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IAS 41, Agriculture - DipIFR - Students - ACCA - ACCA Global
IAS 41, Agriculture - DipIFR - Students - ACCA - ACCA Global
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International Accounting Standard IAS 41, Agriculture, is the first standard that specifically covers the primary sector.
IAS 41 introduces a fair value model to agriculture accounting. This is a major shift away from the traditional cost model widely
IAS 41 impacts those agricultural activities where the income-producing biological assets are living animals or plants and will
include the harvested produce of these assets eg if the biological asset is dairy cattle, the agricultural produce is milk or the same
distinction could be made with trees in a plantation/felled trees or sugarcane/harvested cane Biological assets do not include
bearer plants. Bearer plants are:
ii. are expected to bear produce for more than one period;and
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iii. have a remote likelihood of being sold as agricultural produce, except for incidental scrap.
Bearer plants would include tea bushes, grape vines and rubber trees. They will be accounted for using IAS 16 – accumulated
cost until maturity and then subject to depreciation and impairment. The revaluation model could also be applied. The agricultural
produce from them will be accounted for using IAS 41 and IAS 2.
By contrast, in the case of an annual crop of wheat, for example, when the cultivated plants would typically have a useful life that
does not extend beyond the next year end date, the introduction of the fair value model should not have such a major impact.
1. Biological assets (living plants or animals – for example, trees in a plantation or orchard, cultivated plants, sheep, cattle)
related to managed agricultural activity. (for example, raising livestock, forestry, annual or perennial cropping, fish farming).
Agricultural activity is the management by an entity of the biological transformation (the process of growing, degenerating,
production and procreating that causes qualitative or quantitative change in the biological asset.
1. Bearer plants related to agricultural activity (IAS 16, Property, Plant and Equipment)
2. Products that are the result of processing after the point of harvest, for example: yarn/carpet, processed meats such as cured
hams, tea, wine, rubber, logs – IAS 2, Inventories, applies
3. The land on which the biological assets grow, regenerate and/or degenerate (IAS 16, Property, Plant and Equipment, IFRS
16, Leases, or IAS 40, Investment Properties, applies as appropriate)
4. Any intangible asset associated with the agricultural activity, for example: licenses and rights (IAS 38, Intangible Assets,
applies)
5. Agricultural activity that is not managed, for example: harvesting from ocean fishing
6. Minerals, oil, natural gas and similar non-regenerative resources (not yet covered by an IAS).
The following accounting standards specifically do not apply to biological assets related to managed agricultural activity because
of the specific coverage in IAS 41:
• IFRS 15, Revenue from Contracts with Customers, in respect of revenue arising from the initial recognition of agricultural
produce, and initial recognition and changes in fair value of biological assets
• IAS 20, Accounting for Government Grants and Disclosure of Government Assistance
• IAS 36, Impairment of Assets, when biological assets are measured at fair value.
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• When should a biological asset or agricultural produce be recognised on the statement of financial position?
• How should the differences in value of a recognised biological asset or agricultural produce between two year end dates be
accounted for?
Recognition
IAS 41 specifies the usual tests in order that a biological asset or agricultural produce be recognised on the statement of financial
position, namely:
• Control: the enterprise must have ownership or rights of control akin to ownership that result from a past event
• Value: future economic benefits are expected to flow to the enterprise from its ownership or control of the asset
• Measurement: the cost or fair value of the asset can be measured reliably.
Measurement
Biological assets should be measured at initial recognition, and at the end of each reporting period , at fair value less estimated
costs to sell.
Agricultural produce is measured, at the point of harvest, at fair value less estimated costs to sell at the point of harvest. The
point of harvest represents the transition between accounting for agricultural produce assets under IAS 41 and IAS 2. Fair value
less costs to sell at the point of harvest forms ‘cost’ for the purposes of IAS 2.
Costs to sell are incremental costs directly attributable to the disposal, excluding taxation and finance costs, and would include
commissions to brokers and dealers, levies by regulatory agencies and commodity exchanges, and transfer taxes and duties.
They exclude transport and other costs necessary to get assets to a market (these are taken into account in arriving at fair
value).
IAS 41 contains a rebuttable presumption that fair value can be established for all biological assets and agricultural produce.
