vary significantly between countries. Policymakers, international institutions, and markets need comparable financial reports to make sound decisions. Achieving comparability in government financial statements will require globally applicable financial reporting standards that address public sector needs. These should form an integral part of the coordinated measures and collaboration between global standard setters and multilateral institutions that the B20 calls for in its Statement on Trade and Finance.

    At this stage in the pandemic, improving government accounting may not seem a high priority, but it could truly be a lifesaver. By providing the complete picture of the state of a government’s finances necessary for strong future fiscal projections, high-quality financial reports based on international accounting standards can help politicians make the right long-term choices for their countries that will be even more essential in the demanding post COVID-19 world. They can also help convince potential funders that they should provide the support required to implement them.

    The IMF called last week for governments to ‘do whatever it takes but keep the receipts’. This is certainly true. But they must then use those receipts to prepare the full accrual-based financial reports that will be essential in making the tough decisions that lie ahead.

    By Ian Carruthers, IPSASB Chair

  • Registration Now Open for IPSASB Research Forum, Grants Announced

    English

    The IPSASB’s 2nd Research Forum will take place in an online format on Wednesday June 17, 2020 from 14:00 to 17:00 (CEST). The Research Forum together with the CIGAR Workshop 2020 are hosted by the University of South-Eastern Norway, Nord University and University of Essex.

    Registration is now open until May 15. Participants can attend both the Forum and the Workshop free of charge. However, registration is essential so that the organizers can send each participant the link to «enter» the CIGAR Workshop and the IPSASB Research Forum.

    The Research Forum provides scope for academics to engage in discussions with standard setters and IPSASB representatives. Academics involved in researching public sector accounting topics and representatives from standard-setting bodies responsible for public sector accounting standards are encouraged to attend.

    Five research papers are planned for presentation at the Forum. They are the four grant recipient papers (see below) and a second paper on the topic “Presentation of Financial Statements in the Public Sector,” which is by Laurence Morgana.

    Grants awarded: The IPSASB is very pleased to announce that, following a rigorous blind review process, the below abstracts have been awarded a research grant of US$1,500.

    Abstract:Researcher(s):
    Presentation of Financial Statements in the Public SectorAnnemarie Conrath-Hargreaves, Mukesh Garg, and Sonja Wüstemann
    Differential Reporting (Financial Reporting for Small and Medium Sized Public Sector Entities)Berit Adam, and Jens Heiling
    Contextual Factors and Imprudent Discount Rate Assumptions: An Empirical ExaminationOdd Stalebrink and Pierre Donatella
    Disclosure of Tax Expenditures: Advances and Challenges in the Brazilian ExperienceSelene Peres Peres Nunes


    The IPSASB’s Call for Papers explained that research on these four topics will support IPSASB decisions on their inclusion in the IPSASB’s 2021 work program consultation.

    The 2nd IPSASB Research Forum will be held virtually on June 17, 2020

  • IPSASB Extends Comment Period on Exposure Drafts Addressing Revenue & Transfer Expenses

    English

    The International Public Sector Accounting Standards Board (IPSASB) today announced that it is extending the comment period for Exposure Drafts (EDs) 70-72 to November 1, 2020. The extension responds to the additional challenges facing stakeholders as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, and will provide them with additional time to undertake outreach and prepare their responses. 

    These three EDs, released in February this year, pioneer new approaches for some of the most prevalent public sector transactions, including government transfers and grants for the delivery of key government services to citizens. 

    Stakeholders can learn more about the Exposure Drafts, and submit their comments, by visiting the below links:

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    About the IPSASB
    The International Public Sector Accounting Standards Board (IPSASB) works to strengthen public financial management globally through developing and maintaining accrual-based International Public Sector Accounting Standards® (IPSAS®) and other high-quality financial reporting guidance for use by governments and other public sector entities. It also raises awareness of IPSAS and the benefits of accrual adoption. The Board receives support from the Asian Development Bank, the Chartered Professional Accountants of Canada, the New Zealand External Reporting Board, and the governments of Canada and New Zealand. The structures and processes that support the operations of the IPSASB are facilitated by the International Federation of Accountants (IFAC). For copyright, trademark, and permissions information, please go to permissions or contact permissions@ifac.org

    About the Public Interest Committee
    The governance and standard-setting activities of the IPSASB are overseen by the Public Interest Committee (PIC), to ensure that they follow due process and reflect the public interest. The PIC is comprised of individuals with expertise in public sector or financial reporting, and professional engagement in organizations that have an interest in promoting high-quality and internationally comparable financial information.