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Accounting Standard 27
Financial Reporting of Interests
in Joint Ventures
(In this Accounting Standard, the
standard portions have been set in bold italic
type. These should be read in the context of the background
material which has been set in normal type, and in
the context of the ‘Preface to the Statements of Accounting
Standards’1.)
Accounting Standard (AS) 27, ‘Financial Reporting
of Interests in Joint Ventures’, issued by the Council
of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of India,
comes into effect in respect of accounting periods
commencing on or after 01.04.2002. In respect of separate
financial statements of an enterprise, this Standard
is mandatory in nature2 from that date. In respect
of consolidated financial statements of an enterprise,
this Standard is mandatory in nature2 where the enterprise
prepares and presents the consolidated financial statements
in respect of accounting periods commencing on or
after 01.04.2002. Earlier application of the Accounting
Standard is encouraged. The following is the text
of the Accounting Standard.
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| Objective |
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The objective of this Statement is to set out principles
and procedures for accounting for interests in joint
ventures and reporting of joint venture assets, liabilities,
income and expenses in the financial statements of
venturers and investors.
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| Scope |
| 1 |
This Statement
should be applied in accounting for interests in joint
ventures and the reporting of joint venture assets,
liabilities, income and expenses in the financial
statements of venturers and investors, regardless
of the structures or forms under which the joint venture
activities take place.
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| 2. |
The requirements relating
to accounting for joint ventures in consolidated financial
statements, contained in this Statement, are applicable
only where consolidated financial statements are prepared
and presented by the venturer.
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| Definitions |
| 3. |
For the purpose
of this Statement, the following terms are used with
the meanings specified :
A joint venture is a contractual arrangement
whereby two or more parties undertake an economic
activity, which is subject to joint control.
Joint control is the contractually agreed sharing
of control over an economic activity.
Control is the power to govern the financial
and operating policies of an economic activity so
as to obtain benefits from it.
A venturer is a party to a joint venture and
has joint control over that joint venture.
An investor in a joint venture is a party to
a joint venture and does not have joint control over
that joint venture.
Proportionate consolidation is a method of
accounting and reporting whereby a venturer's share
of each of the assets, liabilities, income and expenses
of a jointly controlled entity is reported as separate
line items in the venturer's financial statements.
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| Forms of Joint Venture |
| 4. |
Joint ventures take many
different forms and structures. This Statement identifies
three broad types - jointly controlled operations,
jointly controlled assets and jointly controlled entities
- which are commonly described as, and meet the definition
of, joint ventures. The following characteristics
are common to all joint ventures:
- two or more venturers are bound by a contractual
arrangement; and
- the contractual arrangement establishes joint
control.
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| Contractual Arrangement |
| 5. |
The existence of a contractual
arrangement distinguishes interests which involve
joint control from investments in associates in which
the investor has significant influence (see Accounting
Standard (AS) 23, Accounting for Investments in Associates
in Consolidated Financial Statements). Activities
which have no contractual arrangement to establish
joint control are not joint ventures for the purposes
of this Statement.
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| 6. |
In some exceptional cases,
an enterprise by a contractual arrangement establishes
joint control over an entity which is a subsidiary
of that enterprise within the meaning of Accounting
Standard (AS) 21, Consolidated Financial Statements.
In such cases, the entity is not consolidated under
AS 21, but is treated as a joint venture as per this
Statement.
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| 7. |
The contractual arrangement
may be evidenced in a number of ways, for example
by a contract between the venturers or minutes of
discussions between the venturers. In some cases,
the arrangement is incorporated in the articles or
other by-laws of the joint venture. Whatever its form,
the contractual arrangement is normally in writing
and deals with such matters as:
- the activity, duration and reporting obligations
of the joint venture;
-
the appointment of the board
of directors or equivalent governing body of the
joint venture and the voting rights of the venturers;
- capital contributions by the venturers; and
-
the sharing by the venturers of
the output, income, expenses or results of the
joint venture.
