Accounting For Pensions and Postretirement Benefits: Assignment Classification Table (By Topic)
Accounting For Pensions and Postretirement Benefits: Assignment Classification Table (By Topic)
Accounting For Pensions and Postretirement Benefits: Assignment Classification Table (By Topic)
com
CHAPTER 20
Accounting for Pensions and Postretirement Benefits
Brief Concepts
Topics Questions Exercises Exercises Problems for Analysis
1. Basic definitions and 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 16 1, 2, 3,
concepts related to pension 6, 7, 8, 12, 4, 5, 7
plans. 13, 23
2. Worksheet preparation. 3 3, 4, 7, 1, 2, 7,
10, 14 8, 9
3. Income statement 9, 10, 11, 1, 4 1, 2, 3, 6, 1, 2, 3, 4, 4, 5
recognition, computation 13, 16 11, 12, 13, 5, 6, 9
of pension expense. 14, 15, 16,
17, 18, 19
4. Financial statement 15, 21, 22 2 3, 9, 11, 12, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 2, 5, 7
recognition, computation of 13, 14, 6, 7, 8, 9
pension expense. 16, 17
5. Corridor calculation. 18 7 8, 13, 2, 3, 5, 6, 3, 4, 5, 6
18, 19 7, 8, 9
6. Reconciliation schedule. 24 9 3, 9, 10, 1, 2, 3,
13, 14, 17 6, 8, 9
7. Past service cost. 12, 13 5, 6 1, 2, 3, 5, 9, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 1, 4
11, 12, 13, 6, 7, 8, 9
14, 17, 19
8. Unrecognized net gain 14, 17, 7, 8 8, 9, 13, 14, 1, 2, 3, 5, 4, 5, 6
or loss. 19, 20 17, 18, 19 6, 7, 8, 9
9. Disclosure issues. 24 9, 11, 12 3, 4
10. Special Issues. 25, 26 10, 11, 20, 21, 22 10
27, 28, 12, 13
29, 30
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Brief
Learning Objectives Exercises Exercises Problems
1. Distinguish between accounting for the
employer’s pension plan and accounting
for the pension fund.
2. Identify types of pension plans and their
characteristics.
3. Explain alternative measures for valuing
the pension obligation.
4. List the components of pension expense. 1, 2, 4 1, 2, 6, 11, 12,
13, 15, 16
5. Use a worksheet for employer’s pension 3 3, 4, 7, 10, 1, 2, 4,
plan entries. 11, 14 7, 8, 9
6. Describe the amortization of past service 5, 6 1, 2, 5, 7, 12, 1, 2, 3, 4,
costs. 13, 16, 17 6, 7, 8, 9
7. Explain the accounting for unexpected gains 12, 13, 17 1, 2, 3, 4, 5,
and losses. 6, 7, 8, 9
8. Explain the corridor approach to amortizing 7, 8 8, 12, 13, 17, 3, 4, 5,
gains and losses. 18, 19 6, 7, 8
9. Describe the requirements for reporting 9 9, 10, 11, 12, 1, 2, 3,
pension plans in financial statements. 13, 15, 16, 17 4, 8, 9
10. Explain special issues related to 10, 11, 20, 21, 22 10
postretirement benefit plans. 12, 13
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Level of Time
Item Description Difficulty (minutes)
E20-1 Pension expense, journal entries. Simple 5–10
E20-2 Computation of pension expense. Simple 5–10
E20-3 Preparation of pension worksheet with reconciliation. Moderate 15–25
E20-4 Basic pension worksheet. Simple 10–15
E20-5 Past service costs. Moderate 5–10
E20-6 Computation of actual return. Simple 10–15
E20-7 Basic pension worksheet. Moderate 15–25
E20-8 Application of the corridor approach. Moderate 20–25
E20-9 Disclosures: Pension expense and reconciliation schedule. Moderate 25–35
E20-10 Pension worksheet with reconciliation schedule. Moderate 20–25
E20-11 Pension expense, journal entry, statement presentation. Moderate 20–30
E20-12 Pension expense, journal entry, statement presentation. Moderate 20–30
E20-13 Computation of actual return, gains and losses, corridor test, Complex 35–45
past service cost, pension expense, and reconciliation.
E20-14 Worksheet for E20-13. Complex 40–50
E20-15 Pension expense, journal entry. Moderate 15–20
E20-16 Pension expense, statement presentation. Moderate 30–45
E20-17 Reconciliation schedule and unrecognized loss. Moderate 20–25
E20-18 Amortization of unrecognized net gain or loss (corridor approach), Moderate 25–35
pension expense computation.
E20-19 Amortization of unrecognized net gain or loss (corridor approach). Moderate 30–40
E20-20 Other postretirement benefit expense computation. Simple 10–12
E20-21 Other postretirement benefit worksheet. Moderate 15–20
E20-22 Other postretirement benefit reconciliation schedule. Simple 10–15
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Level of Time
Item Description Difficulty (minutes)
P20-8 Comprehensive 2-year worksheet. Complex 45–60
P20-9 Comprehensive 2-year worksheet. Moderate 40–45
P20-10 Postretirement benefit worksheet with reconciliation. Moderate 30–35
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ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS
**1. A private pension plan is an arrangement whereby a company undertakes to provide its retired
employees with benefits that can be determined or estimated in advance from the provisions of a
document or from the company’s practices.
In a contributory pension plan the employees bear part of the cost of the stated benefits
whereas in a noncontributory plan the employer bears the entire cost.
**2. A defined contribution plan specifies the employer’s contribution to the plan usually based on a
formula, which may consider such factors as age, length of service, employer’s profit, or
compensation levels.
A defined benefit plan specifies a determinable pension benefit that the employee will receive at
a time in the future. The employer must determine the amount that should be contributed now to
provide for the future promised benefits.
In a defined contribution plan, the employer’s obligation is simply to make a contribution to the
plan each year based on the plan formula. The benefit of gain or risk of loss from assets con-
tributed to the plan is borne by the employee. In a defined benefit plan, the employer’s obli-
gation is to make sufficient contributions each year to provide for the promised future benefits.
Therefore, the employer is at risk to the extent that contributions will not be adequate to meet the
promised benefits.
**3. The employer is the organization sponsoring the pension plan. The employer incurs the costs
and makes contributions to the pension fund. Accounting for the employer involves: (1) allocating
the cost of the pension plan to the proper accounting periods, (2) measuring the amount of
pension obligation resulting from the plan, and (3) disclosing the status and effects of the plan in
the financial statements.
