GASB Proposes Guidance on Public-Private and
Public-Public Partnership Arrangements
Norwalk, CT, June 13,
2019—The Governmental Accounting Standards Board (GASB) has proposed new guidance to improve accounting and
financial reporting for public-private and public-public partnership
arrangements (both referred to as PPPs) and availability payment arrangements
(APAs).
The Exposure
Draft, Public-Private and Public-Public Partnerships and Availability
Payment Arrangements, provides proposed guidance for PPP arrangements that
are outside of the scope of its existing literature for these transactions,
namely Statement No. 60, Accounting and Financial Reporting for Service
Concession Arrangements, and Statement No. 87, Leases. The
proposed Statement also would make certain improvements to the guidance
currently included in Statement 60 and provide accounting and financial
reporting guidance for APAs.
PPPs
The proposal
defines a PPP as an arrangement in which a government transferor contracts with
a governmental or nongovernmental operator to provide public services by
conveying control of the right to operate or use an infrastructure or other
nonfinancial asset—the underlying PPP asset—for a period of time in an exchange
or exchange-like transaction. Some PPPs meet the definition of a service
concession arrangement (SCA). The proposed Statement includes the following
definition of an SCA:
- The transferor conveys to the operator the right and related
obligation to provide public services through the use and operation of the
underlying PPP asset
- The operator collects and is compensated by fees from third
parties
- The transferor determines or has the ability to modify or
approve which services the operator is required to provide, to whom the
operator is required to provide the services, and the prices or rates that can
be charged for the services, and
- The transferor is entitled to significant residual interest
in the service utility of the underlying PPP asset at the end of the
arrangement.
The proposed Statement carries forward the financial
reporting requirements for SCAs that currently are included in Statement 60. For
PPPs that meet the definition of a lease, but not the definition of an SCA, the
proposed Statement would require governments to apply the requirements of
Statement 87. For all other PPPs that are not SCAs and are not leases, the
proposed Statement generally would require a transferor to recognize an asset
for the underlying PPP asset and a deferred inflow of resources for
consideration received or to be received as part of the PPP.The
proposed Statement would require a governmental operator to report an intangible
right-to-use asset related to the underlying PPP asset that either is owned by
the transferor or is the underlying asset of an SCA.
APAs
Under the proposal, an APA would be defined
as an arrangement in which a government compensates an operator for services
that may include designing, constructing, financing, maintaining, or operating
an underlying infrastructure or other nonfinancial asset for a period of time in
an exchange or exchange-like transaction.The proposed Statement
would require governments to account for APAs related to those activities and in
which ownership of the asset transfers by the end of the contract as a financed
purchase of the underlying infrastructure or other nonfinancial asset.
A government would be required to report an APA that is related to
operating or maintaining an infrastructure or other nonfinancial asset as an
outflow of resources in the period to which payments relate.
The
proposed Statement would be effective for fiscal years beginning after June 15,
2021, and all reporting periods thereafter. Earlier application would be
encouraged.
The Exposure
Draft is available on the GASB website, http://www.gasb.org/. The GASB invites stakeholders to
review the proposal and provide comments by September 13, 2019.