
The Australian Accounting Standards Board (AASB) has confirmed new disclosure requirements for non-profit organisations preparing Special Purpose Financial Statements (SPFS). New requirements will apply to financial years ending on or after 30 June 2020. This will affect your audit if you report Special Purpose.
Your audit report will either be prepared Special Purpose or General Purpose (including General Purpose under the reduced disclosures regime or RDR). Your report should name the basis of preparation in Note 1 (the start of the wordy bit).
General Purpose is the highest standard of reporting. Essentially the organisations that adopt General Purpose apply all the accounting standards in the presentation of the audit report.
With Special Purpose, a subset of key accounting standards are complied with in the audit. However, not all accounting or presentation standards must be applied. Special Purpose audit reports are often shorter in length, with less disclosure (explanatory) notes.
There are guidelines for who can report General Purpose, and who can report Special Purpose. For larger orgs, with a broad cross section of potential readers of the financial statements, the expectation is for the org to report General Purpose. For orgs with small constituencies, there is an option to prepare the audit as Special Purpose.
An entity that reports Special Purpose will need to make new disclosures that aim to provide clarity around compliance with the recognition and measurement standards for assets and liabilities.
There have been changes upstream in the international reporting standards with which Australia complies. These changes tighten the reporting standards for Special Purpose, reducing some of the current flexibility to bring Special Purpose more in line with General Purpose.
Orgs will need to make new disclosures about compliance with the recognition and measurement requirements if they are:
A high level summary has been prepared by the AASB to help understand the new requirements. If you are affected by the changes, from 30 June 2020 your Special Purpose report will need to disclose:
We have worked with one organisation to early-adopt the new disclosure requirements. Through conversations involving us, the auditor, and the Board, we reached a shared understanding of the new requirements and drafted the disclosures into the audit report. For other organisations this might be a time to consider whether Special Purpose reporting is for them.