The pension fund or plan is the entity which receives the contributions from the employer, adminis-
ters the pension assets, and makes the benefit payments to the pension recipients. Accounting
for the fund involves identifying receipts as contributions from the employer sponsor, income from
fund investments, and computing the amounts due to individual pension recipients. Accounting for
the pension costs and obligations of the employer is the topic of this chapter; accounting for the
pension fund is not.
**4. When the term “fund” is used as a noun, it refers to assets accumulated in the hands of a
funding agency for the purpose of meeting pension benefits when they become due. When the
term “fund” is used as a verb, it means to pay over to a funding agency (as to fund future pension
benefits or to fund pension cost).
**5. An actuary’s role is to ensure that the company has established an appropriate funding pattern to
meet its pension obligations, to make predictions and assumptions about future events and
conditions that affect pension costs, and to assist the accountant in measuring facets of the pen-
sion plan that must be reported (costs, liabilities and assets). In order to determine the company’s
pension obligation, the actuary must first determine the expected benefits that will be paid in the
future. To accomplish this requires the actuary to make actuarial assumptions, which are esti-
mates of the occurrence of future events affecting pension costs, such as mortality, withdrawals,
disablement and retirement, changes in compensation, and changes in discount rates to reflect
the time value of money.
**6. In measuring the amount of pension benefits under a defined benefit pension plan, an actuary
must consider such factors as mortality rates, employee turnover, interest and earnings rates,
early retirement frequency, and future salaries.
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**7. One measure of the pension obligation is the vested benefit obligation. This measure uses only
current salary levels and includes only vested benefits; that is, benefits the employee is already
entitled to receive even if the employee renders no additional services under the plan.
A company’s accumulated benefit obligation is the actuarial present value of benefits attributed
by the pension benefit formula to service before a specified date and is based on employee
service and compensation prior to that date. The accumulated benefit obligation differs from the
projected benefit obligation in that it includes no assumption about future compensation levels.
The defined benefit obligation is based on vested and nonvested services using future salaries.
**8. Cash-basis accounting recognizes pension cost as being equal to the amount of cash paid by
the employer to the pension fund in any period; pension funding serves as the basis for expense
recognition under the cash basis.
Not infrequently, the amount which an employer must fund for pension purposes during a particular
period is unrelated to the economic benefits derived from the pension plan in that period. Cash-
basis accounting recognizes the amount funded as periodic pension cost and the amount funded
may be discretionary and vary widely from year to year. Funding is a matter of financial
management, based on working capital availability, tax considerations, and other matters
unrelated to accounting considerations.
Note to instructor: Regarding return on plan assets, the final component is expected rate of
return. We are assuming above that an adjustment is made to the actual return to determine
expected return.
*10. The service cost component of pension expense is determined as the actuarial present value
of benefits attributed by the pension benefit formula to employee service during the period. The
plan’s benefit formula provides a measure of how much benefit is earned and, therefore, how
much cost is incurred in each individual period. The IASB concluded that future compensation
levels had to be considered in measuring the present obligation and periodic pension expense if
the plan benefit formula incorporated them.
11. The interest component is the interest for the period on the defined benefit obligation
outstanding during the period. The assumed discount rate should reflect the rates at which pension
benefits could be effectively settled (settlement rates). Other rates of return on high-quality fixed-
income investments might also be employed.
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12. Service cost is the actuarial present value of benefits attributed by the pension benefit formula to
employee service during the period. Actuaries compute service cost at the present value of
the new benefits earned by employees during the year. Past service cost is the cost of retroactive
benefits granted in a plan amendment or initiation of a pension plan. The cost of the retroactive
benefits is the increase in the defined benefit obligation at the date of the amendment.
*13. When a defined benefit plan is either initiated or amended, credit is often given to employees for
years of service provided before the date of initiation or amendment. The cost of these retroactive
benefits are referred to as past service costs. Employers grant retroactive benefits because they
expect to receive benefits in the future. As a result, past service cost should not be recognized as
pension expense entirely in the year of amendment or initiation, but should be recognized during
the service periods of those employees who are expected to receive benefits under the plan.
Consequently, unrecognized past service cost is amortized over the remaining average period to
vesting of employees who will receive benefits and is a component of net periodic pension
expense each period.
*14. Liability gains and losses are unexpected gains or losses from changes in the defined benefit
obligation. Liability gains (resulting from unexpected decreases) and liability losses (resulting
from unexpected increases) are deferred and combined in the Unrecognized Net Gain or Loss
account. They are accumulated from year to year in a memo record account.
*15. If pension expense recognized in a period exceeds the current amount funded, a liability account
referred to as Pension Liability arises; the account would be reported either as a current or non-
current liability, depending on the ultimate date of payment.
If the current amount funded exceeds the amount recognized as pension expense, an asset
account referred to as Pension Asset arises; the account would be reported as a current asset if
it is current in nature; if non-current, it would be reported in the other assets section. Often, one
general account is used referred to as Pension Asset/Liability. If it has a credit balance, it is
identified as a liability; if a debit balance, it is an asset.
*17. An asset gain occurs when the actual return on the plan assets is greater than the expected
return on plan assets while an asset loss occurs when the actual return is less than the expected
return on the plan assets. A liability gain results from unexpected decreases in the pension
obligation and a liability loss results from unexpected increases in the pension obligation.
*18. Corridor amortization occurs when the accumulated unrecognized net gain or loss balance gets
too large. The gain or loss is too large when it exceeds the arbitrarily selected IASB criterion of
10% of the larger of the beginning balances of the defined benefit obligation or the fair value of
the plan assets. The excess unrecognized gain or loss balance may be amortized using any
systematic method but the amortization cannot be less than the amount computed using the
straight-line method over the average remaining service-life of active employees expected to
receive benefits.
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*22. Joshua Co. would report a pension liability of £74,300 (£335,000 – £245,000 – £24,000 + £8,300).
*23. (a) A contributory plan is a pension plan under which employees contribute part of the cost.
In some contributory plans, employees wishing to be covered must contribute; in other
contributory plans, employee contributions result in increased benefits.
(b) Vested benefits are benefits for which the employee’s right to receive a present or future
pension benefit is no longer contingent on remaining in the service of the employer.
(c) Retroactive benefits are benefits granted in a plan amendment (or initiation) that are
attributed by the pension benefit formula to employee services rendered in periods prior to
the amendment.
