Extent of IFRS application | Status | Additional Information |
---|---|---|
IFRS Accounting Standards are required for domestic public companies | Required. | |
IFRS Accounting Standards are permitted but not required for domestic public companies | ||
IFRS Accounting Standards are required or permitted for listings by foreign companies | Required. | |
The IFRS for SMEs Accounting Standard is required or permitted | Permitted. | |
The IFRS for SMEs Accounting Standard is under consideration |
Profile last updated: 16 June 2016
IFRS Standards (then called IAS Standards) were formally adopted for use in Zimbabwe in 1993 and were legally operationalised in 1996 with the publication of Statutory Instrument 62 of 1996.
To incorporate amendments to existing IFRS Standards and adopt new IFRS Standards, the reporting regulations are updated by statutory instruments issued by the Minister of Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs from time to time.
The ZAPB states that ‘of late we have realised that the process is cumbersome, and we have proposed that the law be amended to give immediate legal backing to any International Financial Reporting Standards that would have been adopted for use in Zimbabwe by ZAPB’.
There is no separate local GAAP in Zimbabwe.
IFRS Standards as issued by the IASB Board. However, amendments and new IFRS Standards are sometimes not formally adopted on a timely basis. Nonetheless, new or amended IFRS Standards are normally followed in practice even without formal adoption.
The ZAPB notes that ‘of late we have realised that the process is cumbersome, and we have proposed that the law be amended to give immediate legal backing to any international financial reporting standards that would have been adopted for use in Zimbabwe by ZAPB’.
To update the reporting standards in line when the IASB Board issues a new or amended IFRS Standard, the reporting regulations are updated via the medium of a statutory instrument issued by the Minister.
The ZAPB states that ‘of late we have realised that the process is cumbersome, and we have proposed that the law be amended to give immediate legal backing to any international financial reporting standards that would have been adopted for use in Zimbabwe by ZAPB’.
The IFRS for SMEs Standard was formally adopted for use in Zimbabwe with effect from 1 January 2011. However, according to the PAAB, to date the uptake has been low. The PAAB has run awareness programmes, including having all universities that offer accountancy degrees to have courses on the IFRS for SMEs Standard.
The PAAB has also delivered a workshop for university lecturers on implementing IFRS for SMEs Standard. PAAB states that ‘whilst the IFRS for SMEs is a welcome development, we still feel that there are some micro entities, who still find the IFRS for SMEs as complex. We propose that a reporting framework for very small/micro entities be developed.’