GASB ESTABLISHES SINGLE APPROACH FOR REPORTING 
LEASES
Norwalk, CT, June 28, 2017—The Governmental 
Accounting Standards Board (GASB) today issued guidance that establishes a 
single approach to accounting for and reporting leases by state and local 
governments. This single approach is based on the principle that leases are 
financings of the right to use an underlying asset. 
GASB Statement No. 
87, Leases, provides guidance for lease contracts for nonfinancial 
assets—including vehicles, heavy equipment, and buildings—but excludes 
nonexchange transactions, including donated assets, and leases of intangible 
assets (such as patents and software licenses). 
Under the new Statement, 
a lessee government is required to recognize (1) a lease liability and (2) an 
intangible asset representing the lessee’s right to use the leased asset. A 
lessor government is required to recognize (1) a lease receivable and (2) a 
deferred inflow of resources.  A lessor will continue to report the leased asset 
in its financial statements.
A lessee also will report the following in 
its financial statements: 
  - Amortization expense for using the lease asset (similar to depreciation) 
  over the shorter of the term of the lease or the useful life of the underlying 
  asset
- Interest expense on the lease liability
- Note disclosures about the lease, including a general description of the 
  leasing arrangement, the amount of lease assets recognized, and a schedule of 
  future lease payments to be made.
A lessor also will report the 
following in its financial statements:
  - Lease revenue, systematically recognized over the term of the lease, 
  corresponding with the reduction of the deferred inflow
- Interest revenue on the receivable
- Note disclosures about the lease, including a general description of the 
  leasing arrangement and the total amount of inflows of resources recognized 
  from leases.
“The Board’s new leasing guidance better aligns the 
accounting and financial reporting of these arrangements with their economic 
substance,” said GASB Chairman David A. Vaudt. “The new single model for 
reporting governmental leasing agreements is designed to result in greater 
transparency and usefulness for financial statement users. It also is meant to 
reduce complexity in application for preparers and auditors of governmental 
financial statements.”
Limited exceptions to the single-approach guidance 
are provided for:
  - Short-term leases, defined as lasting a maximum of 12 months at inception, 
  including any options to extend
- Financed purchases
- Leases of assets that are investments
- Certain regulated leases, such as between municipal airports and air 
  carriers.
Other issues addressed in the Statement include:
  - Accounting for lease terminations and modifications
- Sale-leaseback transactions
- Nonlease components embedded in lease contracts (such as service 
  agreements)
- Leases with related parties.
The full text of Statement 87 and a high-level 
overview featured in the current issue of the GASB Outlook are 
available on the GASB website, http://www.gasb.org/.
Considerations Related to Costs and Benefits
One 
of the principles guiding the GASB’s setting of standards is that the costs 
incurred through the application of its standards, compared with possible 
alternatives, are justified when compared to the expected overall public 
benefit. Although the costs of implementing the changes required by this 
Statement may be significant, the Board believes that the expected benefits that 
will result from the information provided through implementation of the 
Statement, both initially and on an ongoing basis, are significant.
The 
exceptions identified above, as well as exclusions of supply contracts and 
leases of inventory, will reduce the cost of implementation. The Statement also 
includes cost-reducing provisions regarding reassessment of the lease term, 
allowing governments to report multiple-component contracts as a single lease 
unit when a best estimate of individual components is not practicable, and not 
requiring lessors to derecognize underlying assets, among other 
provisions.
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/.