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IAS 27, titled Separate Financial Statements, is an International Accounting Standard issued by the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB). It prescribes the accounting and disclosure requirements for investments in subsidiaries, joint ventures, and associates when an entity elects, or is required by local regulations, to present separate financial statements. [1]
Originally, IAS 27 covered both consolidated and separate financial statements. However, in 2011, the consolidation requirements were moved to IFRS 10 Consolidated Financial Statements, leaving IAS 27 to focus exclusively on the accounting for investments in the separate records of the parent or investor. [2]
Separate financial statements are those presented by a parent (an investor with a subsidiary) or an investor with joint control of, or significant influence over, an investee, in which the investments are accounted for at cost or in accordance with IFRS 9. [3]
These are distinct from:
When an entity prepares separate financial statements, it must account for its investments in subsidiaries, joint ventures, and associates using one of the following three methods: [5]
An entity must apply the same accounting for each category of investments (e.g., all subsidiaries must be treated the same). [7]
Under IAS 27, an entity recognizes a dividend from a subsidiary, joint venture, or associate in its separate financial statements when its right to receive the dividend is established. [8] The dividend is recognized in profit or loss.
When a parent elects not to prepare consolidated financial statements (as permitted by IFRS 10) and instead prepares only separate financial statements, it must disclose: [9]