the federal accounting standards advisory board fasab update fasab update 20th annual government...
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The Federal AccountingStandards Advisory Board
FASAB FASAB UpdateUpdate
20th Annual Government20th Annual GovernmentFinancial Management ConferenceFinancial Management Conference
August 4, 2010August 4, 2010
Views expressed are those of the speaker. Official positions of the FASAB are determined only after
extensive due process and deliberations.
Disclaimer
Overview
• General information about FASAB
• Major Challenges
• Five recently issued documents
• One standard under review
• Active projects
General Information
Mark RegerTreasury
Debra BondOMB
Bob DaceyGAO
Hal Steinberg
Alan SchumacherMichael Granof
Scott ShowalterNorwood Jackson
Tom AllenChairman
(Former GASB Chair)
Who is FASAB?
Bios available at www.fasab.gov
(Current as of August 1, 2010)
When does FASAB meet?
• Generally six times a year
For 2010:For 2010:• February 24 – 25 February 24 – 25 • April 28 – 29April 28 – 29• June 23 – 24June 23 – 24• August 25 – 26August 25 – 26• October 27 – 28 October 27 – 28 • December 16 – 17 December 16 – 17
• Open to the public
• Agenda and briefing materials on www.fasab.gov
Where does FASAB meet?
Government Accountability Office441 G Street, NW
Washington, DC 20548
Room 7C13 (Staats Briefing Room)
Contact Charles Jackson at 202.512.7352 or [email protected] to be added to the building access list.
Major Challenges
Major Challenges
• The federal government’s financial health
• Primary focus of FASAB is not on one bottom line number
• Community involvement
• Cost/benefit considerations
Source: A Citizen’s Guide to the 2009 Financial Report of the U.S. Government, pg. i
Source: A Citizen’s Guide to the 2009 Financial Report of the U.S. Government, pg. ii
World War II peak of 109%
Source: A Citizen’s Guide to the 2009 Financial Report of the U.S. Government, pg. iv
Source: A Citizen’s Guide to the 2009 Financial Report of the U.S. Government, pg. x
Source: A Citizen’s Guide to the 2009 Financial Report of the U.S. Government, pg. xi
“. . . The nation must change course and bring social insurance expenses and resources in balance before the deficit and debt reach unprecedented heights. Delays will only increase the magnitude of the reforms needed and will place more of the burden on future generations. . . “
Source: A Citizen’s Guide to the 2009 Financial Report of the U.S. Government, pg. xii
Example Formats and Illustrations
Primary Focusof FASAB
• Stewardship--Information on whether:– the government’s financial condition
improved or deteriorated– programs are sustainable as currently
constructed
Primary Focus of FASAB (contd.)
• Operating Performance—Information to evaluate:– The service efforts, costs and
accomplishments of government– The manner in which these are financed– Management of the entity’s assets and
liabilities
Primary Focusof FASAB (contd.)
There is a need for more than just the bottom line numbers.
Community Involvement
• FASAB Community
– Preparers
– Auditors
– Users• Internal• External
Community Involvement (contd.)
• Formal Feedback
– AAPC
– Requests for comment
– Public Hearings
Community Involvement (contd.)
• Informal Feedback
– Task Forces / Roundtables
– Surveys
– Field Testing
Cost/Benefit Considerations
• Costs not readily available
• Benefits difficult to quantify
• Balance in the eye of the beholder
• True user not always easy to pinpoint
How Does the Board Address Cost/Benefit?
• Agenda-setting
• Proposal development
• Staff communications
• Exposure Drafts
• Field Tests
Recently Issued Documents
Recently Issued Standards
SFFAS 37, Social Insurance: Additional Requirements for MD&A and Basic Financial Statements
Effective
(FY 2010)
SFFAS 38, Accounting for Federal Oil and Gas Resources
Effective
(FY 2012)
Other Recently Issued
Technical Bulletin 2009-1, Deferral of the Effective Date of Technical Bulletin 2006-1
Effective
(FY 2009)
Technical Release 10 – Guidance on Asbestos Cleanup Costs Associated with Facilities and Installed Equipment
Effective
(upon issuance)
Technical Release 11 – Guidance on Cleanup Costs Associated with Equipment
Effective
(upon issuance)
SFFAS 37: Social Insurance
• Preliminary Views issued October 23, 2006
• Exposure Draft issued November 17, 2008
• Board and respondents strongly divided on many aspects
• SI project spawned fiscal sustainability reporting project
Social Insurance (contd.)
