Financial regulators are considering allowing smaller businesses (SMBs) more time to comply with sweeping changes in lease accounting standards, which experts have said will place a significant burden as organizations work to comply with the requirements. Reports in Accounting Today last week said Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) Chairman Russell Golden revealed that it is considering extending the compliance deadline for small and private firms by as much as two years.
“At a public meeting next month, the FASB will consider whether we should extend implementation timelines for private companies and not-for-profit organizations, as well as for smaller public companies — and, if so, how we should define a ‘small public company,'” he said during the annual Institute of Management Accountants conference in San Diego last week. “As part of this process, we’ll look at the effective dates of certain standards that are not yet effective to determine whether they should be amended to reflect a new philosophy. We’ll ask you for input on this as well.”
The FASB is leading sweeping changes to accounting standards, affecting the ways companies report on lease, hedging and current expected credit loss data. These changes are already in effect for the public sector, and, during a Q&A after his speech, Golden noted that “private companies could reduce their costs by learning from public companies.”
“They could learn from the accounting policies at public companies,” he said, adding that the FASB is now considering whether it makes sense to broaden the time between the rules taking affect for public versus private firms.
Separate reports in Bloomberg Tax noted that the FASB is considering both the benefits and drawbacks of pushing back the deadline for the private sector.
According to CPA Practice Advisor reports on Friday (June 21), researchers from Robert Half and Protiviti found that 18 percent of private companies have not yet begun the process of transitioning to the new accounting standards. The adjustment is more difficult for small businesses, with only 38 percent of companies with between 20 and 49 employees having completed the transition, compared to 61 percent of companies with 1,000 or more employees.
The Wall Street Journal reported last month that two professional groups requested a delay in the implementation of the new accounting standards to the FASB. The American Institute of Certified Public Accountants and the Associated General Contractors of America sent letters to the FASB, requesting additional time for the rules to take effect, reports said.