segment .................................................................................................2857
   3.2
   Identifying externally reportable segments .................................................. 2858
   3.2.1
   Aggregation criteria – aggregating internally reported
   operating segments into single reportable operating
   segments .............................................................................................. 2860
   3.2.2 Quantitative
   thresholds
   – operating segments which are
   reportable because of their size ...................................................... 2864
   2844 Chapter 32
   3.2.3
   Combining small operating segments into a larger
   reportable segment ............................................................................ 2865
   3.2.4
   ‘All other segments’ ........................................................................... 2865
   3.2.5
   A ‘practical limit’ for the number of reported operating
   segments .............................................................................................. 2866
   3.2.6
   Restatement of segments reported in comparative periods ..... 2866
   4 MEASUREMENT .......................................................................................... 2866
   5 INFORMATION TO BE DISCLOSED ABOUT REPORTABLE SEGMENTS ..... 2868
   5.1
   General information about reportable segments ........................................ 2869
   5.1.1
   Disclosure of how operating segments are aggregated .............. 2870
   5.2
   A measure of segment profit or loss, total assets and total liabilities ....... 2871
   5.2.1
   Other measures of segment performance ..................................... 2871
   5.3
   Disclosure of other elements of revenue, income and expense .............. 2872
   5.4
   Additional disclosures relating to segment assets ....................................... 2873
   5.5
   Explanation of the measurements used in segment reporting ................. 2874
   5.6 Reconciliations
   ...................................................................................................
   2876
   5.7
   Restatement of previously reported information ........................................ 2877
   5.7.1
   Changes in organisation structure ................................................... 2877
   5.7.2 Changes
   in
   segment measures ........................................................ 2879
   5.8
   Disclosure of commercially sensitive information ..................................... 2879
   6 ENTITY-WIDE DISCLOSURES FOR ALL ENTITIES .................................... 2880
   6.1
   Information about products and services ..................................................... 2880
   6.2 Information
   about
   geographical areas ............................................................ 2881
   6.3
   Information about major customers .............................................................. 2882
   6.3.1
   Customers known to be under common control ........................ 2883
   7 RESULTS OF THE POST-IMPLEMENATION REVIEW OF IFRS 8 .............. 2884
   List of examples
   Example 32.1:
   The meaning of ‘public market’ in the context of a fund ........... 2851
   Example 32.2:
   Identifying operating segments – CODM and segment
   manager ............................................................................................... 2855
   Example 32.3:
   Similar production process ............................................................... 2861
   Example 32.4:
   Type and class of customer .............................................................. 2861
   Example 32.5:
   Retail outlets and internet distribution ......................................... 2862
   Example 32.6:
   Aggregating internally reported operating segments with
   similar characteristics into a single reportable operating
   segment ................................................................................................ 2862
   Operating
   segments
   2845
   Example 32.7:
   Identifying reportable segments using the quantitative
   thresholds ............................................................................................ 2864
   Example 32.8:
   Reaching the threshold of 75% of external revenue ................... 2866
   2846 Chapter 32
   2847
   Chapter 32
   Operating segments
   1 INTRODUCTION
   1.1 Background
   IFRS 8 – Operating Segments – was published in November 2006. The Standard has
   been mandatory since 2009. [IFRS 8.35].
   In Europe, the introduction of IFRS 8 was controversial. Opponents shared concerns
   expressed in the dissenting opinions of two IASB members that the lack of a defined
   measure of segment profit or loss and the absence of any requirement for that measure
   to be consistent with the attribution of assets to reportable segments would encourage
   the proliferation of non-GAAP measures that could mislead users. [IFRS 8.D01-D04]. These
   concerns were raised in the European Parliament together with questions about the
   governance of the IASB, as a result of which the process to endorse IFRS 8 in the
   European Union was not completed until November 2007, a year after the Standard had
   been published.
   During this period, the IFRS Foundation announced enhancements to oversight and due
   process to include a requirement for the IASB to conduct ‘a review of issues identified
   as contentious as part of the consultation process related to all new IFRSs (including
   IFRS 8), major amendments to IFRSs and major IFRIC interpretations’. Such a review
   would be performed after at least two full years of implementation and be completed
   within three years of the pronouncement’s effective date.1 IFRS 8 was the first standard
   subject to a post-implementation review, which was completed in 2013 and is further
   discussed at 7 below.
