GASB ISSUES PRELIMINARY VIEWS ON LEASE ACCOUNTING
FOR STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS
Norwalk, CT, November 20,
2014—The Governmental Accounting Standards Board (GASB) today issued
for public comment a Preliminary Views, Leases, which includes
proposals to improve the accounting and financial reporting for leases for state
and local governments from both a lessee and lessor perspective.
Many
governments use leasing to finance certain necessary items—including vehicles,
heavy equipment, and buildings—without having to actually purchase them. Some
governments also serve in a lessor capacity by leasing assets to other
entities.
The purpose of the Preliminary Views is to obtain comments from
stakeholders on the Board’s views before developing more detailed proposals for
changes to existing accounting and financial reporting standards. The
Preliminary Views presents the Board’s current thinking on the issues associated
with accounting for leases—which are based on the foundational principle that
all leases are financings of the right to use an underlying asset.
The
document includes proposals on how leases would be presented in the financial
statements and essential information related to leases that governments would
disclose in the notes.
Under the proposal, lessee governments would
report the following in their financial statements for all leases except
short-term leases (12 months or less):
•An intangible asset that represents
the government’s right to use the leased asset
- A corresponding liability for lease payments
- Amortization expense related to the lease asset (recognizing the asset
amount as an expense over the term of the lease)
- Interest expense related to the lease liability.
Government lessors
would report the following in their financial statements for all leases except
short-term leases:
- A receivable for the right to receive payments
- A corresponding deferred inflow of resources to reflect resources related
to future periods
- Lease revenue (and a corresponding reduction in the deferred inflow)
systematically over the term of the lease
- Interest revenue related to the receivable.
“The Preliminary Views
more closely aligns the accounting and financial reporting for leases with the
economic substance of those transactions,” said GASB Chair David A. Vaudt. “The
Board has an opportunity to make changes to the current guidance on leases that
would result in greater transparency, reduced complexity in application, and
more meaningful information for financial statements users.”
The
Preliminary Views is available on the GASB website, http://www.gasb.org/.
Stakeholders are encouraged to review the proposals and provide comments by
March 6, 2015.
The GASB will host public hearings on the Preliminary
Views on April 8, 9, and 10, 2015. Locations and other details, including
instructions for registering to participate, are highlighted in the
document.
About the Governmental Accounting Standards Board
The GASB is the independent, not-for-profit organization formed
in 1984 that establishes and improves financial accounting and reporting
standards for state and local governments. Its seven members are drawn from the
Board’s diverse range of stakeholders, including preparers and auditors of
government financial statements, users of those statements, and members of the
academic community. More information about the GASB can be found at its website,
http://www.gasb.org/.