The International Accounting Standards Board (Board) is seeking public comments on a new approach to developing disclosure requirements in IFRS Standards and new disclosure requirements for the Standards on fair value measurement and employee benefits. These proposals would enable companies to enhance their judgement and reduce ‘boilerplate’ information, giving investors more useful information.
The notes in financial statements sometimes include too little relevant information, too much irrelevant information and information disclosed ineffectively. Stakeholders say this typically occurs when the requirements in IFRS Standards are treated like a checklist without applying effective judgement.
Responding to stakeholder demand for the Board’s help in addressing these issues, the Board has set out a new approach to developing the disclosure requirements in IFRS Standards. Disclosure requirements developed using this approach are intended to better enable companies, auditors and others to make more effective materiality judgements and thus provide disclosures that are more useful to investors.
The new approach is written as draft guidance for use by the Board when developing disclosure requirements in individual Standards. In applying this guidance, the Board aims to:
The Board has tested this new approach using two IFRS Standards—IFRS 13 Fair Value Measurement and IAS 19 Employee Benefits—and has proposed amendments to the disclosure requirements in those Standards in the Exposure Draft.
The Board is seeking stakeholder feedback on whether the proposed new approach to developing disclosure requirements and proposed amendments to IFRS 13 and IAS 19 would help companies and others improve the usefulness of information disclosed.
Access the Exposure Draft below. The comment letter period was open until 12 January 2022. The Board developed these proposals as part of its Disclosure Initiative—Targeted Standards-level Review of Disclosures project and wider work on ‘Better Communication in Financial Reporting'.