IPSAS 21 — Impairment of Non-Cash-Generating Assets

Scope of IPSAS 21

IPSAS 21 applies to non-cash-generating assets. These are assets held mainly to deliver public services rather than to earn a commercial return.

A public entity may hold buildings, ICT systems, schools, clinics, libraries, roads, equipment or other assets that are not expected to generate direct cash inflows. The asset may still be important because it provides service potential to the public.

The first question is not whether the asset is still physically present. The first question is whether the carrying amount in the books is still supported by the remaining service potential of the asset.

The Big Picture

Impairment does not mean the asset is useless. It means the asset is carried in the books at an amount higher than the amount that can be recovered from its remaining service potential or sale.

For a non-cash-generating asset, the recoverable service amount is the higher of:

MeasureMeaning
Fair value less costs to sellThe amount the entity could receive from selling the asset, after deducting selling costs
Value in useThe remaining service potential of the asset

If the carrying amount is higher than the recoverable service amount, the asset is impaired.

Impairment loss = Carrying amount − Recoverable service amount

Non-Cash-Generating Assets

A non-cash-generating asset is mainly held to provide public service. Cash may sometimes be received, but the main purpose is not commercial return.

Examples include:

AssetWhy IPSAS 21 applies
Public school buildingMainly provides education service
Public hospital ward providing free servicesMainly provides health service
Public libraryMainly provides public access to information
Public road with no toll chargesMainly supports public movement
Ministry office buildingMainly supports administrative service delivery
Public service ICT systemMainly supports service delivery

Where the asset is mainly held to earn cash inflows and commercial return, IPSAS 26 is considered instead.

When to Test for Impairment

A public entity tests an asset for impairment when there is an indication that the asset may be impaired.

Common indicators include:

IndicatorExample
Significant decline in demandA public training facility is no longer used because programmes moved online
ObsolescenceAn old ICT system is replaced by cheaper and more efficient technology
Physical damageFire, flooding or structural damage affects a public building
Change in useA learning facility is closed and converted into a storage facility
Reduced service outputA machine still works but produces fewer units of service
Legal or policy changeSafety rules prevent part of a building from being used

The key issue is whether the asset can still provide the level of service expected when the carrying amount was recorded.

Recoverable Service Amount

The recoverable service amount is the higher of:

  1. Fair value less costs to sell; and
  2. Value in use.

For non-cash-generating assets, value in use is not based on future cash flows. It is based on remaining service potential.

IPSAS 21 uses three main approaches to measure value in use:

Situation in the questionApproachMeaning
The asset is obsolete, underused, or its use has changedDepreciated replacement costReplace the remaining service potential and depreciate it
The asset is physically damagedRestoration costStart with the value if undamaged, then deduct the cost to restore
The asset still works but gives fewer service unitsService-units approachReduce the value based on the service still available

The approach is selected from the facts of the question, not from the numbers.

Depreciated replacement cost deals with replacement. Restoration cost deals with damage. Service-units approach deals with reduced output or reduced capacity.

Approach 1: Depreciated Replacement Cost

Depreciated replacement cost is used where the asset is obsolete, underused, or now provides a different type of service.

The question asks: what would it cost today to replace the remaining service potential of the asset?

The steps are:

  1. Calculate the carrying amount of the old asset.
  2. Identify the replacement cost of the remaining service potential.
  3. Depreciate that replacement cost to reflect the age or used condition of the asset.
  4. Compare the carrying amount with the recoverable service amount.
  5. Recognise impairment if the carrying amount is higher.

Example 1: Underused Mainframe

A government ICT department bought a mainframe computer for CU10,000,000. The useful life was 7 years. After 4 years, most of the work moved to modern servers. The mainframe is still working, but it is now heavily underused. A machine that can provide the remaining service now costs CU500,000.

This is not physical damage. The issue is technological change and underuse. The depreciated replacement cost approach is used.

Step 1: Carrying Amount

ItemCU
Cost10,000,000
Less accumulated depreciation: 4/7 × 10,000,000(5,714,286)
Carrying amount4,285,714

Step 2: Recoverable Service Amount

ItemCU
Replacement cost of remaining service500,000
Depreciated replacement cost: 3/7 × 500,000214,286
Recoverable service amount214,286

Step 3: Impairment Loss

ItemCU
Carrying amount4,285,714
Recoverable service amount(214,286)
Impairment loss4,071,428

The mainframe is still working, but that is not enough. The same remaining service can now be provided by a much cheaper machine. The carrying amount of CU4,285,714 is therefore not supported by the remaining service potential.

