LEASES (IAS 17)
Learning Outcomes:
– Distinguish between the different types of leases
– Account for an operating lease
– Account for a finance lease
– Explain the advantages of capitalising leased assets
- Identify the accounting issues involved in leasing assets
Basic Definitions:
• A lease is a contract between two parties: a lessor and a lessee.
• The lessor is the legal owner of the asset
• The lessee rents the asset from the lessor
NB:
IAS17 defines a lease as:
“An agreement whereby the lessor conveys to the lessee in return for a payment or series of payments the right to use an asset for an agreed period of time”
IAS17 defines a finance lease as:
“A lease that transfers substantially all the risks and rewards incidental to ownership of an asset. Title may or may not eventually be transferred”.
• In a finance lease, the lessee has acquired the risks and rewards of ownership
• Risks of ownership
– Asset breakdown
– Repairs
– Theft
• Rewards of ownership are those benefits derived from the use of the asset
NOTE:
The following would normally suggest that a lease be classified as a finance lease;
– Present Value of minimum lease payments amounts to substantially all (>90%) of assets fair value
– Lease term is a major part of economic life of asset
– Full ownership of asset transferred to the lessee by end of lease
– Bargain purchase option at end of lease
– Leased asset is of a specialised nature (specific to lessee)
IAS17 defines an operating lease as:
“A lease other than a finance lease”
Accounting Treatment
Operating leases - in the Income statement- recognise as an expense
- In the statement of financial position- No effect
Finance leases- In the income statement- Recognise leases payments as expenses
- In the statement of financial position- Recognise finance leased item as an asset and finance lease obligation as a liability.
Effect of capitalisation
Prior to IAS17
• A company could have use of – and generate income from – and asset without disclosing either the asset of lease obligations in the statement of financial position
IAS 17 requires the capitalisation of finance
Leases
• This has an impact on key accounting ratios such as gearing, return on assets and ROI.
Advantages of leasing
• It permits flexibility
• It avoids obsolescence
• It gives tax advantages
• It improves cash flow
Disadvantages of leasing
• Capitalising leases can be misleading to the unsophisticated
• The presentation of the legal form of the transaction is sacrificed in favour of the economic substance
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