12 October 2023 | 6 minute read
Senthilnathan Sampath - Partner, Corporate Reporting Services, PwC Singapore Angeline Tan - Senior Manager, Corporate Reporting Services, PwC Singapore
Insights
The Pillar Two rules (also known as Global Anti-Base Erosion rules (GloBE rules)) apply to multinational enterprises (MNEs) that have consolidated revenues of EUR 750 million or more, in accordance with the group consolidated financial statements, in at least two out of the last four years.
On 23 May 2023, the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) issued narrow-scope amendments to IAS 12 which seek to address stakeholders’ concerns arising from the GloBE rules. The amendments provide for a mandatory exception from the requirement to recognise and disclose deferred taxes arising from enacted or substantively enacted tax law that implements the Pillar Two model rules published by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), including tax law that implements qualified domestic minimum top-up taxes (DTT) described in those rules.
When the GloBE rules were released in December 2021, it was unclear how an entity would account for deferred taxes related to top-up tax. Stakeholders have brought a number of concerns to the IASB:
The exception from deferred tax recognition and disclosure as issued by the IASB on 23 May 2023 and as endorsed by the Accounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority of Singapore on the same day also introduces targeted disclosure requirements for affected companies.
To meet the targeted disclosure requirements’ objective on the known or reasonably estimable exposure to Pillar Two income taxes, an entity shall disclose:
An illustrative disclosure can be found in this publication (Note 6(g)), a PwC's illustrative consolidated financial statements for a fictitious listed company.
The exception from deferred tax recognition and disclosure is effective immediately upon the issuance of the amendments and retrospectively in accordance with International Accounting Standard 8 (IAS 8)/Singapore Financial Reporting Standards (International) 1-8 (SFRS(I) 1-8)/Singapore Financial Reporting Standards 8 (SFRS 8), ‘Accounting Policies, Changes in Accounting Estimates and Errors’, including the requirement to disclose the fact that the exception has been applied if the entity’s income taxes will be affected by enacted or substantively enacted tax law that implements the OECD’s Pillar Two model rules.
The disclosures relating to the known or reasonably estimable exposure to Pillar Two income taxes are required for annual reporting periods beginning on or after 1 January 2023, but they are not required to be disclosed in interim financial reports for any interim period ending on or before 31 December 2023.
The amendments to IAS 12 provide welcome relief to preparers of financial statements. Nonetheless, the complexity of Pillar Two rules means that the targeted requirements to provide estimable exposure disclosures for deferred taxes would still be challenging for in-scope MNEs. Tax and finance leaders should take advantage of the temporary relief afforded by the amendments to IAS 12 and proactively initiate strategic discussions to:
Rose Sim
Senthilnathan Sampath