   1.2
   The main features of IFRS 8
   IFRS 8 is a disclosure standard. It specifies the way an entity should report information
   about its operating segments in annual financial statements and, as a consequential
   amendment to IAS 34 – Interim Financial Reporting, requires an entity to report
   selected information about its operating segments in interim financial reports (see
   Chapter 37 at 4.4). It also sets out requirements for related disclosures about an entity’s
   products and services, geographical areas and major customers. The disclosures
   required are discussed at 5 and 6 below and include:
   2848 Chapter 32
   • financial and descriptive information about the entity’s reportable segments, which
   are operating segments above a certain size or (where specific criteria are met)
   aggregations of operating segments;
   • segment revenues and a measure of profit or loss for each reportable segment,
   reconciled to the amounts disclosed in the entity’s financial statements;
 />
   • a measure of segment assets, segment liabilities and particular income and expense
   items to the extent that such information is regularly provided to the chief
   operating decision maker of the entity, reconciled to the amounts disclosed in the
   entity’s financial statements;
   • unless the information is not available and the cost of its development would be
   excessive, information about the revenues derived from the entity’s products and
   services (or groups of similar products and services), about the countries in which
   it earns revenues and holds assets, and about major customers, regardless of
   whether this information is used by management in making operating decisions;
   and
   • descriptive information about the way that operating segments were determined,
   the products and services provided by the segments, differences between the
   measurements used in reporting segment information and those used in the entity’s
   financial statements, and changes in the measurement of segment amounts from
   period to period.
   The process of identifying operating segments for external reporting purposes begins
   with the information used by the entity’s chief operating decision maker to assess
   performance and to make decisions about future allocations of resources. [IFRS 8.5].
   Entities applying IFRS 8 report on a single set of components according to the way that
   the business is sub-divided for management reporting purposes. [IFRS 8.10].
   If a component of an entity is managed as a separate segment, IFRS 8 requires it to be
   treated as such even if it sells exclusively or primarily to other components of the same
   entity. [IFRS 8.5(a)].
   IFRS 8 does not go so far as to require an entity to report all the information that is
   reviewed by the chief operating decision maker, recognising that such detail may not be
   useful to users of financial statements and could be cumbersome in its presentation.
   Instead it allows entities to apply certain criteria for aggregating components and to
   disclose information only for those segments that exceed certain quantitative criteria.
   [IFRS 8.BC Appendix A 72].
   Under IFRS 8, the amounts reported about identified segments are prepared according
   to the manner in which information is presented to the entity’s chief operating decision
   maker. This can be different to the way that the entity applies its accounting policies
   used in the preparation of the financial statements under IFRSs.
   IFRS 8 requires an entity to describe the factors used to identify the entity’s reportable
   segments, including a description of the basis of organisation. This description would explain
   whether the organisation is structured according to products and services, geographical
   areas, regulatory environments or other factors and state whether operating segments have
   been aggregated for reporting purposes. In addition, the entity must describe the types of
   products and services from which each reportable segment derives its revenues. [IFRS 8.22].
   Operating
   segments
   2849
   IFRS 8 specifies amounts which should be disclosed about each reportable segment, but
   only if those measures are included in the measure of profit or loss used by, or otherwise
   regularly provided to, the chief operating decision maker (see 5.2 below). These
   specified amounts include a requirement to report separately interest revenue and
   interest expense by segment (but only if those measures are included in the measure of
   profit or loss used, or otherwise regularly provided to the by the chief operating decision
   maker) unless a majority of the segment’s revenues is derived from interest and
   performance is assessed primarily on the basis of net interest revenue. [IFRS 8.23].
   Certain ‘entity-wide disclosures’ are also required to be provided under IFRS 8, even if
   the entity has only one reportable segment [IFRS 8.31] (see 6 below). Entity-wide
   information is disclosed for the entity as a whole about its products and services,
   geographical areas and major customers, regardless of the way the entity is organised
   and the information presented to the chief operating decision maker. The amounts
   reported for this entity-wide information is based on the financial information used to
   produce the entity’s financial statements. [IFRS 8.32-34].