*24. Compromises by the IASB to full capitalization or recognition in the financial statements of
relevant pension data resulted in nonrecognition of the defined benefit obligation, plan assets,
past service cost, and gains and losses. These unrecognized items are disclosed in a separate
schedule in such a way that the total obligation and funded status (either over- or underfunded)
of the pension plan are reconciled to the pension asset/liability reported in the statement of
financial position by acknowledging the unrecognized pension elements (plan assets, past
service cost, and deferred gains and losses).
25. Postretirement benefits other than pensions include healthcare and other welfare benefits
provided to retirees, their spouses, dependents, and beneficiaries. The other welfare benefits
include life insurance offered outside a pension plan, dental care as well as medical care, eye
care, legal and tax services, tuition assistance, day care, and housing activities.
26. The major differences between pension benefits and postretirement benefits are listed below:
Additionally, although healthcare benefits are generally covered by the fiduciary and reporting
standards for employee benefit funds, in many jurisdictions the stringent minimum vesting,
participation, and funding standards that apply to pensions do not apply to healthcare benefits.
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A settlement occurs when a company enters into a transaction that eliminates all further
obligations for part or all of the benefits provided under a defined benefit plan. For example, by
making a lump-sum cash payment to participants in a defined pension plan in exchange for their
rights to receive specified benefits in the future, a settlement has occurred.
28. Companies recognize gains or losses on the curtailment or settlement of a defined benefit plan
when the curtailment or settlement occurs. The gain or loss on a curtailment or settlement is
comprised of the following: (1) any resulting change in the present value of the defined benefit
obligation, (2) any resulting change in the fair value of the plan assets, and (3) any related
actuarial gains and losses and past service cost that had not been previously recognized.
Where a curtailment relates to only some of the employees covered by a plan, or where only part
of an obligation is settled:
The gain or loss includes a proportionate share of the previously unrecognized past service
cost and actuarial gains and losses.
The proportionate share is determined on the basis of the present value of the obligations
before and after the curtailment or settlement.
If a cash payment is made to employees affected by the curtailment, such that it eliminates all
further obligations for benefits provided under the plan, a gain or loss may be recorded. This is
referred to as a settlement.
29. The underlying concepts for the accounting for postretirement benefits are similar between U.S.
GAAP and IFRS—both U.S. GAAP and IFRS view pensions and other postretirement benefits as
forms of deferred compensation. Other similarities include: (1) IFRS and U.S. GAAP separate
pension plans into defined contribution plans and defined benefit plans. The accounting for
defined contribution plans is similar. (2) Both IFRS and U.S. GAAP compute unrecognized past
service costs (PSC) in the same manner. (3) Both use corridor amortization for recognition on
pension gains and losses.
Differences include: (1) IFRS recognizes any vested PSC amounts immediately and spreads
unvested amounts over the average remaining period to vesting. U.S. GAAP amortizes PSC over
the remaining service lives of employees. (2) Under IFRS, companies have the choice of
recognizing actuarial gains and losses in income immediately (either net income or other
comprehensive income) or amortizing them over the expected remaining working lives of
employees. U.S. GAAP does not permit choice—using corridor amortization, actuarial gains and
losses are recognized in “Accumulated other comprehensive income” and amortized to income
over remaining service lives. (3) For defined benefit plans, U.S. GAAP recognizes a pension
asset or liability as the funded status of the plan (i.e., defined benefit obligation minus the fair
value of plan assets). IFRS recognizes the funded status, net of unrecognized past service cost
and unrecognized gain or loss. (4) The accounting for pensions and other postretirement benefit
plans is the same under IFRS. U.S. GAAP has separate standards for these types of benefits,
and significant differences exist in the accounting.
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UDDIN COMPANY
General Journal Entries Memo Record
Pension Defined
Pension Asset/ Benefit Plan
Items Expense Cash Liability Obligation Assets
1/1/10 250,000 Cr 250,000 Dr
Service cost 27,500 Dr 27,500 Cr
Interest cost 25,000 Dr 25,000 Cr
Actual return* 25,000 Cr 25,000 Dr
Contributions 20,000 Cr 20,000 Dr
Benefits 17,500 Dr 17,500 Cr
Journal entry 27,500 Dr 20,000 Cr 7,500 Cr
12/31/10 7,500 Cr 285,000 Cr 277,500 Dr
*Note: We show actual return on the worksheet to ensure that plan assets
are properly reported. If expected and actual return differ, then an additional
adjustment is made to compute the proper amount of pension expense.
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2010 amortization:
$120,000 ÷ 4 yrs. = $30,000
Villa’s 2010 and 2011 pension expense would be decreased by the €25,000
PSC amortization.
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SOLUTIONS TO EXERCISES
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20-16
Pension Worksheet—2010
General Journal Entries Memo Record
Annual Pension Defined Unrecognized
Pension Asset/ Benefit Plan Past
Expense Cash Liability Obligation Assets Service Cost
Balance, January 1, 2010 10,000 Cr. 800,000 Cr. 640,000 Dr. 150,000 Dr.
(a) Service cost 90,000 Dr. 90,000 Cr.
(b) Interest cost 80,000 Dr. 80,000 Cr.
(c) Actual return* 64,000 Cr. 64,000 Dr.
(d) Amortization of PSC 10,000 Dr. 10,000 Cr.
(e) Contributions 105,000 Cr. 105,000 Dr.
(f) Benefits 40,000 Dr. 40,000 Cr.
Journal entry 116,000 Dr. 105,000 Cr. 11,000 Cr.
Balance, January 31, 2010 21,000 Cr. 930,000 Cr. 769,000 Dr. 140,000 Dr.
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Reconciliation Schedule
*Note: We show actual return on the worksheet to ensure that plan assets are properly reported. If expected and
actual return differ, then an additional adjustment is made to compute the proper amount of pension expense.
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*Note: We show actual return on the worksheet to ensure that plan assets are properly reported. If
expected and actual return differ, then an additional adjustment is made to compute the proper
amount of pension expense.
20-3
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*Note: We show actual return on the worksheet to ensure that plan assets are properly reported. If expected and actual
return differ, then an additional adjustment is made to compute the proper amount of pension expense.
20-19
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20-3
Note to instructor: To prove the amounts reported, a worksheet might be prepared as follows:
Balance, Dec. 31, 2010 62,000 Cr. 2,077,000 Cr. 1,130,000 Dr. 1,085,000 Dr.* 200,000 Cr.
*This number is a plug as the problem states there is no unrecognized gain or loss.
