2 March 2021 (Updated 28 September 2023)
Materiality as a filter
Making information in financial statements more relevant and less cluttered has been one of the key focus areas for the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB).
Companies make materiality judgements not only when making decisions about recognition and measurement, but also when deciding what information to disclose and how to present it. However, management are often uncertain about how to apply the concept of materiality to disclosure, and find it easier to defer to using the disclosure requirements in IFRS® Accounting Standards as a checklist.
To help preparers of financial statements, the IASB had previously refined its definition of ‘material’1 and issued non-mandatory practical guidance on applying the concept of materiality2. As the final piece of the materiality improvements, in February 2021 the IASB issued amendments on applying materiality to disclosure of accounting policies.
The amendments on accounting policy disclosures could prove helpful for preparers in deciding which accounting policies to disclose in their financial statements. The focus on company-specific information should further discourage boilerplate disclosure.
Refined definition of material
In October 2018, the IASB refined its definition of material to make it easier to understand and apply. This definition is now aligned across IFRS Accounting Standards and the Conceptual Framework.
“Information is material if omitting, misstating or obscuring it could reasonably be expected to influence decisions that the primary users of general purpose financial statements make on the basis of those financial statements, which provide financial information about a specific reporting entity.” [emphasis added]
The refined definition of material complements the non-mandatory IFRS Practice Statement 2 guidance the IASB issued in 2017, which outlines a four-step process that preparers can use to help them make materiality judgements and provides guidance and examples on how to make materiality judgements in preparing their financial statements.
Amendments on accounting policy disclosures
In February 2021 the IASB issued amendments to IAS 1 Presentation of Financial Statements and an update to IFRS Practice Statement 2 Making Materiality Judgements to help companies provide useful accounting policy disclosures.
The key amendments to IAS 1 include:
- requiring companies to disclose their material accounting policies rather than their significant accounting policies;
- clarifying that accounting policies related to immaterial transactions, other events or conditions are themselves immaterial and as such need not be disclosed; and
- clarifying that not all accounting policies that relate to material transactions, other events or conditions are themselves material to a company’s financial statements.
The IASB also amended IFRS Practice Statement 2 to include guidance and two additional examples on the application of materiality to accounting policy disclosures.
The amendments are consistent with the refined definition of material:
“Accounting policy information is material if, when considered together with other information included in an entity’s financial statements, it can reasonably be expected to influence decisions that the primary users of general purpose financial statements make on the basis of those financial statements”.
The amendments are effective from 1 January 2023 but may be applied earlier.
Further guidance on disclosures
The Disclosure Initiative is part of the IASB’s wider work under the theme Better Communication in Financial Reporting (refer to our Visual Guide (PDF 132 KB) ).
For more information on these developments, speak to your KPMG contact.
1 Definition of Material – Amendments to IAS 1 and IAS 8, issued in October 2018 and effective from 1 January 2020
2 IFRS Practice Statement 2 Making Materiality Judgements, non-mandatory guidance applicable since September 2017
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