A
The following is the trial balance of ANG Ltd, a trading company, as of 30 September 2022:

Debit Credit
GH¢’000 GH¢’000
Sales
Inventory 3,150
Cost of sales 35,500
Selling & distribution expenses 5,600
Administration expenses 8,540
Loan Note interest paid 110
Bank interest 85
Investment income
Leasehold building at valuation – 1 Oct 2021 14,000
Plant and equipment – cost/depreciation 13,750
Computer equipment – cost/depreciation 7,200
Motor vehicles – cost/depreciation 1,500
Trade receivables 17,900
Bank
Trade payables
500,000 Ordinary shares
8% Loan notes (2019 – 2023)
Revaluation surplus
General reserve
Retained earnings – 1 Oct 2021
107,335 107,335

The following additional information is made available:
i. The company paid ordinary dividends of GH¢2.2 per share on 31 January 2022 and GH¢2.6 per share on 30 June 2022. The dividend payments are included in administrative expenses in the trial balance.
ii. Provision is to be made for a full year’s interest on the Loan notes.
iii. non-current assets:
• Depreciation of Property, plant and equipment is to be provided on the following bases:

  • Plant and equipment – 10% on cost
  • Computer equipment – 25% on cost
  • Motor vehicles – 20% on reducing balance.
    • No depreciation has yet been charged on any non-current asset for the year ended 30 September 2022.
    • ANG Ltd revalues its buildings at the end of each accounting year. On 30 September 2022, the relevant value to be incorporated into the financial statements is GH¢14,100,000.
    • The building’s remaining life at the beginning of the current year (1 October 2021) was 25 years. ANG Ltd does not make an annual transfer from the revaluation reserve to retained earnings in respect of the realization of the revaluation surplus. Ignore deferred tax on the revaluation surplus.
    iv. Estimated corporate income tax payable on the profit for the year is GH¢3,500,000.

You are required to:
Prepare the following financial statements of ANG Ltd. for publication in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS):
a. Statement of profit or loss and other comprehensive income for the year ended 30 September 2022 and.
b. Statement of financial position as of 30 September 2022.
c. Show clearly all relevant workings.

 B
I. What is the objective of general-purpose financial reporting?
II. The IASB’s Conceptual Framework for Financial Reporting states that “If financial information is to be useful, it must be relevant and faithfully represent what it purports to represent.” Explain the terms Relevance and Faithfully Representation.

 C
The accounting treatment of intangible assets is prescribed by IAS 38 Intangible Assets. You are required to:
i. Define intangible asset under IAS 38 Intangible Assets.
ii. Explain the recognition criteria for intangible assets.
iii. State 5 disclosure requirements of Intangible Assets under IAS 38.

    A Workings (All figures in GH¢’000)

  1. Dividends Calculation:
    • Number of ordinary shares: 500,000
    • Dividend on 31 January 2022: 500,000 × GH¢2.2 = 1,100
    • Dividend on 30 June 2022: 500,000 × GH¢2.6 = 1,300
    • Total dividends: 1,100 + 1,300 = 2,400
    • Administrative expenses in trial balance include these dividends, so adjust administrative expenses: 8,540 – 2,400 = 6,140
  2. Loan Note Interest:
    • Full year interest: 8% × 5,500 = 440
    • Paid: 110
    • Accrued: 440 – 110 = 330
  3. Depreciation Calculation:
    • Building: Straight-line over 25 years = 14,000 / 25 = 560
    • Plant and equipment: 10% on cost = 10% × 13,750 = 1,375
    • Computer equipment: 25% on cost = 25% × 7,200 = 1,800
    • Motor vehicles: 20% on reducing balance; Carrying value = 1,500 – 400 = 1,100; Depreciation = 20% × 1,100 = 220
    • Total depreciation: 560 + 1,375 + 1,800 + 220 = 3,955 (allocated to administrative expenses for presentation)
  4. Revaluation of Building:
    • Carrying amount before revaluation: 14,000 – 560 = 13,440
    • Revalued amount: 14,100
    • Revaluation gain: 14,100 – 13,440 = 660 (to OCI)
  5. Finance Costs:
    • Loan note interest: 440
    • Bank interest: 85
    • Total: 440 + 85 = 525
  6. Bank Overdraft:
    • The bank balance is a credit in the trial balance, indicating an overdraft of 910 (current liability).

a. Statement of Profit or Loss and Other Comprehensive Income for the Year Ended 30 September 2022