**Note: We show actual return on the worksheet to ensure that plan assets are properly reported. If expected and actual
return differ, then an additional adjustment is made to compute the proper amount of pension expense.
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(b) Computation of pension liability gains and losses and pension asset
gains and losses.
Beginning-of-the-Year
(d) Past service cost amortization: £1,100 X 1/10 = £110 per year.
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Reconciliation Schedule
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Journal Entries—2011
Journal Entries—2012
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(c) The past service cost not yet recognized in periodic expense should
be deducted from the defined benefit obligation in excess of plan
assets (funded status) because, for accounting purposes, it has not
been recognized. As a result, the liability for accounting purposes is
lower, and, therefore, to reconcile to this lower number, the past
service cost not yet recognized must be deducted.
The unrecognized loss has either increased the defined benefit obliga-
tion or decreased the fair value of the plan assets, but has not been
recognized for accounting purposes. As a result, the accounting obliga-
tion is lower by this amount. In reconciling from the funded status to the
accounting liability, this unrecognized loss must be deducted.
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(a) The excess of the cumulative unrecognized net gain or loss over the
corridor amount is amortized by dividing the excess by the average
remaining service period of employees.
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(b) The excess of the cumulative unrecognized net gain or loss over the
corridor amount is amortized by dividing the excess by the average
remaining service life per employee. The average service period to vesting
is 10 years.
Amortization of Unrecognized Net (Gain) or Loss
(Gain) or Loss
For the Year Ended
December 31, Amount
2010 ($101,000
2011 (24,000)
10% Cumulative Minimum
Defined Benefit Plan Corridor Unrecognized Amortization of
Year Obligation (a) Assets (a) (b) (Gain) Loss (a) (Gain) Loss
2010 $2,800,000 $1,700,000 $280,000 ($ 0 $ –0–
2011 3,650,000 2,900,000 365,000 101,000 –0– (c)
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20-34
(f) Amortization:
Past service cost 3,000 Dr. 3,000 Cr.
Journal entry for 2010 103,900 Dr. 16,000 Cr. 87,900 Cr.
Balance, Dec. 31, 2010 87,900 Cr. 932,900 Cr. 748,000 Dr. 97,000 Dr.
*($810,000 X 9%)
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20-36
SOLUTIONS TO PROBLEMS
(b) Interest cost 420,000 Dr. 420,000 Cr.
(c) Actual return 252,000 Cr. 252,000 Dr.
(d) Funding 140,000 Cr. 140,000 Dr.
(e) Benefits 200,000 Dr. 200,000 Cr.
Journal entry, 12/31/10 318,000 Dr. 140,000 Cr. 178,000 Cr.
Balance, Dec. 31, 2010 178,000 Cr. 4,570,000 Cr. 4,392,000 Dr.
(f) Past service cost, 500,000 Cr. 500,000 Dr.
1/1/11 5,070,000 Cr.
PROBLEM 20-1
(g) Service cost 180,000 Dr. 180,000 Cr.
(h) Interest cost 507,000 Dr. 507,000 Cr.
(i) Actual return 260,000 Cr. 260,000 Dr.
(j) Unexpected loss 91,360 Cr. 91,360 Dr.
(k) Amortization of PSC 90,000 Dr. 90,000 Cr.
(l) Funding 185,000 Cr. 185,000 Dr.
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PROBLEM 20-2
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Balance, Dec. 31, 2010 222,000 Cr. 219,000 Dr. 3,000 Dr.
Worksheet computations:
2011
Pension Expense ..................................................... 89,700
Cash .................................................................. 40,000
Pension Asset/Liability .................................... 49,700
2012
Pension Expense ..................................................... 83,430
Cash .................................................................. 48,000
Pension Asset/Liability .................................... 35,430
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PROBLEM 20-3
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The £24,000 net loss in the Unrecognized Net Gain or Loss account
becomes the beginning balance in 2011. The corridor at 1/1/11 is 10%
of the greater of £452,000 (DBO) or £276,000 (fair value). Since the
corridor of £45,200 is greater than the balance in the unamortized
gain/loss account of £24,000, there will be no gain/loss amortization in
2011. It follows that no amortization occurs in 2010 because no
balance existed in the Unrecognized Net Gain or Loss account at the
beginning of 2010.
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PROBLEM 20-4
2010 2011
Service cost (¥ 60,000 ¥ 90,000
Interest cost (¥600,000 X .09)
and (¥700,000 X .09) 54,000 63,000
Expected return on plan assets (24,000) (30,000)
Amortization of past service cost 10,000 12,000
Pension expense (¥100,000 (¥135,000
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PROBLEM 20-5
(a) Pension expense for 2010 consisted only of the service cost component
amounting to $55,000. There were no unrecognized past service cost,
unrecognized net gain or loss, pension assets, or defined benefit
obligation as of January 1, 2010.
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Journal Entry—2011
Pension Expense ..................................................... 86,050
Cash .................................................................. 60,000
Pension Asset/Liability .................................... 26,050
Journal Entry—2012
Pension Expense ..................................................... 131,829
Cash .................................................................. 95,000
Pension Asset/Liability .................................... 36,829
*($86,050 + $83,950)
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PROBLEM 20-6
Journal Entries—2010
Pension Expense .................................................. 600,000
Pension Asset/Liability ................................. 25,000
Cash ............................................................... 575,000
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Farber Corp.
Pension Worksheet—2010
General Journal Entries Memo Entries
Annual Pension Defined Unrecognized Unrecognized
Pension Asset/ Benefit Plan Past Service Net Gain or
Item Expense Cash Liability Obligation Assets Cost Loss
Balance, Jan. 1, 2010 33,000 Cr. 725,000 Cr. 520,000 Dr. 81,000 Dr. 91,000 Dr.
(a) Service cost 108,000 Dr.
108,000 Cr.
(b) Interest cost 65,250 Dr.
65,250 Cr.
(c) Actual return 48,000 Cr.
48,000 Dr.
(d) Unexpected loss 4,000 Cr. 4,000 Dr.
PROBLEM 20-7
(e) Amortization of PSC 25,000 Dr. 25,000 Cr.
Kieso Intermediate: IFRS Edition, Solutions Manual
Balance, Jan. 1, 2010 80,000 Cr. 650,000 Cr. 410,000 Dr. 160,000 Dr.
(a) Service cost 40,000 Dr. 40,000 Cr.
(b) Interest cost 65,000 Dr. 65,000 Cr.