• New requirements– Narrative in MD&A
– Table of key measures in MD&A
– Summary section for SOSI
– Statement of changes in SOSI
• Effective FY 2011
Example Formats and Illustrations
Example Formats and Illustrations
Example Formats and Illustrations
SFFAS 38: Natural Resources
• Natural Resources project initiated in July 1995
• Task force held first meeting in January 1997
• Task force issued discussion paper in June 2000
Natural Resources (contd.)
• Original exposure draft on oil and gas released May 2007
• Concurrent field test
• Revised exposure draft issued July 6, 2009
• Final standard issued April 13, 2010
• A schedule of estimated federal oil and gas petroleum royalties:
– the present value of future federal royalty receipts on proved reserves known to exist as of the reporting date
– the amounts to be distributed to others (state governments)
• Required supplementary information for three years beginning in FY 2012
Natural Resources (contd.)
Technical Bulletin 2009-1, Deferral of the Effective Date of Technical Bulletin 2006-1
Fully Effective
(FY 2009)
• Defers effective date of Technical Bulletin 2006-1, Recognition and Measurement of Asbestos-Related Cleanup Costs, for two years (now fiscal year 2012)
• Provides federal agencies with additional time to resolve implementation issues identified since Technical Bulletin 2006-1 was issued
• AAPC recently issued implementation guidance
Technical Release 10 – Guidance on Asbestos Cleanup Costs Associated with Facilities and Installed Equipment
Fully Effective
(upon issuance)
• Provides implementation guidance for Technical Bulletin 2006-1, Recognition and Measurement of Asbestos-Related Cleanup Costs
• Framework
– Identifying assets that contain asbestos
– Develop estimates of cleanup costs
Technical Release 11 – Guidance on Cleanup Costs Associated with Equipment
Fully Effective
(upon issuance)
• Clarifies the accounting for cleanup costs associated with permanent or temporary closures or shutdown of equipment
• Also clarifies accounting for cleanup costs associated with ongoing operations
Standard UnderReview
• SAS → SFFAS
• At the request of ASB
• Guidance basically unchanged
• Expected to be issued August 2010
Subsequent Events: Codification of Accounting and Financial Reporting Standards Contained in the AICPA Statement on Auditing Standards
Effective
(upon issuance)
Active Projects
Active FASAB Projects
• Revisiting Conceptual Framework
• Deferred Maintenance / Asset Impairment
• Evaluating Existing Standards
• Use of FASB by Federal Entities
Revisiting Conceptual Framework
• Completed Phases:– Objectives– Elements
• In-Process Phases:– Reporting Model– Federal Entity– Measurement Attributes
• Review and Maintenance
Reporting Objectives
• Completed a review of the FASAB’s role and its environment
• Reviewed each of the four existing objectives from SFFAC 1
• Issued report, “Clarifying FASAB’s Near-Term Role in Achieving the Objectives of Federal Financial Reporting.”– Operating Performance and Stewardship are primary near-term
focus.
FASAB’s Near-Term Focus
Operating Performance
Federal financial reporting should assist report users in evaluating the service efforts, costs, and accomplishments of the reporting entity; the manner in which these efforts and accomplishments have been financed; and the management of the entity's assets and liabilities.
Stewardship
Federal financial reporting should assist report users in assessing the impact on the country of the government's operations and investments for the period and how, as a result, the government's and the nation's financial condition has changed and may change in the future.
Budgetary Integrity
Federal financial reporting should assist in fulfilling the government's duty to be publicly accountable for monies raised through taxes and other means and for their expenditure in accordance with the appropriations laws that establish the government's budget for a particular fiscal year and related laws and regulations.
Systems and Control
Federal financial reporting should assist report users in understanding whether financial management systems and internal accounting and administrative controls are adequate…
Primary Near-Term Focus
Mission
Comparative Advantage/GAAP Standards Setter
Language from Concepts 1
FASAB’S ROLE
Supporting RoleDirect Role Direct RoleSupporting Role
Secondary Near-TermFocus
Evolving Laws & Administrative Directives
Other Reports Fulfilling Objective
Contribution of Current Standards
Secondary Near-TermFocus
Board’s Authority does not extend to Budgetary Measurement and Recognition
Other ReportsFulfilling Objective
Contribution of Current Standards
Elements
• SFFAC 5 defined five elements of accrual-basis financial statements:– Assets, liabilities, net position, revenues
and expenses
• Recognition criteria
• Uncertainty
Reporting Model
• Revisiting SFFAC 2, Entity and Display– Validate and explain each financial
statement– Ensure all objectives are adequately
addressed by the model– Concerns exist regarding benefits of
accrual-basis financial statements relative to the cost of preparing them
Reporting Model (contd.)