Example 2: Public Learning Facility Becomes a Warehouse

A public school authority constructed a learning facility for CU10,000,000. The useful life was 50 years. After 6 years, enrolment collapsed and the facility was closed. The building is now used only as a storage warehouse. A warehouse with the same storage capacity would cost CU4,200,000.

This is a change in use. The building is no longer providing learning services. It is now providing storage service.

Step 1: Carrying Amount

ItemCU
Cost10,000,000
Less accumulated depreciation: 6/50 × 10,000,000(1,200,000)
Carrying amount8,800,000

Step 2: Recoverable Service Amount

ItemCU
Replacement cost of warehouse service4,200,000
Depreciated replacement cost: 44/50 × 4,200,0003,696,000
Recoverable service amount3,696,000

Step 3: Impairment Loss

ItemCU
Carrying amount8,800,000
Recoverable service amount(3,696,000)
Impairment loss5,104,000

The building has not disappeared, but the service has changed. It is no longer valued as a learning facility because it is not being used as one. The recoverable service amount is based on the storage service now being provided.

Approach 2: Restoration Cost

Restoration cost is used when the asset is physically damaged.

The question asks: what would the asset be worth if it was still in sound condition, and what cost is needed to restore it?

The steps are:

  1. Calculate the carrying amount of the damaged asset.
  2. Calculate the depreciated replacement cost of the asset as if it were undamaged.
  3. Deduct the restoration cost.
  4. The result is value in use.
  5. Compare with fair value less costs to sell, where provided.
  6. Recognise impairment if carrying amount is higher than recoverable service amount.

Example 3: Office Building Damaged by Fire

A public entity built an office building for CU50,000,000. The useful life was 40 years. After 19 years, fire caused serious structural damage. Repairs will cost CU35,500,000. A new similar office building would cost CU100,000,000.

This is physical damage. The restoration cost approach is used.

Step 1: Carrying Amount

ItemCU
Cost50,000,000
Less accumulated depreciation: 19/40 × 50,000,000(23,750,000)
Carrying amount26,250,000

Step 2: Depreciated Replacement Cost if Undamaged

ItemCU
Replacement cost of new building100,000,000
Less depreciation: 19/40 × 100,000,000(47,500,000)
DRC if undamaged52,500,000

Step 3: Deduct Restoration Cost

ItemCU
DRC if undamaged52,500,000
Less restoration cost(35,500,000)
Recoverable service amount17,000,000

Step 4: Impairment Loss

ItemCU
Carrying amount26,250,000
Recoverable service amount(17,000,000)
Impairment loss9,250,000

Journal Entry

Dr Impairment loss — surplus or deficit CU9,250,000
Cr Accumulated impairment / asset CU9,250,000

This is not a change in use. This is damage. The value in use is measured by taking the depreciated replacement cost of the building as if it was sound, then deducting the cost needed to restore it.

After the impairment, future depreciation is based on the new carrying amount of CU17,000,000 over the remaining useful life.

Approach 3: Service-Units Approach

The service-units approach is used where the asset still works, but its service output or capacity has reduced.

The question asks: how much of the original service capacity is still available?

The steps are:

  1. Calculate the carrying amount.
  2. Calculate depreciated replacement cost before the service reduction.
  3. Multiply by the remaining service units.
  4. Compare with fair value less costs to sell, where provided.
  5. Use the higher amount as recoverable service amount.
  6. Recognise impairment if carrying amount is higher.

Example 4: Public Office Tower Partly Closed

A public entity constructed a 20-storey office tower for CU80,000,000. The useful life is 40 years. After 15 years, new safety regulations require the top 4 floors to remain empty. Only 16 out of 20 floors can now be used. A similar 20-storey building costs CU85,000,000. Fair value less costs to sell is CU45,000,000.

The building is still working, but it is not giving full service. This is a service-units example.

