The
objective of this IFRS is to ensure that an entity’s first IFRS financial
statements, and its interim financial reports for part of the period covered by
those financial statements, contain high quality information that:
(a)
is transparent for users and comparable over all periods presented;
(b)
provides a suitable starting point for accounting in accordance with
International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRSs); and
(c)
can be generated at a cost that does not exceed the benefits.
An
entity shall prepare and present an opening IFRS statement of financial
position at the date of transition to IFRSs. This is the starting point for its
accounting in accordance with IFRSs.
An
entity shall use the same accounting policies in its opening IFRS statement of
financial position and throughout all periods presented in its first IFRS
financial statements. Those accounting policies shall comply with each IFRS
effective at the end of its first IFRS reporting period.
In
particular, the IFRS requires an entity to do the following in the opening IFRS
statement of financial position that it prepares as a starting point for its
accounting under IFRSs:
(a)
recognise all assets and liabilities whose recognition is required by IFRSs;
(b)
not recognise items as assets or liabilities if IFRSs do not permit such
recognition;
(c)
reclassify items that it recognised in accordance with previous GAAP as one
type of asset, liability or component of equity, but are a different type of
asset, liability or component of equity in accordance with IFRSs; and
(d)
apply IFRSs in measuring all recognised assets and liabilities.
The
IFRS grants limited exemptions from these requirements in specified areas where
the cost of complying with them would be likely to exceed the benefits to users
of financial statements. The IFRS also prohibits retrospective application of
IFRSs in some areas, particularly where retrospective application would require
judgements by management about past conditions after the outcome of a
particular transaction is already known.
The
IFRS requires disclosures that explain how the transition from previous GAAP to
IFRSs affected the entity’s reported financial position, financial performance
and cash flows.
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