GH¢’000
Revenue 68,865
Cost of sales (35,500)
Gross profit 33,365
Selling and distribution expenses (5,600)
Administrative expenses (6,140 + 3,955) (10,095)
Operating profit 17,670
Investment income 360
Finance costs (525)
Profit before tax 17,505
Income tax expense (3,500)
Profit for the year 14,005
Other comprehensive income:
Gain on revaluation of building 660
Total comprehensive income for the year 14,665

b. Statement of Financial Position as of 30 September 2022

Non-current assets GH¢’000 GH¢’000
Property, plant and equipment:
Leasehold building 14,100
Plant and equipment (13,750 – 3,200 – 1,375) 9,175
Computer equipment (7,200 – 2,000 – 1,800) 3,400
Motor vehicles (1,500 – 400 – 220) 880
27,555

| Current assets | | |
| Inventory | 3,150 | |
| Trade receivables | 17,900 | |
| | | 21,050|
| Total assets | | 48,605|

| Equity and liabilities | | |
| Equity | | |
| Ordinary shares | | 14,500 |
| Revaluation surplus (800 + 660) | | 1,460 |
| General reserve | | 1,500 |
| Retained earnings (3,600 + 14,005 – 2,400) | | 15,205 |
| Total equity | | 32,665|

| Non-current liabilities | | |
| 8% Loan notes | | 5,500 |

| Current liabilities | | |
| Trade payables | 5,700 | |
| Bank overdraft | 910 | |
| Taxation | 3,500 | |
| Accrued interest | 330 | |
| | | 10,440|
| Total liabilities | | 15,940|
| Total equity and liabilities | | 48,605|

Question 1B
I. The objective of general-purpose financial reporting is to provide financial information about the reporting entity that is useful to existing and potential investors, lenders, and other creditors in making decisions about providing resources to the entity. These decisions involve buying, selling, or holding equity and debt instruments, and providing or settling loans and other forms of credit.

II.Relevance: Relevant financial information is capable of making a difference in the decisions made by users. Information is relevant if it has predictive value (helps users form expectations about the future), confirmatory value (confirms or changes past evaluations), or both. Materiality is an aspect of relevance, where information is material if omitting or misstating it could influence decisions. For example, in a Ghanaian bank like GCB Bank, disclosing potential losses from non-performing loans under BoG directives is relevant for investors assessing credit risk.

  • Faithful Representation: Financial information faithfully represents the phenomena it purports to represent when it is complete, neutral, and free from error. Completeness means including all necessary descriptions and explanations; neutrality means without bias in selection or presentation; freedom from error means no errors or omissions in the process. For instance, in compliance with IFRS and BoG’s Corporate Governance Directive 2018, a bank’s financial statements must faithfully represent asset valuations to avoid misleading stakeholders, as seen in the 2017-2019 banking cleanup where misrepresentations led to bank collapses like UT Bank.

C
i. An intangible asset under IAS 38 is defined as an identifiable non-monetary asset without physical substance. It must be identifiable (separable or arising from contractual/legal rights), controlled by the entity, and expected to generate future economic benefits. Examples include software, patents, or customer lists in a Ghanaian bank context, such as proprietary risk management software developed by Ecobank Ghana.

ii. The recognition criteria for intangible assets under IAS 38 are:

  • It is probable that the expected future economic benefits attributable to the asset will flow to the entity (e.g., through revenue generation or cost savings).
  • The cost of the asset can be measured reliably.
    For internally generated intangibles, additional strict criteria apply separate research (expensed) from development (capitalized if criteria met, including technical feasibility, intention to complete, ability to use/sell, and demonstrable benefits). In practice, for a bank like Stanbic Bank Ghana investing in fintech under the Payment Systems and Services Act 2019, development costs for a new mobile banking app can be capitalized only if these criteria are satisfied to ensure compliance and accurate reporting.

iii. Five disclosure requirements for intangible assets under IAS 38 include:

  • For each class of intangible assets, distinguish between internally generated and others: useful lives (finite or indefinite), amortization methods, gross carrying amount, accumulated amortization, and impairment losses.
  • Reconciliation of carrying amount at beginning and end of period, showing additions, disposals, revaluations, amortization, and impairments.
  • If indefinite useful life, reasons supporting that assessment and carrying amount.
  • Description, carrying amount, and remaining amortization period for individually material intangibles.
  • Existence and amounts of intangibles with restricted title or pledged as security.