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| 8. |
The contractual arrangement
establishes joint control over the joint venture.
Such an arrangement ensures that no single venturer
is in a position to unilaterally control the activity.
The arrangement identifies those decisions in areas
essential to the goals of the joint venture which
require the consent of all the venturers and those
decisions which may require the consent of a specified
majority of the venturers.
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| 9. |
The contractual arrangement
will indicate whether or not an enterprise has joint
control over the venture, along with the other venturers.
In evaluating whether an enterprise has joint control
over a venture, it would need to be considered whether
the contractual arrangement provides protective rights
or participating rights to the enterprise. Protective
rights merely allow an enterprise to protect its interests
in the venture in situations where its interests are
likely to be adversely affected. The participating
rights enable the enterprise to jointly control the
financial and operating policies related to the venture's
ordinary course of business. The existence of participating
rights would evidence joint control.
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| 10. |
The contractual arrangement
may identify one venturer as the operator or manager
of the joint venture. The operator does not control
the joint venture but acts within the financial and
operating policies which have been agreed to by the
venturers in accordance with the contractual arrangement
and delegated to the operator.
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| Jointly Controlled Operations |
| 11. |
The operation of some
joint ventures involves the use of the assets and
other resources of the venturers rather than the establishment
of a corporation, partnership or other entity, or
a financial structure that is separate from the venturers
themselves. Each venturer uses its own fixed assets
and carries its own inventories. It also incurs its
own expenses and liabilities and raises its own finance,
which represent its own obligations. The joint venture's
activities may be carried out by the venturer's employees
alongside the venturer's similar activities. The joint
venture agreement usually provides means by which
the revenue from the jointly controlled operations
and any expenses incurred in common are shared among
the venturers.
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| 12. |
An example of a jointly
controlled operation is when two or more venturers
combine their operations, resources and expertise
in order to manufacture, market and distribute, jointly,
a particular product, such as an aircraft. Different
parts of the manufacturing process are carried out
by each of the venturers. Each venturer bears its
own costs and takes a share of the revenue from the
sale of the aircraft, such share being determined
in accordance with the contractual arrangement.
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| 13. |
In respect of its interests in jointly
controlled operations, a venturer should recognise in
its separate financial statements and consequently in
its consolidated financial statements:
- the assets that it controls and the liabilities
that it incurs; and
- the expenses that it incurs and its share of the
income that it earns from the joint venture.
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| 14. |
Because the assets, liabilities,
income and expenses are already recognised in the
separate financial statements of the venturer, and
consequently in its consolidated financial statements,
no adjustments or other consolidation procedures are
required in respect of these items when the venturer
presents consolidated financial statements.
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| 15. |
Separate accounting records
may not be required for the joint venture itself and
financial statements may not be prepared for the joint
venture. However, the venturers may prepare accounts
for internal management reporting purposes so that
they may assess the performance of the joint venture.
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| Jointly Controlled Assets |
| 16. |
Some joint ventures involve
the joint control, and often the joint ownership,
by the venturers of one or more assets contributed
to, or acquired for the purpose of, the joint venture
and dedicated to the purposes of the joint venture.
The assets are used to obtain economic benefits for
the venturers. Each venturer may take a share of the
output from the assets and each bears an agreed share
of the expenses incurred.
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| 17. |
These joint ventures
do not involve the establishment of a corporation,
partnership or other entity, or a financial structure
that is separate from the venturers themselves. Each
venturer has control over its share of future economic
benefits through its share in the jointly controlled
asset.
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| 18. |
An example of a jointly
controlled asset is an oil pipeline jointly controlled
and operated by a number of oil production companies.
Each venturer uses the pipeline to transport its own
product in return for which it bears an agreed proportion
of the expenses of operating the pipeline. Another
example of a jointly controlled asset is when two
enterprises jointly control a property, each taking
a share of the rents received and bearing a share
of the expenses.
