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NEW STANDARDS, AMENDMENTS TO STANDARDS AND INTERPRETATIONS
12 Months Ended
Jun. 30, 2021
New standards amendments to standards and interpretations [abstract]  
NEW STANDARDS, AMENDMENTS TO STANDARDS AND INTERPRETATIONS
3
 
NEW STANDARDS,
 
AMENDMENTS TO STANDARDS
 
AND INTERPRETATIONS
New standards, amendments to standards and interpretations effective for the year ended June 30, 2021
During
 
the financial
 
period, the
 
following relevant
 
new and
 
revised
 
accounting standards,
 
amendments to
 
standards and
 
new
interpretation were adopted by the Group:
Definition of Material (Effective July 1, 2020)
The amendment
 
clarifies the definition
 
of material to
 
make it easier
 
to understand
 
and provides guidance
 
on how the
 
definition
should be applied. The
 
changes in the definition now
 
ensures that the definition
 
is consistent across all
 
IFRS standards and the
Conceptual Framework.
old definition (IAS
 
1): Omissions or
 
misstatements of items
 
are material if
 
they could, individually
 
or collectively,
 
influence the
economic decisions that users make on the basis of the financial statements;
new definition (IAS
 
1): Information is
 
material if omitting,
 
misstating or obscuring
 
it could reasonably
 
be expected to
 
influence
the decisions that
 
the primary users of
 
general-purpose financial statements make
 
on the basis of
 
those financial statements,
which provide financial information about a specific reporting entity.
The
 
definition of
 
material
 
omissions or
 
misstatements from
 
IAS
 
8
Accounting Policies,
 
Changes in
 
Accounting Estimates
and
Errors
 
has been removed.
 
The amendments to IAS 1 and IAS 8 did not have a significant impact on the Group.
Amendments to References to Conceptual Framework in IFRS (Effective July 1, 2020)
The IASB decided to revise the Conceptual Framework because certain important issues were not covered and certain guidance
was unclear or out of date. The revised Conceptual Framework, issued by the IASB in March 2018, includes:
new concepts on measurement including factors to be considered when selecting the measurement basis;
new concepts on presentation
 
and disclosure, including when
 
to classify income and
 
expenses in other comprehensive
 
income;
new guidance on when assets and liabilities are removed from financial statements;
updated definitions of an asset and liability;
updated recognition criteria for including assets and liabilities in financial statements;
clarified concepts of prudence, stewardship, measurement uncertainty and substance over form; and
the
 
IASB
 
also
 
updated
 
references
 
to
 
the
 
Conceptual
 
Framework
 
in
 
IFRS
 
by
 
issuing
 
Amendments
 
to
 
References
 
to
 
the
Conceptual Framework in IFRS.
The amendments to the References to the Conceptual Framework did not have a significant impact on the Group.
New standards, amendments to standards and interpretations not yet effective
At the date
 
of authorisation
 
of these consolidated
 
financial statements, the
 
following relevant
 
standards, amendments to
 
standards
and interpretations that may be
 
applicable to the business of
 
the Group were in issue
 
but not yet effective and
 
may therefore have
an impact on
 
future consolidated financial
 
statements. These new
 
standards, amendments to
 
standards and interpretations
 
will
be adopted at their effective dates.
 
These new standards, amendments to standards and
 
interpretations are not expected to have a significant
 
impact on the Group
unless stated otherwise.
Annual Improvements to IFRS Standards 2018-2020 (Effective July 1, 2022)
As
 
part
 
of
 
its process
 
to
 
make
 
non-urgent
 
but
 
necessary
 
amendments
 
to
 
IFRS
Standards,
 
the
 
IASB
 
International
 
Accounting
Standards Board has issued the
Annual Improvements to IFRS Standards 2018–2020.
Property, Plant and Equipment: Proceeds before Intended Use (Amendments to IAS 16) (Effective July 1, 2022)
The IASB has amended IAS
 
16
Property, Plant and Equipment
to provide guidance on
 
the accounting for such
 
sale proceeds and
the related production costs.
Under the amendments, proceeds from
 
selling items before the related
 
item of property,
 
plant and equipment (PPE) is
 
available
for use should
 
be recognised in
 
profit or loss,
 
together with the
 
costs of producing
 
those items. IAS
 
2
Inventories
 
should be applied
in identifying and measuring these production costs.
The amendments apply retrospectively,
 
but only to items of property,
 
plant and equipment made available for use on or after the
beginning of the
 
earliest period presented in
 
the financial statements
 
in which the amendments
 
are adopted.
 
