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Accounting Standard
18
Related Party
Disclosures |
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(In this Accounting
Standard, the standard portions have been set in bold italic type.
These should be read in the context of the background material which
has been set in normal type, and in the context of the ‘Preface to
the Statements of Accounting Standards’.) |
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The following is the text
of Accounting Standard (AS) 18, ‘Related Party Disclosures’, issued
by the Council of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of India.
This Standard comes into effect in respect of accounting periods
commencing on or after 1-4-2001 and is mandatory in nature
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| Objective |
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The objective of this
Statement is to establish requirements for disclosure of:
- related party relationships;
and
- transactions between a reporting
enterprise and its related parties.
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| Scope |
| 1. |
This
Statement should be applied in reporting related party relationships
and transactions between a reporting enterprise and its related
parties. The requirements of this Statement apply to the financial
statements of each reporting enterprise as also to consolidated
financial statements presented by a holding
company. |
| 2.
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This
Statement applies only to related party relationships described in
paragraph 3. |
| 3. |
This Statement deals only with related
party relationships described in (a) to (e) below:
- enterprises that directly, or
indirectly through one or more intermediaries, control, or are
controlled by, or are under common control with, the reporting
enterprise (this includes holding companies, subsidiaries and
fellow subsidiaries);
- associates and joint ventures of the
reporting enterprise and the investing party or venturer in
respect of which the reporting enterprise is an associate or a
joint venture;
- individuals owning, directly or
indirectly, an interest in the voting power of the reporting
enterprise that gives them control or significant influence over
the enterprise, and relatives of any such individual;
- key management personnel and relatives
of such personnel; and
- enterprises over which any person
described in (c) or (d) is able to exercise significant influence.
This includes enterprises owned by directors or major shareholders
of the reporting enterprise and enterprises that have a member of
key management in common with the reporting enterprise.
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| 4. |
In the context of this
Statement, the following are deemed not to be related parties:
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two companies simply because they have a director
in common, notwithstanding paragraph 3(d) or (e) above (unless the
director is able to affect the policies of both companies in their
mutual dealings);
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a single customer, supplier, franchiser,
distributor, or general agent with whom an enterprise transacts a
significant volume of business merely by virtue of the resulting
economic dependence; and
- the parties listed below, in the course of their normal
dealings with an enterprise by virtue only of those dealings
(although they may circumscribe the freedom of action of the
enterprise or participate in its decision-making process):
- providers of finance;
- trade unions;
- public utilities;
- government departments and government agencies including
government sponsored bodies.
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| 5. |
Related party
disclosure requirements as laid down in this Statement do not apply
in circumstances where providing such disclosures would conflict
with the reporting enterprise’s duties of confidentiality as
specifically required in terms of a statute or by any regulator or
similar competent authority. |
| 6. |
In case a statute or a
regulator or a similar competent authority governing an enterprise
prohibit the enterprise to disclose certain information which is
required to be disclosed as per this Statement, disclosure of such
information is not warranted. For example, banks are obliged by law
to maintain confidentiality in respect of their customers’
transactions and this Statement would not override the obligation to
preserve the confidentiality of customers’ dealings.
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| 7. |
No disclosure is
required in consolidated financial statements in respect of
intra-group transactions. |
| 8. |
Disclosure of transactions between members of a group is
unnecessary in consolidated financial statements because
consolidated financial statements present information about the
holding and its subsidiaries as a single reporting
enterprise. |
| 9. |
No disclosure is
required in the financial statements of state-controlled enterprises
as regards related party relationships with other state-controlled
enterprises and transactions with such enterprises.
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| Definitions |
| 10. |
For the purpose of this Statement,
the following terms are used with the meanings
specified:
Related party - parties are
considered to be related if at any time during the reporting period
one party has the ability to control the other party or exercise
significant influence over the other party in making financial
and/or operating decisions.
Related party transaction
- a transfer of resources or obligations between related
parties, regardless of whether or not a price is
charged.
Control – (a) ownership, directly or
indirectly, of more than one half of the voting power of an
enterprise, or
(b) control of the composition of the board
of directors in the case of a company or of the composition of the
corresponding governing body in case of any other enterprise, or
(c) a substantial interest in voting power and the power to
direct, by statute or agreement, the financial and/or operating
policies of the enterprise.