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| 19. |
In respect of its
interest in jointly controlled assets, a venturer should
recognise, in its separate financial statements, and
consequently in its consolidated financial statements:
-
its share of the jointly controlled
assets, classified according to the nature of
the assets;
-
any liabilities which it has incurred;
-
its share of any liabilities incurred
jointly with the other venturers in relation to
the joint venture;
-
any income from the sale or use
of its share of the output of the joint venture,
together with its share of any expenses incurred
by the joint venture; and
-
any expenses which it has incurred
in respect of its interest in the joint venture.
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| 20. |
In respect of its interest
in jointly controlled assets, each venturer includes
in its accounting records and recognises in its separate
financial statements and consequently in its consolidated
financial statements:
-
its share of the jointly controlled
assets, classified according to the nature of
the assets rather than as an investment, for example,
a share of a jointly controlled oil pipeline is
classified as a fixed asset;
-
any liabilities which it has incurred,
for example, those incurred in financing its share
of the assets;
-
its share of any liabilities incurred
jointly with other venturers in relation to the
joint venture;
-
any income from the sale or use
of its share of the output of the joint venture,
together with its share of any expenses incurred
by the joint venture; and
-
any expenses which it has incurred
in respect of its interest in the joint venture,
for example, those related to financing the venturer's
interest in the assets and selling its share of
the output.
Because the assets, liabilities, income
and expenses are already recognised in the separate
financial statements of the venturer, and consequently
in its consolidated financial statements, no adjustments
or other consolidation procedures are required in
respect of these items when the venturer presents
consolidated financial statements.
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| 21. |
The treatment of jointly
controlled assets reflects the substance and economic
reality and, usually, the legal form of the joint
venture. Separate accounting records for the joint
venture itself may be limited to those expenses incurred
in common by the venturers and ultimately borne by
the venturers according to their agreed shares. Financial
statements may not be prepared for the joint venture,
although the venturers may prepare accounts for internal
management reporting purposes so that they may assess
the performance of the joint venture.
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| Jointly Controlled Entities |
| 22. |
A jointly controlled
entity is a joint venture which involves the establishment
of a corporation, partnership or other entity in which
each venturer has an interest. The entity operates
in the same way as other enterprises, except that
a contractual arrangement between the venturers establishes
joint control over the economic activity of the entity.
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| 23. |
A jointly controlled
entity controls the assets of the joint venture, incurs
liabilities and expenses and earns income. It may
enter into contracts in its own name and raise finance
for the purposes of the joint venture activity. Each
venturer is entitled to a share of the results of
the jointly controlled entity, although some jointly
controlled entities also involve a sharing of the
output of the joint venture.
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| 24. |
An example of a jointly
controlled entity is when two enterprises combine
their activities in a particular line of business
by transferring the relevant assets and liabilities
into a jointly controlled entity. Another example
is when an enterprise commences a business in a foreign
country in conjunction with the government or other
agency in that country, by establishing a separate
entity which is jointly controlled by the enterprise
and the government or agency.
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| 25. |
Many jointly controlled
entities are similar to those joint ventures referred
to as jointly controlled operations or jointly controlled
assets. For example, the venturers may transfer a
jointly controlled asset, such as an oil pipeline,
into a jointly controlled entity. Similarly, the venturers
may contribute, into a jointly controlled entity,
assets which will be operated jointly. Some jointly
controlled operations also involve the establishment
of a jointly controlled entity to deal with particular
aspects of the activity, for example, the design,
marketing, distribution or after-sales service of
the product.
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| 26. |
A jointly controlled
entity maintains its own accounting records and prepares
and presents financial statements in the same way
as other enterprises in conformity with the requirements
applicable to that jointly controlled entity.
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| Separate Financial Statements
of a Venturer |
| 27. |
In a venturer's
separate financial statements, interest in a jointly
controlled entity should be accounted for as an investment
in accordance with Accounting Standard (AS) 13, Accounting
for Investments.
