FASB Improves Income Tax Accounting Related to the Tax Cuts and Jobs
Act
Norwalk, CT, February 14, 2018—The Financial
Accounting Standards Board (
FASB) today
issued
an
Accounting Standards Update (ASU) that helps organizations address certain
stranded income tax effects in accumulated other comprehensive income (AOCI)
resulting from the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.
The ASU provides financial
statement preparers with an option to reclassify stranded tax effects within
AOCI to retained earnings in each period in which the effect of the change in
the U.S. federal corporate income tax rate in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (or
portion thereof) is recorded.
The ASU requires financial statement
preparers to disclose:
- A description of the accounting policy for releasing income tax effects
from AOCI
- Whether they elect to reclassify the stranded income tax effects from the
Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, and
- Information about the other income tax effects that are
reclassified.
The amendments in this ASU affect any organization that
is required to apply the provisions of Topic 220, Income Statement—Reporting
Comprehensive Income, and has items of other comprehensive income for which the
related tax effects are presented in other comprehensive income as required by
GAAP.
The amendments are effective for all organizations for fiscal years
beginning after December 15, 2018, and interim periods within those fiscal
years. Early adoption is permitted. Organizations should apply the proposed
amendments either in the period of adoption or retrospectively to each period
(or periods) in which the effect of the change in the U.S. federal corporate
income tax rate in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act is recognized.
The ASU is
available on
the FASB
website.
About the Financial Accounting Standards
BoardEstablished in 1973, the FASB is the independent,
private-sector, not-for-profit organization based in Norwalk, Connecticut, that
establishes financial accounting and reporting standards for public and private
companies and not-for-profit organizations that follow Generally Accepted
Accounting Principles (GAAP). The FASB is recognized by the Securities and
Exchange Commission as the designated accounting standard setter for public
companies. FASB standards are recognized as authoritative by many other
organizations, including state Boards of Accountancy and the American Institute
of CPAs (AICPA). The FASB develops and issues financial accounting standards
through a transparent and inclusive process intended to promote financial
reporting that provides useful information to investors and others who use
financial reports. The Financial Accounting Foundation (FAF) supports and
oversees the FASB. For more information, visit
http://www.fasb.org/.