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IFRS 19 — Subsidiaries without Public Accountability: Disclosures ( Summary with examples )

IFRS 19 — Subsidiaries without Public Accountability: Disclosures

Issued 2024 – Effective for periods beginning 1 January 2027

IFRS 19 allows subsidiaries that do not have public accountability (not listed, not financial institutions, not holding assets for a broad group of outsiders) to apply reduced disclosure requirements, while still using full IFRS recognition and measurement.

It is the IFRS equivalent of a “reduced disclosure framework”.


1. Objective

To reduce the disclosure burden for subsidiaries in groups that use full IFRS, but where the subsidiary itself has no public accountability.

The subsidiary:

  • Measures and recognises items using full IFRS

  • Presents fewer disclosures using IFRS 19

  • Consolidation by parent still follows full IFRS


2. Which entities qualify?

A subsidiary qualifies if:

✔ It is a subsidiary
✔ It does not have public accountability
✔ Its parent produces consolidated financial statements that comply with full IFRS

Public accountability includes:

  • A publicly listed entity

  • A financial institution, bank, insurance company

  • An entity holding assets in a fiduciary capacity for wide group of outsiders (e.g., mutual fund)


3. Main Features of IFRS 19

Full IFRS recognition and measurement

  • Use IFRS 9, IFRS 15, IFRS 16, IAS 12, etc., exactly as in full IFRS

  • Only disclosures are reduced

Reduced disclosure requirements

  • Based on IFRS for SMEs, but adapted to full IFRS measurement

Standalone financial statements only

IFRS 19 is applied only in the subsidiary’s own separate financial statements.


4. Reduced Disclosure Areas (Key Topics)

IFRS Standard Reduced Disclosures under IFRS 19
IFRS 7 – Financial Instruments Much fewer risk disclosures; only key credit/liquidity/market risks
IFRS 12 – Interests in other entities Only summarised information, no extensive detail
IFRS 13 – Fair Value High-level fair value hierarchy (no long reconciliations)
IFRS 15 – Revenue No extensive contract liability tables
IFRS 16 – Leases Simple maturity table instead of detailed breakdown
IAS 1 – Presentation No requirement for third balance sheet
IAS 19 – Employee Benefits Short-form actuarial disclosures

5. Examples (very important)

Example 1 — Entity qualifies

Parent: Global Manufacturing Plc (listed in London), prepares full IFRS consolidated FS
Subsidiary: Cambodia Auto Parts Co., Ltd

  • Manufactures spare parts

  • Not listed

  • Not a financial institution

  • No fiduciary activities

Subsidiary can use IFRS 19 with reduced disclosures.


Example 2 — Entity does NOT qualify

Subsidiary: Bright Finance Co.

  • Provides loans to the public

  • Has public accountability (financial institution)

Cannot apply IFRS 19, must use full IFRS disclosures.


Example 3 — Reduced disclosure for IFRS 7

Full IFRS requires:

  • Detailed analysis of credit risk

  • Sensitivity analysis

  • Liquidity table by month

  • Hedge accounting detail

IFRS 19 only requires:

  • Major categories of financial assets

  • High-level credit risk description

  • Maturity analysis (short format)

Illustration:

Under IFRS 19 disclosure:

“The company’s financial assets consist mainly of trade receivables. Credit risk is limited because customers are long-term contracts with the parent group. Trade receivables of $120,000 are due within 90 days.”


Example 4 — Reduced disclosure for IFRS 16

Full IFRS disclosure:

  • Separate tables for lease liabilities

  • Weighted average discount rate

  • Interest charge

  • Reconciliation of opening and closing balances

IFRS 19 disclosure:

Lease liability = $300,000
Maturity:
• Within 1 year: $80,000
• 1–5 years: $220,000
No other extensive disclosures required.


Example 5 — Revenue (IFRS 15)

Full IFRS requires:

  • Disaggregation by product, geography, customer type

  • Contract balances detail

  • Performance obligations explanation

IFRS 19 requires only:

Revenue is $1,500,000 from sale of goods.
Revenue is recognized at a point in time when control is transferred to customers.


6. Transition to IFRS 19

The subsidiary can apply IFRS 19:

  • Prospectively, or

  • Retrospectively (with some simplifications)

Must disclose:

  • That it applied IFRS 19

  • Which exemptions were used


7. Benefits of IFRS 19

✔ Significant reduction of disclosures
✔ Cost-saving for group subsidiaries
✔ Consistency with parent’s recognition and measurement
✔ Simplifies auditing and reporting
✔ Useful for large international groups with many subsidiaries


8. Quick One-Page Summary (useful for revision)

IFRS 19 allows small subsidiaries in a large IFRS group to:

  • measure things using full IFRS

  • present reduced disclosures

  • avoid heavy reporting requirements

  • provided they have no public accountability

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