IFRIC 23 and Living will: Difference between pages

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imported>Doug Williamson
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''Financial reporting''.
1.  


IFRIC 23 clarifies the accounting for uncertainties in income tax under IAS 12.
A contingency plan of how a significant financial institution could be wound up by its supervisor in an orderly manner in the event of a collapse.


IFRIC 23 is applied to the determination of taxable profit (tax loss), tax bases, unused tax losses, unused tax credits and tax rates, when there is uncertainty over income tax treatments under IAS 12.
A requirement of the US Dodd-Frank financial reform law applied to financial institutions with total consolidated assets of $50 billion or more
and non-bank financial companies supervised by the Federal Reserve.




IFRIC 23 is effective for annual reporting periods beginning on or after 1 January 2019.
Similar requirements apply in other jurisdictions, in relation to institutions considered to be significant on the grounds of their size, degree of interconnectedness with other parts of the financial system, or both.


''Also known as a Resolution plan.''


== See also ==
 
*[[IAS 12]]
2.
*[[IFRIC]]
 
*[[International Financial Reporting Interpretations Committee]]
A set of instructions which specifies what actions are to be taken if an individual becomes unable to act personally due to illness or incapacity.
 
''Also known as an advance decision.''
 
 
==See also==
* [[Bank supervision]]
* [[BRRD]]
* [[Dodd-Frank]]
* [[Recovery plan]]
* [[Resolution]]
* [[Resolution plan]]


[[Category:Compliance_and_audit]]
[[Category:Compliance_and_audit]]

Revision as of 18:56, 30 October 2016

1.

A contingency plan of how a significant financial institution could be wound up by its supervisor in an orderly manner in the event of a collapse.

A requirement of the US Dodd-Frank financial reform law applied to financial institutions with total consolidated assets of $50 billion or more and non-bank financial companies supervised by the Federal Reserve.


Similar requirements apply in other jurisdictions, in relation to institutions considered to be significant on the grounds of their size, degree of interconnectedness with other parts of the financial system, or both.

Also known as a Resolution plan.


2.

A set of instructions which specifies what actions are to be taken if an individual becomes unable to act personally due to illness or incapacity.

Also known as an advance decision.


See also