Summary
This Statement establishes financial reporting standards for defined benefit pension plans
and for the notes to the financial statements of defined contribution plans of state and
local governmental entities. Financial reporting standards for postemployment healthcare
plans administered by defined benefit pension plans and for the pension
expenditures/expense of employers are included, respectively, in two related Statements:
No. 26, Financial Reporting for Postemployment Healthcare Plans Administered by Defined
Benefit Pension Plans, and No. 27, Accounting for Pensions by State and Local
Governmental Employers.
The standards in this Statement apply for pension trust funds included in the financial
reports of plan sponsors or employers as well as for the stand-alone financial reports of
pension plans or the public employee retirement systems that administer them. Reduced
disclosures are acceptable for pension trust funds when a stand-alone plan financial
report is publicly available and contains all required information.
This Statement establishes a financial reporting framework for defined benefit
pension plans that distinguishes between two categories of information: (a) current
financial information about plan assets and financial activities and (b) actuarially
determined information, from a long-term perspective, about the funded status of the plan
and the progress being made in accumulating sufficient assets to pay benefits when due.
Plans should include information in the first category in two financial statements: (a)
a statement of plan net assets that provides information about the fair value and
composition of plan assets, plan liabilities, and plan net assets and (b) a statement
of changes in plan net assets that provides information about the year-to-year changes
in plan net assets. The requirements for the notes to the financial statements include a
brief plan description, a summary of significant accounting policies, and information
about contributions, legally required reserves, and investment concentrations.
Information in the second category should be included, for a minimum of six years, in
two schedules of historical trend information that should be presented as required
supplementary information immediately after the notes to the financial statements. The
required schedules are (a) a schedule of funding progress that reports the
actuarial value of assets, the actuarial accrued liability, and the relationship between
the two over time and (b) a schedule of employer contributions that provides
information about the annual required contributions of the employer(s) (ARC) and the
percentage of the ARC recognized by the plan as contributed. Note disclosures related to
the required schedules should be presented after the schedules and should include the
actuarial methods and significant assumptions used for financial reporting.
Plans may elect to report one or more years of the information required for either or
both schedules in an additional financial statement(s) or in the notes to the financial
statements. Information for all required years also should be reported as required
supplementary information, unless all years are included in the additional statement(s) or
notes.
Plans should measure all actuarially determined information included in their financial
reports in accordance with certain parameters. The parameters include requirements for the
frequency and timing of actuarial valuations as well as for the actuarial methods and
assumptions that are acceptable for financial reporting. When the methods and assumptions
used in determining a plan's funding requirements meet the parameters, the same methods
and assumptions are required for financial reporting by both a plan and its participating
employer(s).
This Statement requires the notes to the financial statements of defined
contribution plans to include a brief plan description, a summary of significant
accounting policies (including the fair value of plan assets, unless reported at fair
value), and information about contributions and investment concentrations.
The provisions of this Statement are effective for periods beginning after June 15,
1996. Early implementation is encouraged; however, Statement 26, if applicable, should be
implemented in the same fiscal year.
Unless otherwise specified, pronouncements of the GASB apply to financial reports of all
state and local governmental entities, including general purpose governments, public
benefit corporations and authorities, public employee retirement systems, utilities,
hospitals and other healthcare providers, and colleges and universities. Paragraphs 9 and
10 discuss the applicability of this Statement.