GASB IMPROVES REPORTING FOR HEALTH INSURANCE AND
OTHER RETIREE BENEFITS
Norwalk, CT, June 2,
2015—The Governmental Accounting Standards Board (GASB) today voted
unanimously to approve two Statements that will significantly improve the
accounting and financial reporting by state and local governments for
postemployment benefits other than pensions (OPEB), primarily retiree health
insurance. The GASB also approved a third Statement establishing accounting and
financial reporting requirements for pensions and pension plans that were
outside the scope of the pension standards the GASB released in 2012.
The OPEB Statements
GASB Statement No. 74,
Financial Reporting for Postemployment Benefit Plans Other Than Pension
Plans, addresses reporting by OPEB plans that administer benefits on behalf
of governments. GASB Statement No. 75, Accounting and Financial Reporting
for Postemployment Benefits Other Than Pensions, addresses reporting by
governments that provide OPEB to their employees and for governments that
finance OPEB for employees of other governments.
The new OPEB standards
parallel the pension standards issued in 2012—GASB Statement No. 67,
Financial Reporting for Pension Plans, and GASB Statement No. 68, Accounting
and Financial Reporting for Pensions. Together, the pension and OPEB
standards provide consistent and comprehensive guidance for all postemployment
benefits.
“These OPEB standards usher in the same fundamental
improvements in accounting and financial reporting that were previously
introduced for pensions,” said GASB Chairman David A. Vaudt. “Because OPEB
promises represent a very significant liability for many state and local
governments, it is critical that taxpayers, policy makers, bond analysts, and
others are equipped with enhanced information, which will enable them to better
assess the related financial obligations and annual costs of providing
OPEB.”
Statement 75
Statement 75
replaces the requirements of GASB Statement No. 45, Accounting and Financial
Reporting by Employers for Postemployment Benefits Other Than Pensions.
Statement 75 requires governments to report a liability on the face of the
financial statements for the OPEB that they provide:
- Governments that are responsible only for OPEB liabilities related to
their own employees and that provide OPEB through a defined benefit OPEB plan
administered through a trust that meets specified criteria will report a
net OPEB liability—the difference between the total OPEB liability
and assets accumulated in the trust and restricted to making benefit
payments.
- Governments that participate in a cost-sharing OPEB plan that is
administered through a trust that meets the specified criteria will report a
liability equal to their proportionate share of the collective OPEB
liability for all entities participating in the cost-sharing plan.
- Governments that do not provide OPEB through a trust that meets specified
criteria will report the total OPEB liability related to their
employees.
Statement 75 carries forward from Statement 45 the option to
use a specified alternative measurement method in place of an actuarial
valuation for purposes of determining the total OPEB liability for benefits
provided through OPEB plans in which there are fewer than 100 plan members
(active and inactive). This option was retained in order to reduce costs for
smaller governments.
Statement 75 requires governments in all types of
OPEB plans to present more extensive note disclosures and required supplementary
information (RSI) about their OPEB liabilities. Among the new note disclosures
is a description of the effect on the reported OPEB liability of using a
discount rate and a healthcare cost trend rate that are one percentage point
higher and one percentage point lower than assumed by the government. The new
RSI includes a schedule showing the causes of increases and decreases in the
OPEB liability and a schedule comparing a government’s actual OPEB contributions
to its contribution requirements.
Some governments are legally
responsible to make contributions directly to an OPEB plan or make benefit
payments directly as OPEB comes due for employees of other governments. In
certain circumstances—called special funding situations—Statement 75 requires
these governments to recognize in their financial statements a share of the
other government’s net OPEB liability.
Statement 74
Statement 74 replaces GASB Statement No. 43, Financial
Reporting for Postemployment Benefit Plans Other Than Pension Plans.
Statement 74 addresses the financial reports of defined benefit OPEB plans that
are administered through trusts that meet specified criteria. The Statement
follows the framework for financial reporting of defined benefit OPEB plans in
Statement 45 by requiring a statement of fiduciary net position and a statement
of changes in fiduciary net position. The Statement requires more extensive note
disclosures and RSI related to the measurement of the OPEB liabilities for which
assets have been accumulated, including information about the annual
money-weighted rates of return on plan investments. Statement 74 also sets forth
note disclosure requirements for defined contribution OPEB
plans.
The Pension Statement
GASB Statement No.
73, Accounting and Financial Reporting for Pensions and Related Assets That
Are Not within the Scope of GASB Statement 68, and Amendments to Certain
Provisions of GASB Statements 67 and 68, completes the suite of pension
standards. Statement 73 establishes requirements for those pensions and pension
plans that are not administered through a trust meeting specified criteria (in
other words, those not covered by Statements 67 and 68). The requirements in
Statement 73 for reporting pensions generally are the same as in Statement 68.
However, the lack of a pension plan that is administered through a trust that
meets specified criteria is reflected in the
measurements.
Effective Dates
The provisions in
Statement 73 are effective for fiscal years beginning after June 15, 2015—except
those provisions that address employers and governmental nonemployer
contributing entities for pensions that are not within the scope of Statement
68, which are effective for financial statements for fiscal years beginning
after June 15, 2016. The provisions in Statement 74 are effective for financial
statements for periods beginning after June 15, 2016. The provisions in
Statement 75 are effective for fiscal years beginning after June 15, 2017.
Earlier application is encouraged.
Availability of the
Statements
Statements 73, 74, and 75 will be available for
download at no charge from the GASB
website in late June. Printed copies of the Statements will be available for
purchase soon after. Other related resources also will be available on the
website at that time.
About the Governmental Accounting
Standards Board
Established in 1984, the GASB is the
independent, private-sector organization based in Norwalk, Connecticut, that
establishes accounting and financial reporting standards for U.S. state and
local governments that follow Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP).
These standards are recognized as authoritative by state and local governments,
state Boards of Accountancy, and the American Institute of CPAs (AICPA). The
GASB develops and issues accounting standards through a transparent and
inclusive process intended to promote financial reporting that provides useful
information to taxpayers, public officials, investors, and others who use
financial reports. The Financial Accounting Foundation (FAF) supports and
oversees the GASB. For more information, visit http://www.gasb.org/.