Significant influence -
participation in the financial and/or operating policy decisions of
an enterprise, but not control of those policies.
An
Associate - an enterprise in which an investing reporting party
has significant influence and which is neither a subsidiary nor a
joint venture of that party.
A Joint venture - a
contractual arrangement whereby two or more parties undertake an
economic activity which is subject to joint control.
Joint
control - the contractually agreed sharing of power to govern
the financial and operating policies of an economic activity so as
to obtain benefits from it.
Key management personnel -
those persons who have the authority and responsibility for
planning, directing and controlling the activities of the reporting
enterprise.
Relative – in relation to an individual,
means the spouse, son, daughter, brother, sister, father and mother
who may be expected to influence, or be influenced by, that
individual in his/her dealings with the reporting
enterprise. Holding company - a company having one or more
subsidiaries.
Subsidiary - a company:
(a) in
which another company (the holding company) holds, either by itself
and/or through one or more subsidiaries, more than one-half in
nominal value of its equity share capital; or
(b) of which
another company (the holding company) controls, either by itself
and/or through one or more subsidiaries, the composition of its
board of directors.
Fellow subsidiary - a company is
considered to be a fellow subsidiary of another company if both are
subsidiaries of the same holding company. State-controlled
enterprise - an enterprise which is under the control of the Central
Government and/or any State Government(s). |
| 11. |
For the purpose of this
Statement, an enterprise is considered to control the composition
of:
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the board of directors of a company, if it has
the power, without the consent or concurrence of any other person,
to appoint or remove all or a majority of directors of that
company. An enterprise is deemed to have the power to appoint a
director if any of the following conditions is satisfied:
- a person cannot be appointed as director without the
exercise in his favour by that enterprise of such a power as
aforesaid; or
- a person’s appointment as director follows necessarily from
his appointment to a position held by him in that enterprise; or
- the director is nominated by that enterprise; in case that
enterprise is a company, the director is nominated by that
company/subsidiary thereof:
- the governing body of an enterprise that is not a company, if
it has the power, without the consent or the concurrence of any
other person, to appoint or remove all or a majority of members of
the governing body of that other enterprise. An enterprise is
deemed to have the power to appoint a member if any of the
following conditions is satisfied:
- a person cannot be appointed as member of the governing body
without the exercise in his favour by that other enterprise of
such a power as aforesaid; or
- a person’s appointment as member of the governing body
follows necessarily from his appointment to a position held by
him in that other enterprise; or
- the member of the governing body is nominated by that other
enterprise.
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| 12. |
An enterprise is considered
to have a substantial interest in another enterprise if that
enterprise owns, directly or indirectly, 20 per cent or more
interest in the voting power of the other enterprise. Similarly, an
individual is considered to have a substantial interest in an
enterprise, if that individual owns, directly or indirectly, 20 per
cent or more interest in the voting power of the enterprise.
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| 13. |
Significant influence may
be exercised in several ways, for example, by representation on the
board of directors, participation in the policy making process,
material inter-company transactions, interchange of managerial
personnel, or dependence on technical information. Significant
influence may be gained by share ownership, statute or agreement. As
regards share ownership, if an investing party holds, directly or
indirectly through intermediaries, 20 per cent or more of the voting
power of the enterprise, it is presumed that the investing party
does have significant influence, unless it can be clearly
demonstrated that this is not the case. Conversely, if the investing
party holds, directly or indirectly through intermediaries , less
than 20 per cent of the voting power of the enterprise, it is
presumed that the investing party does not have significant
influence, unless such influence can be clearly demonstrated. A
substantial or majority ownership by another investing party does
not necessarily preclude an investing party from having significant
influence. |
| 14. |
Key management personnel
are those persons who have the authority and responsibility for
planning, directing and controlling the activities of the reporting
enterprise. For example, in the case of a company, the managing
director(s), whole time director(s), manager and any person in
accordance with whose directions or instructions the board of
directors of the company is accustomed to act, are usually
considered key management personnel. |
| The Related
Party Issue |
| 15. |
Related party
relationships are a normal feature of commerce and business. For
example, enterprises frequently carry on separate parts of their
activities through subsidiaries or associates and acquire interests
in other enterprises - for investment purposes or for trading
reasons - that are of sufficient proportions for the investing
enterprise to be able to control or exercise significant influence
on the financial and/or operating decisions of its
investee. |
| 16. |
Without related party
disclosures, there is a general presumption that transactions
reflected in financial statements are consummated on an arm’s-length
basis between independent parties. However, that presumption may not
be valid when related party relationships exist because related
parties may enter into transactions which unrelated parties would
not enter into. Also, transactions between related parties may not
be effected at the same terms and conditions as between unrelated
parties. Sometimes, no price is charged in related party
transactions, for example, free provision of management services and
the extension of free credit on a debt. In view of the aforesaid,
the resulting accounting measures may not represent what they
usually would be expected to represent. Thus, a related party
relationship could have an effect on the financial position and
operating results of the reporting enterprise. |
| 17. |
The operating results and
financial position of an enterprise may be affected by a related
party relationship even if related party transactions do not occur.
