Far410 Chapter 5 Ppe Note
Far410 Chapter 5 Ppe Note
Far410 Chapter 5 Ppe Note
MFRS 116:
PROPERTY, PLANT AND EQUIPMENT
TOPIC OUTCOME
At the end of the topic, students should be able to:
1. Apply the concepts and principles in assets, liabilities
and equity.
2. Understand the recognition and initial measurement,
and
reliably
(c) fully controlled by the entity
MFRS 116 – Initial Measurement
An item of property, plant and equipment that qualifies
for recognition as an asset shall be measured at its costs.
Cost is the amount of cash or cash equivalents paid to
acquire an asset at the time of its acquisition or
construction plus the fair value of other consideration
given.
Costs include:
Purchase price
Journal entry
Dr. Photocopy Machine RM1,200
Cr. Cash/Payable RM1,200
(To record initial measurement of PPE)
Example 2
A brick manufacturer constructed a
showroom to market its own bricks.
The costs to construct a showroom would
Journal entry:
Dr. Showroom (material + labour + expenses)
Cr. Cash/Bank
Subsequent Expenditure
The costs of the PPE can include more than the
purchase price.
Eg. Routine repairs, maintenance and servicing
costs.
Normally the above costs is recognised in the SOPL.
However, if these subsequent expenditure
increase/enhance the value of assets, the
expenditure should be recognised as part of the
costs of assets.
Eg. In aircraft industry, they need to replace its
seats several times during the life of the aircraft.
MFRS 116 – Subsequent Measurement
An entity shall choose either the cost model or the revaluation
model as its accounting policy and shall apply that policy to an
entire class of property, plant and equipment.
Journal Entry:
Dr. Depreciation Expense - SOPL
Cr. Accumulated Depreciation - SOFP
(To record depreciation for the year)
Example 3
On 1 January 20X1, an entity acquires a ready-to-use photocopier
for use by its administration staff in exchange for RM12,000 cash.
The depreciation rate is 10% per annum.
Required:
1.Compute the depreciation expense for two years using the
following methods:
a) Straight Line method
b) Reducing Balance method
c) Units of Production method (Assuming the company photocopied
5,000 and 8,000 copies in Year 1 and 2 respectively. The machine is
estimated to make 100,000 copies over its 10-year life.)
On 1 January 20X1 an entity purchases a machine with a cost on initial recognition of RM1,100. At initial
recognition, it is estimated that the machine has a useful life of 5 years and a residual value of RM100.
The entity’s reporting date is 31 December. The fair value of the machine at 31 December 20X1, is
RM1,300. Show journal entries to record the depreciation of the machine for the year ended 31
December 20X2, assuming that the entity measures its PPE using:
RM200 depreciation is calculated as (RM1,100 less RM100) ÷ 5 years × 1 year = RM200 where RM1,100
is the cost of the asset, RM100 is the estimated residual value of the asset, 5 years is the estimated
useful life of the asset and 1 year is the service potential of the asset ‘used up’ during 20X2.
RM300 depreciation is calculated as (RM1,300 less RM100) ÷ 4 years × 1 year = RM300 when RM1,300
is the revalued amount of the asset, RM100 is the estimated residual value of the asset, 4 years is the
estimated useful life of the asset remaining after the asset’s revaluation and 1 year is the service
potential of the asset.
MFRS 116 – Derecognition of Assets
The carrying amount of an item of property, plant
and equipment shall be derecognised:
on disposal; or