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Scope
1. This Standard should be
applied in the reports of retirement benefit plans where such
reports are prepared.
2. Retirement benefit plans are
sometimes referred to by various other names, such as "pension
schemes", "superannuation schemes" or "retirement
benefit schemes". This Standard regards a retirement
benefit plan as a reporting entity separate from the employers
of the participants in the plan. All other International
Accounting Standards apply to the reports of retirement
benefit plans to the extent that they are not superseded by
this Standard.
3. This Standard deals with
accounting and reporting by the plan to all participants as a
group. It does not deal with reports to individual
participants about their retirement benefit rights.
4. IAS 19, employee benefits, is
concerned with the determination of the cost of retirement
benefits in the financial statements of employers having plans.
Hence this Standard complements IAS 19.
5. Retirement benefit plans may
be defined contribution plans or defined benefit plans. Many
require the creation of separate funds, which may or may not
have separate legal identity and may or may not have trustees,
to which contributions are made and from which retirement
benefits are paid. This Standard applies regardless of whether
such a fund is created and regardless of whether there are
trustees.
6. Retirement benefit plans with
assets invested with insurance companies are subject to the
same accounting and funding requirements as privately invested
arrangements. Accordingly, they are within the scope of this
Standard unless the contract with the insurance company is in
the name of a specified participant or a group of participants
and the retirement benefit obligation is solely the
responsibility of the insurance company.
7. This Standard does not deal
with other forms of employment benefits such as employment
termination indemnities, deferred compensation arrangements,
long-service leave benefits, special early retirement or
redundancy plans, health and welfare plans or bonus plans.
Government social security type arrangements are also excluded
from the scope of this Standard.
Definitions
8. The following terms are
used in this Standard with the meanings specified:
Retirement benefit plans are
arrangements whereby an enterprise provides benefits for its
employees on or after termination of service (either in the
form of an annual income or as a lump sum) when such benefits,
or the employer's contributions towards them, can be
determined or estimated in advance of retirement from the
provisions of a document or from the enterprise's practices.
Defined contribution plans are
retirement benefit plans under which amounts to be paid as
retirement benefits are determined by contributions to a fund
together with investment earnings thereon.
Defined benefit plans are
retirement benefit plans under which amounts to be paid as
retirement benefits are determined by reference to a formula
usually based on employees' earnings and/or years of service.
Funding is the transfer of
assets to an entity (the fund) separate from the employer's
enterprise to meet future obligations for the payment of
retirement benefits.
For the purposes of this
Standard the following terms are also used:
Participants are the members
of a retirement benefit plan and others who are entitled to
benefits under the plan.
Net assets available for
benefits are the assets of a plan less liabilities other than
the actuarial present value of promised retirement benefits.
Actuarial present value of
promised retirement benefits is the present value of the
expected payments by a retirement benefit plan to existing and
past employees, attributable to the service already rendered.
Vested benefits are benefits,
the rights to which, under the conditions of a retirement
benefit plan, are not conditional on continued employment.
9. Some retirement benefit plans
have sponsors other than employers; this Standard also applies
to the reports of such plans.
10. Most retirement benefit plans
are based on formal agreements. Some plans are informal but
have acquired a degree of obligation as a result of employers'
established practices. While some plans permit employers to
limit their obligations under the plans, it is usually
difficult for an employer to cancel a plan if employees are to
be retained. The same basis of accounting and reporting
applies to an informal plan as to a formal plan.
11. Many retirement benefit plans
provide for the establishment of separate funds into which
contributions are made and out of which benefits are paid.
Such funds may be administered by parties who act
independently in managing fund assets. Those parties are
called trustees in some countries. The term trustee is used in
this Standard to describe such parties regardless of whether a
trust has been formed.
12. Retirement benefit plans are
normally described as either defined contribution plans or
defined benefit plans, each having their own distinctive
characteristics. Occasionally plans exist that contain
characteristics of both. Such hybrid plans are considered to
be defined benefit plans for the purposes of this Standard.
Defined
contribution plans
13. The report of a defined
contribution plan should contain a statement of net assets
available for benefits and a description of the funding policy.
14. Under a defined contribution
plan, the amount of a participant's future benefits is
determined by the contributions paid by the employer, the
participant, or both, and the operating efficiency and
investment earnings of the fund. An employer's obligation is
usually discharged by contributions to the fund. An actuary's
advice is not normally required although such advice is
sometimes used to estimate future benefits that may be
achievable based on present contributions and varying levels
of future contributions and investment earnings.
15. The participants are
interested in the activities of the plan because they directly
affect the level of their future benefits. Participants are
interested in knowing whether contributions have been received
and proper control has been exercised to protect the rights of
beneficiaries. An employer is interested in the efficient and
fair operation of the plan.
16. The objective of reporting by
a defined contribution plan is periodically to provide
information about the plan and the performance of its
investments. That objective is usually achieved by providing a
report including the following:
(a) a description of
significant activities for the period and the effect of any
changes relating to the plan, and its membership and terms
and conditions;
(b) statements reporting on the
transactions and investment performance for the period and
the financial position of the plan at the end of the period;
and
(c) a description of the
investment policies.
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