Step 1: Carrying Amount

ItemCU
Cost80,000,000
Less depreciation: 15/40 × 80,000,000(30,000,000)
Carrying amount50,000,000

Step 2: DRC Before Service Adjustment

ItemCU
Replacement cost of 20-storey building85,000,000
Less depreciation: 15/40 × 85,000,000(31,875,000)
DRC before service-unit adjustment53,125,000

Step 3: Adjust for Remaining Service Units

ItemCU
DRC before service-unit adjustment53,125,000
Remaining service: 16/20 floors80%
Value in use42,500,000

Step 4: Higher of Two Amounts

ItemCU
Value in use42,500,000
Fair value less costs to sell45,000,000
Recoverable service amount45,000,000

Step 5: Impairment Loss

ItemCU
Carrying amount50,000,000
Recoverable service amount(45,000,000)
Impairment loss5,000,000

This answers the common question: why impair something that is still working? The tower is still working, but not fully. It was expected to provide 20 floors of service and can now provide only 16 floors. The carrying amount must therefore be tested against the reduced service potential.

Example 5: Printing Machine Underperforms

A national education department bought a printing machine for CU40,000,000. The useful life is 10 years. After 5 years, a fault reduces annual output by 25% for the rest of the machine’s life. A new machine costs CU45,000,000.

The machine is still working, but its output has fallen to 75%. This is a service-units example.

Step 1: Carrying Amount

ItemCU
Cost40,000,000
Less depreciation: 5/10 × 40,000,000(20,000,000)
Carrying amount20,000,000

Step 2: DRC Before Service Adjustment

ItemCU
Replacement cost of new machine45,000,000
Depreciated replacement cost: 5/10 × 45,000,00022,500,000

Step 3: Adjust for Reduced Output

ItemCU
Depreciated replacement cost22,500,000
Remaining output capacity75%
Recoverable service amount16,875,000

Step 4: Impairment Loss

ItemCU
Carrying amount20,000,000
Recoverable service amount(16,875,000)
Impairment loss3,125,000

The machine is not useless. It is still printing. But it is not printing at the level expected. The impairment is recognised because the service output has fallen significantly and is expected to remain lower.

Recognition of Impairment Loss

When impairment is identified, the asset is written down to its recoverable service amount.

The impairment loss is normally recognised in surplus or deficit.

Journal Entry

Dr Impairment loss — surplus or deficit
Cr Accumulated impairment / asset

After impairment, depreciation is recalculated based on the new carrying amount over the remaining useful life.

Reversal of Impairment

An impairment loss may be reversed if the conditions that caused the impairment improve.

Examples include:

Earlier impairment causePossible reversal trigger
Demand collapsedDemand returns
Asset was damagedAsset is restored
Use was restrictedRestriction is removed
Output declinedCapacity improves

The reversal cannot increase the asset above the carrying amount that would have existed if no impairment had been recognised.

When IPSAS 44 Takes Over

IPSAS 21 continues to apply where the asset is still being recovered through use.

If the public entity has genuinely committed to sell the asset, the asset is available for immediate sale, and the sale is highly probable, IPSAS 44 takes over.

Under IPSAS 44, the asset is measured at the lower of:

  1. Carrying amount; and
  2. Fair value less costs to sell.

Depreciation stops from the date the asset is classified as held for sale.

Chapter Summary

AreaIPSAS 21 treatment
Type of assetNon-cash-generating asset
Main purposePublic service delivery
Main questionHow much service potential remains?
Recoverable amountRecoverable service amount
Higher of two amountsFair value less costs to sell and value in use
Value in useRemaining service potential
Main approachesDRC, restoration cost, service-units approach
Impairment lossCarrying amount less recoverable service amount
Future depreciationBased on new carrying amount
ReversalAllowed, but capped
Held for saleMove to IPSAS 44 if criteria are met

Application Question

A public entity has a service delivery machine carried at CU30,000,000. The machine is still operating, but due to a permanent technical fault it can now provide only 60% of its original service capacity. A new similar machine costs CU50,000,000. The existing machine has used 4 years of its 10-year life. Fair value less costs to sell is CU24,000,000.

The issue is reduced service capacity. The service-units approach is used. First calculate the depreciated replacement cost of the full service potential, then reduce it to 60%, then compare that amount with fair value less costs to sell. The higher amount becomes the recoverable service amount. If the carrying amount is higher, the difference is impairment.

Key Lines to Remember

IPSAS 21 asks how much public service the asset can still provide.

A working asset can still be impaired if its service potential has fallen.

Depreciated replacement cost is used for obsolescence, underuse or change in use.

Restoration cost is used for physical damage.

Service-units approach is used when service output or capacity has reduced.

Recoverable service amount is the higher of fair value less costs to sell and value in use.

If the asset qualifies as held for sale, IPSAS 44 takes over.