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| 28. |
Each venturer usually
contributes cash or other resources to the jointly
controlled entity. These contributions are included
in the accounting records of the venturer and are
recognised in its separate financial statements as
an investment in the jointly controlled entity.
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| Consolidated Financial Statements
of a Venturer |
| 29. |
In its consolidated
financial statements, a venturer should report its
interest in a jointly controlled entity using proportionate
consolidation except
-
an interest in a jointly controlled
entity which is acquired and held exclusively
with a view to its subsequent disposal in the
near future; and
-
an interest in a jointly controlled
entity which operates under severe long-term restrictions
that significantly impair its ability to transfer
funds to the venturer.
Interest in such a jointly controlled
entity should be accounted for as an investment in
accordance with Accounting Standard (AS) 13, Accounting
for Investments. |
| 30. |
When reporting an interest
in a jointly controlled entity in consolidated financial
statements, it is essential that a venturer reflects
the substance and economic reality of the arrangement,
rather than the joint venture's particular structure
or form. In a jointly controlled entity, a venturer
has control over its share of future economic benefits
through its share of the assets and liabilities of
the venture. This substance and economic reality is
reflected in the consolidated financial statements
of the venturer when the venturer reports its interests
in the assets, liabilities, income and expenses of
the jointly controlled entity by using proportionate
consolidation.
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| 31. |
The application of proportionate
consolidation means that the consolidated balance
sheet of the venturer includes its share of the assets
that it controls jointly and its share of the liabilities
for which it is jointly responsible. The consolidated
statement of profit and loss of the venturer includes
its share of the income and expenses of the jointly
controlled entity. Many of the procedures appropriate
for the application of proportionate consolidation
are similar to the procedures for the consolidation
of investments in subsidiaries, which are set out
in Accounting Standard (AS) 21, Consolidated Financial
Statements.
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| 32. |
For the purpose of applying
proportionate consolidation, the venturer uses the
consolidated financial statements of the jointly controlled
entity.
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| 33. |
Under proportionate consolidation,
the venturer includes separate line items for its
share of the assets, liabilities, income and expenses
of the jointly controlled entity in its consolidated
financial statements. For example, it shows its share
of the inventory of the jointly controlled entity
separately as part of the inventory of the consolidated
group; it shows its share of the fixed assets of the
jointly controlled entity separately as part of the
same items of the consolidated group.
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| 34. |
The financial statements
of the jointly controlled entity used in applying
proportionate consolidation are usually drawn up to
the same date as the financial statements of the venturer.
When the reporting dates are different, the jointly
controlled entity often prepares, for applying proportionate
consolidation, statements as at the same date as that
of the venturer. When it is impracticable to do this,
financial statements drawn up to different reporting
dates may be used provided the difference in reporting
dates is not more than six months. In such a case,
adjustments are made for the effects of significant
transactions or other events that occur between the
date of financial statements of the jointly controlled
entity and the date of the venturer’s financial statements.
The consistency principle requires that the length
of the reporting periods, and any difference in the
reporting dates, are consistent from period to period.
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| 35. |
The venturer usually
prepares consolidated financial statements using uniform
accounting policies for the like transactions and
events in similar circumstances. In case a jointly
controlled entity uses accounting policies other than
those adopted for the consolidated financial statements
for like transactions and events in similar circumstances,
appropriate adjustments are made to the financial
statements of the jointly controlled entity when they
are used by the venturer in applying proportionate
consolidation. If it is not practicable to do so,
that fact is disclosed together with the proportions
of the items in the consolidated financial statements
to which the different accounting policies have been
applied.
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| 36. |
While giving effect to
proportionate consolidation, it is inappropriate to
offset any assets or liabilities by the deduction
of other liabilities or assets or any income or expenses
by the deduction of other expenses or income, unless
a legal right of set-off exists and the offsetting
represents the expectation as to the realisation of
the asset or the settlement of the liability.