(c) Actual return 36,000 Cr. 36,000 Dr.
(d) Unexpected loss 5,000 Cr. 5,000 Dr.
(e) Amortization of PSC 70,000 Dr. 70,000 Cr.
(f) Contributions 72,000 Cr. 72,000 Dr.
(g) Benefits 31,500 Dr. 31,500 Cr.
PROBLEM 20-8
(h) Liability loss 87,000 Cr. 87,000 Dr.
Journal entry for 2010 134,000 Dr. 72,000 Cr. 62,000 Cr.
Balance, Dec. 31, 2010 142,000 Cr. 810,500 Cr. 486,500 Dr. 90,000 Dr. 92,000 Dr.
Journal entry for 2011 146,948 Dr. 81,000 Cr. 65,948 Cr.
Balance, Dec. 31, 2011 207,948 Cr. 896,550 Cr. 574,500 Dr. 35,000 Dr. 79,102 Dr.
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Worksheet computations:
(d) $5,000 = ($410,000 X 10%) – $36,000; expected return exceeds actual return.
(l) $12,350 = ($486,500 X 10%) – $61,000; actual return exceeds expected return.
(b) 2010
Pension Expense ....................................................... 134,000
Cash .................................................................... 72,000
Pension Asset/Liability ...................................... 62,000
2011
Pension Expense ....................................................... 146,948
Cash .................................................................... 81,000
Pension Asset/Liability ...................................... 65,948
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PROBLEM 20-9
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Balance, Dec. 31, 2010 180,000 Cr. 4,880,000 Cr. 4,682,000 Dr. 18,000 Dr.
(g) Prior service cost, 1/1/11 600,000 Cr. 600,000 Dr.
(h) Service cost 170,000 Dr. 170,000 Cr.
(i) Interest cost 548,000 Dr. 548,000 Cr.
(j) Actual return 250,000 Cr. 250,000 Dr.
(k) Unexpected loss 124,560 Cr. 124,560 Dr.
(l) Amortization of PSC 90,000 Dr. 90,000 Cr.
m) Funding 184,658 Cr. 184,658 Dr.
(n) Benefits 280,000 Dr. 280,000 Cr.
Journal entry, 12/31/11 433,440 Dr. 184,658 Cr. 248,782 Cr.
428,782 Cr. 5,918,000 Cr. 4,836,658 Dr. 510,000 Dr. 142,560 Dr.
(b) $450,000 = $4,500,000 X 10%.
(d) $18,000 = ($4,500,000 X 6%) – $252,000.
(i) $548,000 = ($4,880,000 + $600,000) X 10%.
(k) $124,560 = ($4,682,000 X .08) – $250,000.
20-3
(a) Dusty Hass Foods Inc.
Postretirement Benefits Worksheet—2010
General Journal Entries Memo Record
Post-
Net Periodic retirement Defined Unrecognized
Postretirement benefit Benefit Net Gain
Items Cost Cash liability Obligation Plan Assets or Loss
Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
PROBLEM 20-10
(e) Contributions 60,000 Cr. 60,000 Dr.
(f) Benefits 44,000 Dr. 44,000 Cr.
Journal entry, Dec. 31 79,000 Dr. 60,000 Cr. 19,000 Cr.
19,000 Cr. 244,000 Cr. 231,000 Dr. 6,000 Cr.
(c) No amortization of the actuarial gain will be recorded in 2010 since there was no actuarial gain at the beginning
of 2010. There would be no amortization of the unrecognized gain (€6,000) in 2011 because it is less than the
corridor amount of €24,400 (€244,000 X .10).
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CA 20-1
(a) A private pension plan is an arrangement whereby a company undertakes to provide its retired
employees with benefits that can be determined or estimated in advance from the provisions of a
document or from the company’s practices.
In a contributory pension plan the employees bear part of the cost of the stated benefits whereas
in a noncontributory plan the employer bears the entire cost.
(b) The employer is the organization sponsoring the pension plan. The employer incurs the costs
and makes contributions to the pension fund. Accounting for the employer involves: (1) allocating
the cost of the pension plan to the proper accounting periods, (2) measuring the amount of
pension obligation resulting from the plan, and (3) disclosing the status and effects of the plan in
the financial statements.
The pension fund or plan is the entity which receives the contributions from the employer,
administers the pension assets, and makes the benefit payments to the pension recipients.
Accounting for the fund involves identifying receipts as contributions from the employer sponsor
and as income from fund investments and computing the amounts due to individual pension
recipients.
(c) 1. Relative to the pension fund the term “funded” refers to the relationship between pension
fund assets and the present value of expected future pension benefit payments; thus, the
pension fund may be fully funded or underfunded. Relative to the employer, the term
“funded” refers to the relationship of the contributions made by the employer to the pension
fund and the pension expense accrued by the employer; if the employer contributes
annually to the pension fund an amount equal to the pension expense, the employer is fully
funded.
2. Relative to the pension fund, the pension liability is an actuarial concept representing an
economic liability under the pension plan for future cash payments to retirees. From the
viewpoint of the employer, the pension liability is an accounting credit that results from an
excess of amounts expensed over amounts contributed (funded) to the pension fund.
(d) 1. The theoretical justification for accrual recognition of pension costs is based on the expense
recognition principle. Pension costs are incurred during the period over which an employee
renders services to the enterprise; these costs may be paid upon the employee’s
retirement, over a period of time after retirement, as incurred through funding or insurance
plans, or through some combination of any or all of these methods.
2. Although cash (pay-as-you-go) accounting is highly objective for the final determination of
actual pension costs, it provides no measurement of annual pension costs as they are
incurred. Accrual accounting provides greater objectivity in the annual measurement of
pension costs than does cash accounting if actuarial funding methods are applied to actuarial
valuations to determine the provision for pension costs. While cash accounting provides a
more precise determination of the final cost, accrual accounting provides a more objective
measure of the annual cost.
(e) Terms and their definitions as they apply to accounting for pension plans follow:
1. Service cost is the actuarial present value of benefits attributed by the pension benefit formula
to employee service during that period. The service cost component is a portion of the
defined benefit obligation and is unaffected by the funded status of the plan.
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CA 20-1 (Continued)
2. Past service costs are the retroactive benefits granted in a plan amendment (or initiation).
Retroactive benefits are benefits granted in a plan amendment (or initiation) that are
attributed by the pension benefit formula to employee services rendered in periods prior to
the amendment.
