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General Capital Assets; General Long-Term Liabilities; Permanent Funds

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Issuance of debt recorded as OFS ... Works of art. Historical treasures. Infrastructure. Capital Assets GCA ... Examples of infrastructure assets include roads, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: General Capital Assets; General Long-Term Liabilities; Permanent Funds


1
General Capital AssetsGeneral Long-Term
LiabilitiesPermanent Funds
  • Chapter 9

2
Learning Objectives
  • Understand how to maintain GCA GLTL information
    for reporting purposes
  • Understand how to account for transactions
    affecting GCA GLTL
  • Understand how GCA GLTL are related
  • Account for and report general infrastructure
    capital assets
  • Understand how to apply the modified approach to
    infrastructure capital assets
  • Understand GCA GLTL financial reporting
  • Understand how to use, account for, report
    Permanent Funds
  • Account for transactions affecting all
    Governmental Funds, GCA, GLTL

3
GCA GLTLWhat Weve Seen Thus Far
  • General Capital Assets (GCA)
  • Purchases recorded as expenditures rather than
    fund assets
  • Sales recorded as Other Financing Sources (OFS)
  • General Long-Term Liabilities
  • Issuance of debt recorded as OFS
  • Retirement of debt recorded as expenditures or
    Other Financing Uses (OFU)

4
GCA-GLTL Accounting Equation
5
Characteristics of Capital Assets
  • Used in operations of the government (not for
    resale)
  • Have useful lives extending beyond a single
    reporting period (may be modified by governments
    capitalization policy)
  • May be tangible or intangible

6
Types of Capital Assets
  • Land
  • Land improvements
  • Easements
  • Buildings
  • Building Improvements
  • Vehicles
  • Machinery
  • Equipment
  • Works of art
  • Historical treasures
  • Infrastructure

7
Capital Assets ? GCA
  • All general capital assets are capital assets,
    but not all capital assets are general capital
    assets!
  • GCA used by the Governmental Funds (general
    government)
  • Other capital assets are fund-specific used by
    the Proprietary Funds and Trust Funds

8
Initial Valuation
Cost Invoice price Cost of delivery Cost to get asset ready for intended use
Estimated cost Used when invoice price is unknown Frequent problem for governments with poor inventory records
Gifts Fair value Cost of delivery Cost to get asset ready for intended use
9
Other Acquisition Methods
Foreclosure Lower of (1) amount due for taxes, etc. or (2) appraised value of property
Eminent domain Assign value as if it were a negotiated purchase
Escheat Same manner as gifts
10
Normal GCA Classifications(recommended by GFOA)
  • Land
  • Buildings or Building Improvements
  • Infrastructure
  • Machinery Equipment
  • Construction in Progress

11
Infrastructure Capital Assets
  • Long lived capital assets that normally are
    stationary in nature and normally can be
    preserved for a significantly greater number of
    years than most capital assets. Examples of
    infrastructure assets include roads, bridges,
    tunnels, drainage systems, water sewer systems,
    dams, lighting systems.

12
Capitalization Policy
  • Minimum dollar amount
  • Minimum useful life
  • Whatever the government elects to do, it must be
    disclosed in the notes

1 2
13
Minimum Information forProperty Records
  • Property system ID number
  • Serial number, etc.
  • Abbreviated description
  • Date of acquisition
  • Name and address of vendor
  • Payment voucher number
  • Fund and account from which purchased
  • Federal financing, if any
  • Cost or estimated cost
  • Estimated useful life salvage value and annual
    depreciation
  • Accumulated depreciation
  • Department charged with custody
  • Location
  • Date, method, and authorization of disposal

14
Other GCA Issues
  • Regular GCA inventory
  • Accounting for additions, betterments, and
    renewals
  • Depreciation and accumulated depreciation
  • Modified approach
  • Allowed only with infrastructure assets
  • No depreciation recorded
  • Only additions / improvements are capitalized
  • Updating GCA records

15
Impairment of Assets
  • Defined
  • Significant (material)
  • Unexpected (not normal, not ordinary)
  • Decline in the service utility of a capital asset
  • Excludes
  • Events or changes in circumstances that might be
    expected to occur during useful life
  • CA accounted for using the modified approach
  • Declines caused by deferred maintenance