• Project Approach
– User Needs Study
– Report on experiences in other countries
– Alignment of Model with Needs• Fill voids• Adjust current requirements to improve
alignment
Reporting Model (contd.)
• Cost Accounting– Evaluating the effectiveness of existing managerial
cost accounting standards– Surveying federal agencies
• Learn more about practices• Identify best practices
– Focus on linking cost to performance and efforts to encourage that linkage
– Is there a need for greater linkage between accrual based costs and the budget (or spending data)?
Reporting Model (contd.)
• Cost Accounting (contd.)
– Research to Date• Review of Literature• 2008 CFO Roundtable• Pre-Survey• Questionnaire• Interviews• Agency Financial Reports
Reporting Model (contd.)
• Cost Accounting (contd.)
– Preliminary Observations• Lack of consistency in defining responsibility
segments and outputs• Inability to make meaningful comparisons of
statements of net cost• Lack of reporting on output costs and per unit
costs• Lack of link between cost and performance• Lack of integration between budget and cost data• Lack of compliance with FFMIA of 1996
Federal Entity
• Defined in SFFAC 2– Conclusive criterion– Indicative criteria
• Revisiting– Questionable or unique entities– Consistency, completeness, and accountability– Material weakness
Federal Entity (contd.)
• Task Force
• Surveys– CFO– OIG– FFRDCs
Measurement Attributes
• Part of the FASAB’s reexamination and expansion of its conceptual framework
• Purpose: to provide guidance on the selection of measurement attributes in future federal financial reporting standards
• A measurement attribute is the aspect of an item that is measured (e.g., historical cost or replacement cost)
Measurement Attributes (contd.)
• Developing a statement of concepts to assist the board in establishing standards
• Identifying how initial amounts and re-measured amounts contribute to meeting reporting objectives
• Defining a suite of measurement attributes • Considering needs in the federal environment,
for example:– Value in use– Constant dollar reporting
Deferred Maintenance and Asset Impairment
• Deferred Maintenance– SFFAS 6 as amended results in RSI - experimental – Deferred maintenance viewed as critical management
issue.– Task force formed– Exposure draft on definition of deferred maintenance
• Asset Impairment– SFFAS 6 covers complete impairment– How does deferred maintenance relate to:
• Depreciation• Asset Impairment
Evaluating Existing Standards
• Why– Cost/benefit issues– Communication challenges– Expectations
• How– Outreach to preparers, auditors and users– Development of options
Evaluating Existing Standards (contd.)
• Grant Accrual– Exposure draft technical release issued March 2010– Provides guidance supporting cost-effective development of
reasonable estimates of accrued liabilities for grant programs
– Addresses numerous areas (e.g., materiality, internal controls, training, reasonableness, etc.)
– Expect to issue final technical release August 2010
• Earmarked Funds– SFFAS 27 had unintended consequences– Working to identify and resolve issues
Use of FASB by Federal Entities
• Background
– AICPA Rule 203 Status
– Current practice
– Revisiting newsletter guidance• Consistency, completeness, and
accountability • Consolidation issues
Use of FASB byFederal Entities (contd.)
• Issues
– What are user needs
– What requirements would address user needs and Treasury reporting needs
– What are the reporting costs, burdens, challenges
Use of FASB byFederal Entities (contd.)
• Project Status– Survey– Workgroup– Roundtable– Tentative Decisions
• No entities required to convert to FASAB at this time
• CFR can include two sources of GAAP• Exception for material intragovernmental
eliminations
Stay Informed
• www.fasab.gov
• FASAB listserv– Bi-monthly FASAB newsletter– Requests for comment– Press releases– Agendas– Invitations to serve on task forces
• Public meetings
Online Resourceswww.fasab.gov
Contact Information
Julia Ranagan, CGFM, CPA
Assistant Director
202.512.7377
www.fasab.gov
Questions?