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| 37. |
Any excess of the cost
to the venturer of its interest in a jointly controlled
entity over its share of net assets of the jointly
controlled entity, at the date on which interest in
the jointly controlled entity is acquired, is recognised
as goodwill, and separately disclosed in the consolidated
financial statements. When the cost to the venturer
of its interest in a jointly controlled entity is
less than its share of the net assets of the jointly
controlled entity, at the date on which interest in
the jointly controlled entity is acquired, the difference
is treated as a capital reserve in the consolidated
financial statements. Where the carrying amount of
the venturer’s interest in a jointly controlled entity
is different from its cost, the carrying amount is
considered for the purpose of above computations.
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| 38. |
The losses pertaining
to one or more investors in a jointly controlled entity
may exceed their interests in the equity3 of the jointly
controlled entity. Such excess, and any further losses
applicable to such investors, are recognised by the
venturers in the proportion of their shares in the
venture, except to the extent that the investors have
a binding obligation to, and are able to, make good
the losses. If the jointly controlled entity subsequently
reports profits, all such profits are allocated to
venturers until the investors' share of losses previously
absorbed by the venturers has been recovered.
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| 39. |
A venturer should discontinue the
use of proportionate consolidation from the date that:
-
it ceases to have joint control
over a jointly controlled entity but retains,
either in whole or in part, its interest in the
entity; or
-
the use of the proportionate consolidation
is no longer appropriate because the jointly controlled
entity operates under severe long-term restrictions
that significantly impair its ability to transfer
funds to the venturer.
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| 40. |
From the date
of discontinuing the use of the proportionate consolidation,
interest in a jointly controlled entity should be
accounted for:
-
in accordance with Accounting Standard
(AS) 21, Consolidated Financial Statements, if
the venturer acquires unilateral control over
the entity and becomes parent within the meaning
of that Standard; and
-
in all other cases, as an investment
in accordance with Accounting Standard (AS) 13,
Accounting for Investments, or in accordance with
Accounting Standard (AS) 23, Accounting for Investments
in Associates in Consolidated Financial Statements,
as appropriate. For this purpose, cost of the
investment should be determined as under:
-
the venturer’s share in the
net assets of the jointly controlled entity
as at the date of discontinuance of proportionate
consolidation should be ascertained, and
-
the amount of net assets so
ascertained should be adjusted with the carrying
amount of the relevant goodwill/capital reserve
(see paragraph 37) as at the date of discontinuance
of proportionate consolidation.
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| Transactions between a Venturer
and Joint Venture |
| 41. |
When a venturer
contributes or sells assets to a joint venture, recognition
of any portion of a gain or loss from the transaction
should reflect the substance of the transaction. While
the assets are retained by the joint venture, and
provided the venturer has transferred the significant
risks and rewards of ownership, the venturer should
recognise only that portion of the gain or loss which
is attributable to the interests of the other venturers.
The venturer should recognise the full amount of any
loss when the contribution or sale provides evidence
of a reduction in the net realisable value of current
assets or an impairment loss.
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| 42. |
When a venturer
purchases assets from a joint venture, the venturer
should not recognise its share of the profits of the
joint venture from the transaction until it resells
the assets to an independent party. A venturer should
recognise its share of the losses resulting from these
transactions in the same way as profits except that
losses should be recognised immediately when they
represent a reduction in the net realisable value
of current assets or an impairment loss.
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| 43. |
To assess whether a transaction
between a venturer and a joint venture provides evidence
of impairment of an asset, the venturer determines
the recoverable amount of the asset as per Accounting
Standard on Impairment of Assets4. In determining
value in use, future cash flows from the asset are
estimated based on continuing use of the asset and
its ultimate disposal by the joint venture.