Only on the initial recognition of such assets can the presumption be rebutted because of:
When the presumption that fair value can be established is rebutted, and until such time as a fair value becomes measurable
with reliability, the asset is carried on the statement of financial position at cost less any accumulated depreciation and any
accumulated impairment losses. IAS 41 contains additional disclosure requirements in such a situation
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The estimation of fair value will be determined by applying the requirements of IFRS 13 Fair Value Measurement. Fair value is
the price that would be received to sell the biological asset or agricultural produce in an orderly transaction between market
IAS 41 recognises that fair value measurement may be aarived at more reliably by grouping assets or produce eg by age or
quality if this better reflects the attributes used in the market to arrive at prices. For example livestock would be grouped by
species, age, weight, yield in a similar manner to how they would be valued by the market.
The standard specifically requires that fair value not be determined by reference to a future sales contract. Contract prices are
not necessarily relevant in determining fair value, because fair value reflects the current market in which a willing buyer and seller
would enter into a transaction. As a result, the fair value of a biological asset or agricultural produce is not adjusted because of
The standard also addresses the situation where the biological assets are physically attached to the land eg trees in a forestry
plantation. There may be no separate market for the biological asset separate from the land but rather the active market is for the
combined assets as a package. The standard suggests arriving at a fair value for the combined package and deducting the fair
value of the land and land improvements to arrive at the fair value of the biological assets.
The standard also acknowledges cost can approximate to fair value when little biological transformation has taken place since
initial cost incurrence (newly acquired livestock) or the impact of biological transformation on price is not material (initial growth in
timber plantation).
EXAMPLE 1
Establishing fair value when market-determined prices or values may not be available for a separate biological asset in its
present condition:
• As at 31 December 20X1, a plantation consists of 100,000 Pinus Radiata trees that were planted 10 years earlier. Pinus
Radiata takes 40 years to mature, and will ultimately be processed into building material for houses or furniture. Only
plantations combining land, land improvements and trees have established fair values by reference to a quoted price in an
active market.
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present state or a gain on initial recognition such as when livestock are born
The change in fair value (less costs to sell) of a biological asset between reporting dates is reported as a gain or loss in the
A gain or loss arising on initial recognition of agricultural produce at fair value less selling costs is included in profit or loss for the
Referring to the forestry example above, the difference in fair value of the plantation between the two year end dates is 800
(4,500 – 3,700), which will be reported as a gain in the statement or profit or loss (regardless of the fact that it has not yet been
realised).
IAS 41 requires disclosure of the aggregate gain or loss arising during the current period on initial recognition of biological assets
and agricultural produce and from the change in fair value less costs to sell of biological assets. In recognising that reporting the
aggregate gain or loss according to its distinct causes may not be practical in all circumstances, the standard does not require
reporting of the gain or loss on a disaggregated basis (that is, analysed between the gain and/or loss due to price and physical
factors) but encourages such disclosure because it is useful in appraising current period performance and future prospects,
Presentation
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Biological assets and agricultural produce should be presented as separate line items under the following headings:
Non-current assets
• Biological assets – would include all agricultural produce to be harvested more than 12 months from the reporting date,
livestock to be held for more than 12 months and trees cultivated for lumber and fruit.
Current assets
• Biological assets – would include produce to be harvested within 12 months of reporting date, livestock to be slaughtered
within 12 months and annual crops eg wheat, maize
• Inventories – includes the inventories produced from agricultural produce eg the Tea to be sold, produced from the tea
leaves
Disclosure
Extensive disclosure is required by IAS 41, including:
• a description of, and the nature of its activities involving, each group of biological assets
• non-financial measures or estimates of the physical quantities of agricultural produce output for the period and biological
assets as at the year end date
• a reconciliation of changes in the carrying amount of those biological assets between the beginning and end of the
reporting period. The reconciliation should include the gain/loss arising from changes in fair value, purchases, sales,
decreases due to harvest and other changes
For biological assets measured at cost less any accumulated depreciation and any accumulated impairment losses, the standard
• the range of estimates within which fair value is highly likely to lie (if possible)
• impairment losses (if any), reversals of impairment losses (if any) and depreciation expense
• the gross carrying amount and the accumulated depreciation at the beginning and end of the period.
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In addition, if the fair value of biological assets previously measured at cost less any accumulated depreciation and any
accumulated impairment losses subsequently becomes reliably measurable, an enterprise should disclose a description of the
biological assets, an explanation of why fair value has become reliably measurable, and the effect of the change. Disclosure is
also required in respect of government grants relating to managed agricultural activity.
If the government grant is conditional, including when a government grant requires an entity not to engage in specified
agricultural activity, the grant is recognised when the conditions are met. An example of this type og grant is the EU set-aside
grant scheme.
Government grants – assets measured at cost less accumulated depreciation and impairment
The original article by Simon Riley, updated by ACCA DipIFR examining team
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