Management has
begun performing evaluation of whether the amendment will have a significant impact on the
 
Group. More detail will be disclosed
in future financial statements.
Definition of Accounting Estimate
 
(Amendments to IAS 8) (Effective July 1, 2023)
The amendments introduce
 
a new definition for
 
accounting estimates: clarifying that
 
they are monetary
 
amounts in the financial
statements that are subject to measurement uncertainty.
The amendments also
 
clarify the relationship between
 
accounting policies and
 
accounting estimates by
 
specifying that a
 
company
develops an accounting estimate to achieve the objective set out by an accounting policy.
3
 
NEW STANDARDS,
 
AMENDMENTS TO STANDARDS
 
AND INTERPRETATIONS
continued
New standards, amendments to standards and interpretations not yet effective
(continued)
Deferred Tax
 
related to Assets and
 
Liabilities Arising from a single
 
transaction – Amendments to
 
IAS 12
Income Taxes
(Effective July 1, 2023)
IAS
 
12
Income
 
taxes
 
clarifies
 
how
 
companies
 
should
 
account
 
for
 
deferred
 
tax
 
on
 
certain
 
transactions
 
 
e.g.
 
leases
 
and
decommissioning provisions. The amendments
 
narrow the scope of
 
the initial recognition exemption
 
so that it does
 
not apply to
transactions that give rise to equal and offsetting temporary differences. As a result, companies will need to recognize a deferred
tax asset
 
and a
 
deferred tax
 
liability for
 
temporary differences
 
arising on
 
initial recognition
 
of a
 
lease and
 
a decommissioning
provision.
Classification of liabilities as current or non-current (Amendments to IAS 1) (Effective July 1, 2023)
To
promote consistency in application and clarify the requirements on determining if a liability is current or non-current, the IASB
has amended IAS 1 as follows:
 
Right to defer settlement must have substance
Under existing IAS 1 requirements, companies classify a liability as current when they do not have an
unconditional right
 
to defer
settlement of the liability for at least twelve months after the end of the reporting period.
As part of its amendments, the IASB
 
has removed the requirement for a
 
right to be unconditional and instead,
 
now requires that
a right to defer settlement must have substance and exist at the end of the reporting period.
Classification of debt may change
A company
 
classifies a
 
liability as
 
non-current if
 
it has
 
a right
 
to defer
 
settlement for
 
at least
 
twelve months
 
after the
 
reporting
period. The IASB
 
has now clarified that
 
a right to defer
 
exists only if
 
the company complies with
 
conditions specified in
 
the loan
agreement at the end of the reporting period, even if the lender does not test compliance until a later date.
Disclosure of Accounting Policy (Amendments to IAS 1 and IFRS Practice Statement 2) (Effective July 1, 2023)
The
 
Board
 
has
 
recently
 
issued
 
amendments
 
to
 
IAS
 
1
Presentation
 
of
 
Financial
 
Statements
 
and
 
an
 
update
 
to
 
IFRS
 
Practice
Statement 2
Making Materiality Judgements
 
to help companies provide useful accounting policy disclosures.
The key amendments to IAS 1 include:
 
requiring companies to disclose their material accounting policies rather than their significant accounting policies;
 
clarifying that accounting policies related to immaterial
 
transactions, other events or conditions are themselves immaterial and
as such need not be disclosed; and
 
clarifying that not all accounting policies that relate to material transactions, other events or conditions are themselves material
to a company’s financial statements.
The amendments are applied prospectively.
Management has commenced an evaluation
 
of the impact of
 
the amendment will have on
 
the Group. More detail will
 
be disclosed
in future financial statements.