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44 |
In case of transactions
between a venturer and a joint venture in the form
of a jointly controlled entity, the requirements of
paragraphs 41 and 42 should be applied only in the
preparation and presentation of consolidated financial
statements and not in the preparation and presentation
of separate financial statements of the venturer.
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| 45. |
In the separate financial
statements of the venturer, the full amount of gain
or loss on the transactions taking place between the
venturer and the jointly controlled entity is recognised.
However, while preparing the consolidated financial
statements, the venturer’s share of the unrealised
gain or loss is eliminated. Unrealised losses are
not eliminated, if and to the extent they represent
a reduction in the net realisable value of current
assets or an impairment loss. The venturer, in effect,
recognises, in consolidated financial statements,
only that portion of gain or loss which is attributable
to the interests of other venturers.
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| Reporting Interests in Joint
Ventures in the Financial Statements of an Investor |
| 46. |
An investor in
a joint venture, which does not have joint control,
should report its interest in a joint venture in its
consolidated financial statements in accordance with
Accounting Standard (AS) 13, Accounting for Investments,
Accounting Standard (AS) 21, Consolidated Financial
Statements or Accounting Standard (AS) 23, Accounting
for Investments in Associates in Consolidated Financial
Statements, as appropriate.
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| 47. |
In the separate
financial statements of an investor, the interests
in joint ventures should be accounted for in accordance
with Accounting Standard (AS) 13, Accounting for Investments.
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| Operators of Joint Ventures |
| 48. |
Operators or managers
of a joint venture should account for any fees in
accordance with Accounting Standard (AS) 9, Revenue
Recognition.
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| 49. |
One or more
venturers may act as the operator or manager of a
joint venture. Operators are usually paid a management
fee for such duties. The fees are accounted for by
the joint venture as an expense.
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| Disclosure |
| 50. |
A venturer should
disclose the information required by paragraphs 51,
52 and 53 in its separate financial statements as
well as in consolidated financial statements. |
| 51. |
A venturer should
disclose the aggregate amount of the following contingent
liabilities, unless the probability of loss is remote,
separately from the amount of other contingent liabilities:
-
any contingent liabilities that
the venturer has incurred in relation to its interests
in joint ventures and its share in each of the
contingent liabilities which have been incurred
jointly with other venturers;
-
its share of the contingent liabilities
of the joint ventures themselves for which it
is contingently liable; and
-
those contingent liabilities that
arise because the venturer is contingently liable
for the liabilities of the other venturers of
a joint venture.
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| 52. |
A venturer should
disclose the aggregate amount of the following commitments
in respect of its interests in joint ventures separately
from other commitments:
-
any capital commitments of the
venturer in relation to its interests in joint
ventures and its share in the capital commitments
that have been incurred jointly with other venturers;
and
-
its share of the capital commitments
of the joint ventures themselves.
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| 53. |
A venturer should
disclose a list of all joint ventures and description
of interests in significant joint ventures. In respect
of jointly controlled entities, the venturer should
also disclose the proportion of ownership interest,
name and country of incorporation or residence. |
| 54. |
A venturer should
disclose, in its separate financial statements, the
aggregate amounts of each of the assets, liabilities,
income and expenses related to its interests in the
jointly controlled entities. |
| |
| 1. |
Attention is specifically
drawn to paragraph 4.3 of the Preface, according to
which accounting standards are intended to apply only
to material items. |
| 2. |
This implies that, while
discharging their attest function, it will be the
duty of the members of the Institute to examine whether
this Accounting Standard is complied with in the presentation
of financial statements covered by their audit. In
the event of any deviation from this Accounting Standard,
it will be their duty to make adequate disclosures
in their audit reports so that the users of financial
statements may be aware of such deviations. |
| 3. |
Equity is the residual
interest in the assets of an enterprise after deducting
all its liabilities. |
| 4. |
A separate Accounting
Standard on ‘Impairment of Assets’, which is being
formulated, will specify the requirements relating
to impairment of assets. |