   There is no ‘competitive harm’ exemption in IFRS 8 from the requirement to disclose
   segment information, or components of such information, for example on the grounds
   of commercial sensitivity, confidentiality or being otherwise detrimental to the entity’s
   competitive position. [IFRS 8.BC43-45].
   These features are discussed in more detail in this chapter.
   1.3
   Terms used in IFRS 8
   The following terms are used in IFRS 8 with the meanings specified:
   Term Meaning
   Operating segment
   A component of an entity:
   (a) that engages in business activities from which it may earn revenues
   and incur expenses (including revenues and expenses relating to
   transactions with other components of the same entity);
   (b) whose operating results are regularly reviewed by the entity’s chief
   operating decision maker to make decisions about resources to be
   allocated to the segment and assess its performance; and
   (c) for which discrete financial information is available.
   [IFRS 8.5, IFRS 8 Appendix A].
   Chief operating decision The function of allocating resources to and assessing the performance of
   maker
   the operating segments of an entity. This is not necessarily a manager with
   a specific title, but can be an entity’s chief executive officer, chief operating
   officer, a group of executive directors or others. [IFRS 8.7].
   Segment manager
   The function of being directly accountable to and maintaining regular
   contact with the chief operating decision maker to discuss operating
   activities, financial results, forecasts, or plans for the segment. [IFRS 8.9].
   Reportable segment
   An operating segment or a group of two or more operating segments
   determined to be eligible for aggregation in accordance with IFRS 8.12;
   and which exceeds the quantitative thresholds in IFRS 8.13. [IFRS 8.11].
   2850 Chapter 32
   Term Meaning
   Aggregation criteria
   Two or more operating segments may be aggregated into a single operating
   segment if aggregation is consistent with the core principle of IFRS 8, they
   have similar economic characteristics, such as long-term average gross
   margins, and are similar in each of the following respects:
   (a) the nature of the products and services;
   (b) the nature of the production processes;
   (c) the type or class of customer for their products and services;
   (d) the methods used to distribute their products or provide their services;
   (e) if applicable, the nature of the regulatory environment, for example,
   banking, insurance or public utilities. [IFRS 8.12].
   Quantitative thresholds
   Information about an operating segment that meets any of the following
   criteria:
   (a) its reported revenue, including both sales to external customers and
   intersegment sales or transfers, is 10% or
 more of combined revenue,
   internal and external, of all operating segments; or
   (b) its reported profit or loss is, in absolute terms, 10% or more of the
   greater of, in absolute amount:
   (i)
   the combined profit of all operating segments that did not
   report a loss; and
   (ii) the combined reported loss of all operating segments that
   reported a loss; or
   (c) its assets are 10% or more of the combined assets of all operating
   segments. [IFRS 8.13].
   1.4 Transitional
   provisions
   There are no special arrangements for entities applying IFRS 8 for the first time, with the
   Standard requiring comparative information to be restated. Only where the necessary
   information is both unavailable and incapable of being developed without excessive cost
   is an entity exempt from full restatement. [IFRS 8.36]. Accordingly, an entity should ensure
   that internal reporting systems can provide the information needed to meet the disclosure
   requirements of IFRS 8 for all periods presented in its financial statements.
   2
   OBJECTIVE AND SCOPE OF IFRS 8
   2.1 Objective
   The objective of IFRS 8 is expressed as a ‘core principle’, being that an entity shall
   disclose information to enable users of its financial statements to evaluate the nature
   and financial effects of the business activities in which it engages and the economic
   environments in which it operates. [IFRS 8.1].
   Operating
   segments
   2851
   2.2
   Scope of IFRS 8
   IFRS 8 applies to both the separate or individual financial statements of an entity and
   the consolidated financial statements of a group with a parent:
   (a) whose debt or equity instruments are traded in a public market (a domestic or
   foreign stock exchange or an over-the-counter market, including local and
   regional markets); or
   (b) that files, or is in the process of filing, its financial statements with a securities
   commission or other regulatory organisation for the purpose of issuing any class of
   
 
 International GAAP® 2019: Generally Accepted Accounting Practice under International Financial Reporting Standards Page 567