3. Vested benefits are benefits that are not contingent on the employee continuing in the service
of the employer. In some plans the payment of the benefits will begin only when the
employee reaches the normal retirement date; in other plans the payment of the benefits
will begin when the employee retires (which may be before or after the normal retirement
date). The actuarially computed value of vested benefits represents the present value: (a) the
benefits expected to become payable to former employees who have retired, or who have
terminated service with vested rights, at the date of determination; and (b) the benefits
(based on service rendered prior to the date of determination) expected to become payable
at future dates to present employees, taking into account the probable time that employees
will retire.
CA 20-2
1. Pension asset/liability is the cumulative contributions in excess of accrued net pension expense.
This item is reported in the asset section of the statement of financial position and is reduced
when pension expense is greater than the contribution made to the fund during a period.
2. Pension asset/liability is the cumulative net pension expense accrued in excess of the employer’s
contributions. This item is reported in the liability section of the statement of financial position and
is increased when pension expense is greater than the contribution made to the fund.
3. Actuarial loss as a component of Accumulated Other Comprehensive Income arises when the
actual return on plan assets is less than the expected return and a company elects immediate
recognition in OCI. They also arise from changes in the defined benefit obligation. This account
should be reported in the equity section as a component of accumulated other comprehensive
income. In addition, it should be shown as part of other comprehensive income.
4. Pension expense is the amount recognized in an employer’s financial statements as the expense
for a pension plan for the period. Components of pension expense are service cost, interest cost,
expected return on plan assets, amortization of unrecognized gain or loss, and amortization of
unrecognized past service cost.
CA 20-3
(a) 1. The theoretical justification for accrual recognition of pension costs is based on the expense
recognition principle. Pension costs are incurred during the period over which an employee
renders services to the enterprise; these costs may be paid upon the employee’s
retirement, over a period of time after retirement, as incurred through funding or insurance
plans, or through some combination of any or all of these methods.
2. Although cash (pay-as-you-go) accounting is highly objective for the final determination of
actual pension costs, it provides no measurement of annual pension costs as they are
incurred. Accrual accounting provides greater objectivity in the annual measurement of
pension costs than does cash accounting.
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CA 20-3 (Continued)
(b) Terms and their definitions as they apply to accounting for pensions follow:
1. Fair value of pension assets, when based on a calculated value, is a moving average of
pension plan asset values over a period of time. Considerable flexibility is permitted in
computing this amount. In many cases, companies will undoubtedly use the actuarial asset
value employed by the actuary as their fair value of pension assets for purposes of
applying this concept to pension reporting.
2. The defined benefit obligation is the present value of vested and nonvested employee
benefits accrued to date based on employees’ future salary levels. This is the pension
liability adopted by the IASB in IAS 19.
3. The corridor approach was developed by the IASB as the method for determining when to
amortize the accumulated balance in the Unrecognized Net Gain or Loss account. The
unrecognized net gain or loss balance is amortized when it exceeds the arbitrarily selected
IASB criterion of 10% of the larger of the beginning-of-the-year balances of the defined
benefit obligation or the fair value of the plan assets.
(c) The following disclosures about a company’s pension plans should be made in the financial
statements or the notes:
1. A description of the plan and the accounting policy for recognizing actuarial gains and
losses.
3. A reconciliation showing how the defined benefit obligation and the fair value of the plan
assets changed from the beginning to the end of the period.
4. The funded status of the plan (difference between the DBO and fair value of the plan assets)
and the amounts recognized and not recognized in the financial statements.
5. A disclosure of the rates used in measuring the benefit amounts (discount rate, expected
return on plan assets, and rate of compensation).
6. A company’s best estimate of the contributions expected to be made to the plan in the next
year. A table indicating the allocation of pension plan assets by category (equity securities,
debt securities, real estate, and other assets), and showing the percentage of the fair value
to total plan assets. In addition, the actual return on plan is disclosed, as well as information
on how the expected rate of return is determined.
CA 20-4
(a) Pension benefits are part of the compensation received by employees for their services. The
actual payment of these benefits is deferred until after retirement. The pension expense
measures this compensation and consists of the following five elements:
1. The service cost component is the present value of the benefits earned by the employees
during the current period.
2. Since a pension represents a deferred compensation agreement, a liability is created when
the plan is adopted. The interest cost component is the increase in that liability, the defined
benefit obligation, due to the passage of time.
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CA 20-4 (Continued)
3. In order to discharge the pension liability, an employer contributes to a pension fund. The
return on the fund assets serves to reduce the interest element of the pension expense.
Specifically, the expected return reduces pension expense. Expected return is the expected
rate of return times the fair value of pension assets.
4. When a pension plan is adopted or amended, credit is often given for employee service
rendered in prior years. This retroactive credit, or past service cost, is not recognized as
pension expense entirely in the year the plan is adopted or amended, but should be
recognized as pension expense over the time that the employees who benefited from this
credit worked.
5. The gains and losses component arises from a change in the amount of either the defined
benefit obligation or the plan assets. This component is amortized via corridor amortization.
(b) The major similarity between the vested benefit obligation and the defined benefit obligation is
that they both represent the present value of the benefit attributed by the pension benefit formula
to employee service rendered prior to a specific date. All things being equal, when an employee
is about to retire, the vested benefit obligation will be equal to the defined benefit obligation.
The major difference between the vested benefit obligation and the defined benefit obligation is
that the former is based on current salary levels and the latter is based on estimated future salary
levels. Assuming salary increases over time, the defined benefit obligation should be higher than
the vested benefit obligation.
(c) 1. Pension gains and losses, sometimes called actuarial gains and losses, result from changes
in the value of the defined benefit obligation or the fair value of the plan assets. These
changes arise from the deviations between the estimated conditions and the actual
experience, and from changes in assumptions. The volatility of these gains and losses may
reflect an unavoidable inability to predict compensation levels, length of employee service,
mortality, retirement ages, and other relevant events accurately for a period, or several
periods. Therefore, fully recognizing the gains or losses on the income statement may result
in volatility that does not reflect actual changes in the funded status of the plan in that period.
2. In order to decrease the volatility of the reporting of the pension gains or losses, the IASB
had adopted what is referred to as the “corridor approach.” This approach achieves the
objective by amortization of the cumulative, unrecognized pension gains and losses, in
excess of 10% of the greater of the defined benefit obligation or the fair value of the plan
assets.