16
Indicators of Impairment
  • Evidence of physical damage
  • Change in legal or environmental factors
  • Technological development or evidence of
    obsolescence
  • A change in the manner or expected duration of
    usage of an asset
  • Construction stoppage

17
Measuring Impairments
Method Generally Used Method Generally Used
Ind Continued Use Stop Use
1 Restoration cost Lower of CV or FV
2 Service units Lower of CV or FV
3 Service units Lower of CV or FV
4 Deflated depreciation Lower of CV or FV
5 Lower of CV or FV
18
Restoration Cost Approach
  • Amount of impairment is derived from the
    estimated costs to restore the utility of the
    capital asset. The estimated restoration cost can
    be converted to historical cost either by
    restating the estimated restoration cost using an
    appropriate cost index or by applying a ratio of
    estimated restoration cost over estimated
    replacement cost to the carrying value of the
    capital asset.

19
Service Units Approach
  • Isolates the historical cost of the service
    utility of the capital asset that cannot be used
    due to the impairment event or change in
    circumstances. The amount of impairment is
    determined by evaluating the service provided by
    the capital asseteither maximum estimated
    service units or total estimated service units
    throughout the life of the capital assetbefore
    and after the event or change in circumstance.

20
Deflated Depreciation Replacement Cost Approach
  • Replicates the historical cost of the service
    produced. A current cost for a capital asset to
    replace the current level of service is
    estimated. This estimated current cost is
    depreciated to reflect the fact that the capital
    asset is not new, and then is deflated to convert
    it to historical cost dollars.

21
Reporting Impairment Losses
  • Temporary no impairment loss report, but cost
    to repair is reported
  • Expenditure in Governmental Funds
  • Loss in Proprietary Funds
  • Other than temporary
  • Expenditure in Governmental Funds
  • Program expense, extraordinary item, or special
    item in Proprietary Funds and government-wide
    statements

22
Reporting Insurance Recoveries
  • Governmental Funds OFS or extraordinary item,
    as appropriate
  • Government-wide financial statements
    Proprietary Funds report restoration separate
    from impairment and associated insurance recovery
  • Impairment loss reported net of insurance
    recovery if both occur in same fiscal year
  • Insurance recovery in subsequent year reported as
    program revenue, nonoperating revenue, or
    extraordinary item, as appropriate

23
Special Circumstances
  • Insurance recoveries for losses other than
    impairments
  • Netted against loss if in same fiscal year
  • Program revenue, nonoperating revenue, or
    extraordinary revenue if in subsequent year
  • Self-Insurance
  • From ISF, report as described above
  • From General Fund, recovery is reported as
  • Reimbursement up to amount of loss
  • Transfer for any excess

24
Reporting GCA
  • Financial Statements governmental activities
    column of government-wide Statement of Net Assets
  • Notes to the Financial Statements
  • Beginning and Ending Balances of capital asset
    accounts and related accumulated depreciation
    accounts
  • Acquisitions of capital assets
  • Sales or other dispositions
  • Allocation of current period depreciation expense
    to each function in the Statement of Activities

1 2
25
General Long-Term Liabilities
  • Defined
  • All unmatured long-term debt of the government
    except for that accounted for in a Proprietary
    Fund or Trust Fund
  • Examples
  • Bonds, warrants, notes
  • Capital leases and CoPs
  • Underfunded pension plan contributions
  • Claims judgments
  • Compensated absences
  • Landfill closure and post-closure care costs

26
Special Circumstances
  • Serial Bonds
  • Special Assessment debt
  • Defaulted bonds
  • In-substance defeasance

27
Reporting GLTL
  • Financial Statements governmental activities
    column of government-wide Statement of Net Assets
  • Notes to the Financial Statements
  • Beginning and Ending Balances of GLTL accounts
  • Issuances / increases in GLTL accounts
  • Retirements / decreases in GLTL accounts
  • Which governmental funds have typically been used
    in prior years to liquidate other long-term
    liabilities

1
28
Permanent Funds
  • Used to account for resources held in trust by
    the government for the benefit of the government
    or of its citizenry as a whole
  • Contrast with Private Purpose Trust Fund where
    the assets are used to benefit private
    individuals, private organizations, or other
    governments

29
Relationships Requiring Use of a Permanent Fund
  • Gift of real or personal property where
  • Principal is to remain intact
  • Earnings are to be used for certain purposes
  • Employee loan fund principal could be reduced
    under certain circumstances
  • Other trust agreements
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