The mere existence of the relationship may be sufficient to affect
the transactions of the reporting enterprise with other parties. For
example, a subsidiary may terminate relations with a trading partner
on acquisition by the holding company of a fellow subsidiary engaged
in the same trade as the former partner. Alternatively, one party
may refrain from acting because of the control or significant
influence of another - for example, a subsidiary may be instructed
by its holding company not to engage in research and
development. |
| 18. |
Because there is an
inherent difficulty for management to determine the effect of
influences which do not lead to transactions, disclosure of such
effects is not required by this Statement. |
| 19. |
Sometimes, transactions would not have taken place if the
related party relationship had not existed. For example, a company
that sold a large proportion of its production to its holding
company at cost might not have found an alternative customer if the
holding company had not purchased the goods. |
| Disclosure |
| 20. |
The statutes governing an
enterprise often require disclosure in financial statements of
transactions with certain categories of related parties. In
particular, attention is focussed on transactions with the directors
or similar key management personnel of an enterprise, especially
their remuneration and borrowings, because of the fiduciary nature
of their relationship with the enterprise. |
| 21. |
Name of the
related party and nature of the related party relationship where
control exists should be disclosed irrespective of whether or not
there have been transactions between the related
parties. |
| 22. |
Where
the reporting enterprise controls, or is controlled by, another
party, this information is relevant to the users of financial
statements irrespective of whether or not transactions have taken
place with that party. This is because the existence of control
relationship may prevent the reporting enterprise from being
independent in making its financial and/or operating decisions. The
disclosure of the name of the related party and the nature of the
related party relationship where control exists may sometimes be at
least as relevant in appraising an enterprise’s prospects as are the
operating results and the financial position presented in its
financial statements. Such a related party may establish the
enterprise’s credit standing, determine the source and price of its
raw materials, and determine to whom and at what price the product
is sold. |
| 23. |
If there have been
transactions between related parties, during the existence of a
related party relationship, the reporting enterprise should disclose
the following:
- the name of the transacting related party;
- a description of the relationship between the parties;
- a description of the nature of transactions;
- volume of the transactions either as an amount or as an
appropriate proportion;
- any other elements of the related party transactions necessary
for an understanding of the financial statements;
- the amounts or appropriate proportions of outstanding items
pertaining to related parties at the balance sheet date and
provisions for doubtful debts due from such parties at that date;
and
- amounts written off or written back in the period in respect
of debts due from or to related parties.
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| 24. |
The following are examples
of the related party transactions in respect of which disclosures
may be made by a reporting enterprise:
- purchases or sales of goods (finished
or unfinished);
- purchases or sales of fixed
assets;
- rendering or receiving of
services;
- agency arrangements;
- leasing or hire purchase
arrangements;
- transfer of research and development;
- licence agreements;
- finance (including loans and equity
contributions in cash or in kind);
- guarantees and collaterals; and
- management contracts including for
deputation of employees.
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| 25. |
Paragraph 23 (v)
requires disclosure of ‘any other elements of the related party
transactions necessary for an understanding of the financial
statements’. An example of such a disclosure would be an indication
that the transfer of a major asset had taken place at an amount
materially different from that obtainable on normal commercial
terms. |
| 26. |
Items of a
similar nature may be disclosed in aggregate by type of related
party. |