Forums › Ask ACCA Tutor Forums › Ask the Tutor ACCA FR Exams › IFRS 16
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- February 1, 2018 at 9:18 pm #434508
Are there any material and exercise s regarding new IFRS 16? NOT IFRS 17! Sorry!
Thanks in advance!
February 2, 2018 at 7:59 am #434595No, there aren’t yet, but there will be soon
Try this:
A 7 year lease, asset fair value of $12,900, annual instalments of $2,650, annual interest charge of 10%, instalments paid at the end of each year (“in arrears”)
B/F + Interest – Instalment =C/F
12,900 1,290 (2,650) 11,540
11,540 1,154 (2,650) 10,044
10,044 1,004 (2,650) 8,398
8,398 840 (2,650) 6,588
6,588 659 (2,650) 4,597
4,597 460 (2,650) 2,407
2,407 241 (2,650) -3At the end of year 1, there is a capital amount outstanding of $11,540 because that first instalment paid the $1,290 interest that had accrued during the year and the remainder of the instalment paid off some of the capital liability leaving $11,540 to carry forward
At the end of year 2, there is a capital amount outstanding of $10,044 because the second instalment paid the $1,154 interest that had accrued during the second year and the remainder of the instalment paid off some of the capital liability leaving $10,044 to carry forward
And for the end of the third year, there is a capital amount outstanding of $8,398 because the third instalment paid the $1,004 interest that had accrued during the third year and the remainder of the instalment paid off some of the capital liability leaving $8,398 to carry forward
And so on
Now, accept that, at the end of the first year there is an amount outstanding of $11,540 and that liability will be part-paid at the end of the second year with the remainder paid at the end of the third, fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh years
So only the capital amount outstanding that will be paid off at the end of the second year is a current liability
All the rest is a long-term liability
But we know how much capital is outstanding at the end of the second year ($10,044) and at the end of the first year the capital outstanding was $11,540
So, within that second instalment there must have been a capital repayment element of $11,540 – $10,044 = $1,496 … and THAT is the current liability at the end of year 1
Also, at the end of year 1 we can see that $10,044 is payable more than 12 months hence and that is therefore the amount classed as a deferred liability
OK?
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