CA 20-5
1. This situation can exist because companies vary as to whether they are using an implicit or ex-
plicit set of assumptions when interest rates are disclosed. In the implicit approach, two or more
assumptions do not individually represent the best estimate of the plan’s future experience with
respect to these assumptions, but the aggregate effect of their combined use is presumed to be
approximately the same as that of an explicit approach. In the explicit approach, each significant
assumption reflecting the best estimate of the plan’s future experience solely with respect to that
assumption must be stated. As a result, some companies are presently using an implicit approach,
others an explicit approach. IAS 19 requires the use of explicit assumptions. As a result, this large
variance in interest rates will probably disappear to some extent. However, it should be noted that
companies will have some leeway in establishing discount rates. In addition, the expected return
on assets will also be different among companies.
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CA 20-5 (Continued)
2. This situation will occur because of the pension liability required to be reported. That is, companies
are required to report as a liability the excess of their defined benefit obligation over the fair value
of plan assets and adjusted for unrecognized PSC and unexpected gains and losses. In the past,
the basic liability companies reported was the excess of the amount expensed over the amount
funded.
4. These pension plan assets in excess of the defined benefit obligation are not reported on the
employer’s books. However, the fair value of plan assets are required to be reported in the
footnote, so that a reader of the financial statements can determine the funded status of the plan.
5. (a) In a defined contribution plan, the amount contributed is the amount expensed. No significant
reporting problems exist here. On the other hand, defined benefit plans involve many difficult
reporting issues which may lead to additional expense and liability recognition.
Significant amendments will generally increase past service cost which may lead to
significant adjustments to pension expense in the future.
(b) Plan participants are of importance, because the expected future years of service com-
putation can have an impact on the amortization of the past service cost and gains and
losses.
(c) If the plan is underfunded, pension expense will generally increase (all other factors
constant). If the plan is overfunded, pension expense will generally decrease (all other
factors constant). The reason is that the expected return on plan assets will be less if the
plan is underfunded and vice versa.
(d) If the company is using an actuarial funding method different than the one prescribed
in IAS 19 (straight-line approach), some changes in the computation of pension expense
will occur for the company.
6. The corridor method is an approach which requires that only gains and losses in excess of 10%
of the greater of the defined benefit obligation or fair value of pension assets be allocated. This
excess is then amortized over the average remaining service period of current employees
expected to participate in the plan.
The corridor’s purpose is to only recognize gains and losses above a certain amount, on the
theory that gains and losses within the corridor will offset one another over time.
CA 20-6
(a) To: Rachel Avery, Accounting Clerk
From: Good Student, Manager of Accounting
Date: January 3, 2012
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CA 20-6 (Continued)
Subject: Amortization of unrecognized gains and losses in pension expense
Pension expense includes several components; one occasionally included is the amortization of
unrecognized gains/losses. These gains/losses occur for two reasons. First, the plan assets may
provide a return that is either greater or less than what was expected. Second, changes in
actuarial assumptions may create increases or decreases in the pension liability. If these
gains/losses are small in relation to the defined benefit obligation (DBO) or the fair value of the
plan assets (PA), then do not include them in annual pension expense.
If, in any given year, the gains or losses become too great, then at least a portion must be
included in pension expense so as not to understate or overstate the annual obligation. This is
done through a process called amortization.
To decide whether or not you should include gains/losses in annual pension expense, calculate 10
percent of either the DBO or the PA (whichever is greater) as a “corridor.” Amortize the amount of
any gain or loss falling outside the corridor over the average remaining service life of the active
employees.
Note: these gains/losses must exist at the beginning of the year for which amortization takes
place [see (a) on schedule below].
Thus, in the attached schedule, no amortization of the $280,000 loss in 2008 was required
because the balance in the unrecognized gain/loss account at the beginning of that year was
zero. However, at the beginning of 2009, the balance in that account was $280,000. The 10
percent corridor is $260,000, so the loss exceeds this corridor by $20,000. Since the remaining
service life of employees is 10 years, you derive the amortized portion by dividing 10 into
$20,000: $2,000 [see (b) on schedule below].
Note that the unamortized portion of the gain/loss from the previous year is combined with the
current gain/loss. Check this new sum against a newly calculated 10 percent corridor. If the sum
exceeds this corridor, then amortize the excess.
In the attached schedule, the unamortized loss from 2009 ($278,000) was added to the 2009 loss
of $90,000, resulting in a cumulative unrecognized loss of $368,000 (see (c) below). This amount
exceeds the new corridor ($290,000) by $78,000. However, the remaining service life has been
changed to 12 years, resulting in annual amortization of only $6,500 [see (d) below].
Finally, if the losses from 2010 are added to the unamortized portion of the unrecognized loss
from prior years, the sum falls within the 2011 corridor and does not need to be amortized at all.
Cumulative Minimum
Defined Benefit Plan Asset Unrecognized Amortization
Year Obligation (a) Value (a) 10% Corridor Net Loss (a) of Loss
2008 $2,200,000 $1,900,000 $220,000 $ 0 $ 0
2009 2,400,000 2,600,000 260,000 280,000 2,000 (b)
2010 2,900,000 2,600,000 290,000 368,000 (c) 6,500 (d)
2011 3,900,000 3,000,000 390,000 373,500 (e) 0
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CA 20-6 (Continued)
(1) As of the beginning of the year.
(2) ($280,000 – $260,000) ÷ 10 years = $2,000
(3) $280,000 – $2,000 + $90,000 = $368,000
(4) ($368,000 – $290,000) ÷ 12 years = $6,500
(5) $368,000 – $6,500 + $12,000 = $373,500
(b) Companies may choose to immediately recognize actuarial gains and losses in the period they
arise. Immediate recognition of actuarial gains and losses will decrease or increase pension
expense with a corresponding decrease (increase) in the pension asset/liability. The immediate
recognition of a loss will cause both pension expense and the pension liability to be greater.
CA 20-7
While Selma may be correct in assuming that the termination of nonvested employees would decrease
its pension-related liabilities and associated expenses, she is callous to suggest that firing employees is
a reasonable approach to correcting the underfunding of College Electronix’s pension plan. Arbitrarily
dismissing productive employees on the basis of being vested or not vested in the pension plan in order
to avoid capitalizing a liability and recognizing expenses is a capricious and unsound business decision.
Richard Nye should discuss the ethical, legal, and financial implications of the alternatives available as
well as the accounting requirements relating to this situation. This obligation and its effect on the financial
statements should have been known to Cardinal Technology when it performed its due diligence audit of
CE at the time of merger negotiations. Cardinal Technology should capitalize the pension obligations of
CE as required by IFRS.
