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IAS 8-Accounting Policies, Changes in Accounting Estimates and Errors ( summary with examples )

Objective

IAS 8 prescribes:

The goal is to ensure consistency and comparability of financial statements over time.


1. Key Definitions

Term Meaning
Accounting Policies Principles, bases, conventions, rules, and practices applied in preparing and presenting financial statements.
Accounting Estimates Adjustments of the carrying amounts of assets or liabilities based on new information or developments.
Errors Omissions or misstatements in financial statements due to mistakes, fraud, or misuse of accounting policies.

2. Accounting Policies

Selection of Accounting Policies

When IFRS specifically applies, follow that standard.
If no specific IFRS applies, management uses judgment to develop and apply a policy that:


Consistency

Apply accounting policies consistently for similar transactions unless:


Example:

A company has always valued inventory at FIFO.
It now changes to Weighted Average because it better reflects actual flow of goods.
→ This is a change in accounting policy.
→ Must apply retrospectively (adjust prior year figures).


3. Changes in Accounting Policies

A change in accounting policy is allowed only if:

  1. Required by a new IFRS or interpretation; or

  2. Results in more relevant and reliable information.


Accounting Treatment: Retrospective Application


Example:

In 2025, a company changes inventory valuation from FIFO to Weighted Average.
→ Inventory (2024 closing) would have been $95,000 under FIFO and $90,000 under Weighted Average.
→ Decrease retained earnings by $5,000 in 2024 comparative figures.


4. Changes in Accounting Estimates

Definition

Changes in accounting estimates result from new information or developments — not corrections of errors.

Examples:


Accounting Treatment: Prospective Application


Example 1:

Machine cost = $100,000
Useful life = 10 years → Depreciation = $10,000/year
After 3 years, reassessed useful life = 8 years total (5 years remaining).
→ Remaining carrying amount = $70,000
→ New depreciation = $70,000 / 5 = $14,000 per year (prospective change).


Example 2:

Bad debt allowance was 5%, but based on new data, it should be 8%.
→ Adjust provision prospectively in current year only.


5. Errors

Definition

Errors are mistakes or omissions in prior period financial statements.
Examples:


Accounting Treatment: Retrospective Restatement


Example 1:

In 2025, the company discovers that depreciation for 2023 was understated by $10,000.
→ Restate 2023 comparative figures to increase depreciation expense by $10,000.
→ Adjust opening retained earnings (if applicable).


Example 2:

Revenue of $20,000 earned in 2024 was omitted.
→ Restate 2024 comparative financials to include that revenue.


6. Distinguishing Between Policy, Estimate, and Error

Situation Type Treatment
Change from FIFO to Weighted Average Change in policy Retrospective
Revision of asset useful life Change in estimate Prospective
Correction of missed depreciation Error Retrospective
Adoption of new IFRS Change in policy As required by standard
New method for doubtful debts (new data) Change in estimate Prospective

7. Disclosure Requirements

When a change in policy, estimate, or error occurs, disclose:


Example (Disclosure Format):

Note 25 – Change in Accounting Estimate
During 2025, the company revised the useful life of its plant from 10 years to 8 years. The effect of this change increased depreciation expense by $4,000 for the year ended 31 December 2025. The impact on future periods is expected to be similar.


8. Summary Table

Type Cause Accounting Treatment Example
Change in Accounting Policy New IFRS or better info Retrospective FIFO → Weighted Average
Change in Accounting Estimate New info or experience Prospective Useful life or bad debts
Error Correction Mistake or fraud Retrospective Omitted revenue or wrong depreciation

In Summary

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