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(d) M&S’s Analysis of assets and expected rates of return portion of its
pension footnote details the major categories of assets, which are
property partnership interest; UK equities; overseas equities; govern-
ment bonds; corporate bonds; and cash and other. In general, the
expected long-term rate of return on these assets increases with an
increase in risk for the asset. M&S’s overall expected rate of return is
6.7%.
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(a) Cadbury has defined-benefit plans for its UK employees and both
defined-benefit and defined-contribution plans for overseas employees.
Cadbury
Discount rate—UK 6.1%
Discount rate—overseas 3.50 – 6.75%
Inflation rate—UK 2.65%
Overseas 1.75 – 2.50%
Salary increase—UK 3.65%
Overseas 2.75 – 3.50%
Nestlé
Discount rate—Europe 5.0%
—Americas 6.3%
Expected long-term rate of return—Europe 5.7%
—Americas 8.6%
Expected rate of salary increase—Europe 3.2%
—Americas 3.0%
(e) Cadbury paid benefits of £116 million in 2008 and made contributions
to the pension plan of £84 million.
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One other difference that students might note are the relatively high
discount rate and expected return assumptions used by this U.S.
company. For example, many U.S. companies use rates up to three
times as high as the rates used by international companies.
It should be noted that there are several similarities. Under U.S. GAAP,
the pension obligation is measured based on the projected (defined)
benefit obligation and the amount recognized is based on an amount
net of the liability and plan assets. There is smoothing of gains and
losses. Also, the components of pension expense are similar.
(b) Under IFRS, shorter amortization periods will result in higher pension
expense with respect to prior (past) service costs. Depending on
whether the company has unrealized gains or losses, the shorter
amortization period for the actuarial differences may result in either
higher or lower reported income. On the statement of financial
position, under U.S. GAAP there is less non-recognition of the prior
(past) service costs and gains and losses. So the net pension asset or
liability will be measured at the net of the liability and fund assets. The
reported amounts on international companies’ statement of financial
positions will be more volatile, since the smoothing period is shorter.
(c) As indicated above, income and equity likely will be lower due to
higher pension expense and lower net income. If there are significant
asset gains (which is possible given the low expected return
assumptions), then income could be higher as the gains are amortized
into income more quickly. The lower discount rate used to measure the
pension obligation will result in lower interest cost in income, but gives
a higher measure of the projected (defined) benefit obligation.
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Pension expense:
Interest cost = (€820.5 X 0.10) = €82.0
Service cost 42.0
Amortization of unamortized past service cost = 15.0
Amortization of unamortized net loss 0.7
Expected return on plan assets: (€476.5 X 0.12) = (57.2)
€82.5
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Journal entry:
PENCOMP, INC.
Income Statement for the year ended Dec. 31, 2011
Revenues:
Sales .......................................................................... €3,000.0
Expenses:
Cost of goods sold ................................................... €2,000.0
Salary expense.......................................................... 700.0
Pension expense ...................................................... 82.5
Depreciation expense............................................... 80.0
Interest expense ....................................................... 100.0
Total expenses and losses............................. 2,962.5
Net income ................................................................ € 37.5
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PENCOMP, INC.
Statement of Financial Position at Dec. 31, 2011
Assets:
Equity:
Liabilities:
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ANALYSIS
In this example, only the unexpected return on plan assets ‘skipped’ the
income statement and went to other comprehensive income. Had this item
been included in income, ROE would have been = (€42.5 – €46.8) ÷ €2,460.4 =
–0.0017 or –0.17 percent. Whether this ‘should’ be included in a return on
equity calculation is debatable. The rationale for excluding this from
current period income (and therefore from ROE) is that a defined benefit
pension plan is a long-term contract and so it is the long term expected
return on the plan’s assets that is relevant to measuring the cost of
sponsoring the plan. Some people believe that a particularly high or low
return in a given year is not indicative of the long-term return. Others argue
that all returns, high or low, accrue to the plan sponsor and so pension
expense should reflect all returns.
PRINCIPLES
The effects of plan amendments and actuarial gains and losses in a given
year can be thought of as fairly transitory items with respect to income. In
other words, these are items that are not likely to repeat at the same dollar
amount year in and year out. Including these items in income arguably
makes identifying the company’s ‘permanent’ income more difficult.
Therefore, the IASB have (so far!) decided to keep those items out of the
income statement.
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PROFESSIONAL RESEARCH
(a) According to IAS 19, paragraph 105, “The expected return on plan
assets is one component of the expense recognised in profit or loss.
The difference between the expected return on plan assets and the
actual return on plan assets is an actuarial gain or loss; it is included
with the actuarial gains and losses on the defined benefit obligation in
determining the net amount that is compared with the limits of the 10%
‘corridor’ specified in paragraph 92.”
(b) Paragraph 95 states “In the long term, actuarial gains and losses may
offset one another. Therefore, estimates of post-employment benefit
obligations may be viewed as a range (or ‘corridor’) around the best
estimate. An entity is permitted, but not required, to recognise actuarial
gains and losses that fall within that range. This Standard requires an
entity to recognise, as a minimum, a specified portion of the actuarial
gains and losses that fall outside a ‘corridor’ of plus or minus 10%.
[Appendix A illustrates the treatment of actuarial gains and losses,
among other things.] The Standard also permits systematic methods of
faster recognition, provided that those methods satisfy the conditions
set out in paragraph 93. Such permitted methods include, for example,
immediate recognition of all actuarial gains and losses, both within and
outside the ‘corridor’. Paragraph 155(b)(iii) explains the need to consider
any unrecognised part of the transitional liability in accounting for
subsequent actuarial gains.”
(1) the present value of the defined benefit obligation at the end of the
reporting period (see paragraph 64);
(2) plus any actuarial gains (less any actuarial losses) not recognised
because of the treatment set out in paragraphs 92 and 93;
(3) minus any past service cost not yet recognised (see paragraph 96);
(4) minus the fair value at the end of the reporting period of plan
assets (if any) out of which the obligations are to be settled
directly (see paragraphs 102–104).”
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PROFESSIONAL SIMULATION
Measurement
(a)
(b) Simply change the formula in cell B11 to multiply by .07; change the
formula in cell B12 to multiply .10 times (G-9 * –1).
Journal Entry
Disclosure
20-70 Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Kieso Intermediate: IFRS Edition, Solutions Manual
Solution Intermediate Accounting IFRS edition download from arijumadi.blogspot.com