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This is historical material, "frozen in time."
The web site is no longer updated and links to external web sites and some internal pages will not work.
OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT AND BUDGET
Interpretation Numbers 1 and 2 related to
Statement of Federal Financial Accounting Standards
Numbers 4, 5, and 7
AGENCY: Office of Management and Budget.
ACTION: Notice of Interpretations.
SUMMARY: This Notice includes two interpretations of
Statements of Federal Financial Accounting Standards
(SFFAS), adopted by the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB). These interpretations were recommended by the
Federal Accounting Standards Advisory Board (FASAB) and
adopted in their entirety by OMB.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Norwood J. Jackson, Jr.
(telephone: 202-395-3993), Office of Federal Financial
Management, Office of Management and Budget.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This Notice includes two
interpretations of Statements of Federal Financial
Accounting Standards (SFFAS), adopted by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB). These interpretations were
recommended by the Federal Accounting Standards Advisory
Board (FASAB) and adopted in their entirety by OMB.
Under a Memorandum of Understanding among the General
Accounting Office, the Department of the Treasury, and OMB
on Federal Government Accounting Standards, the Comptroller
General, the Secretary of the Treasury, and the Director of
OMB (the Principals) decide upon standards and concepts
after considering the recommendations of FASAB. After
agreement to specific standards and concepts, they are
published in the Federal Register and distributed throughout
the Federal Government.
An Interpretation is a document, originally developed by
FASAB, of narrow scope which provides clarification of the
meaning of a standard, concept or other related guidance.
Once approved by the designated representatives of the
Principals, they are published in the Federal Register.
This Notice, including the first two interpretations of
SFFAS, is available on the OMB home page on the internet
which is currently located at
/OMB/,
under the caption "Federal Register Submissions."
G. Edward DeSeve,
Controller.
INTERPRETATION NUMBER 1 OF
STATEMENT OF FEDERAL FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING STANDARDS NUMBER
7
Reporting on Indian Trust Funds in General Purpose Financial
Reports of the Department of the Interior (DOI) and in the
Consolidated Financial Statements of the United States
Government: An Interpretation of SFFAS No. 7
INTRODUCTION
1. The DOI requested guidance about how to report
information on Indian trust funds in the general purpose
financial report of the Department. The Indian trust funds
are managed by DOI's Office of Special Trustee, Office of
the Secretary. (Prior to FY 1996, the trust funds were
managed by the Bureau of Indian Affairs.) Some of the funds
belong to individual Indians, others belong to tribes. The
funds are managed by the Federal Government in a trust
arrangement. While the government's responsibility for all
of these funds is of a fiduciary nature, some portion of the
annual flows for some of the funds have been included in the
Budget of the United States Government. (Further discussion
regarding types of funds involved is provided in paragraphs
7 and 8.)
2. According to Statement of Federal Financial Accounting
Concepts (SFFAC) No. 2, "Entity and Display," inclusion of a
program in the section of the Federal Budget, currently
entitled "Federal Programs by Agency and Account," is
conclusive evidence that the program should be part of the
reporting entity. The question thus arises whether the
assets and activities of the Indian trust funds should be
reported in DOI's general purpose financial statements.
Also, Statement of Federal Financial Accounting Standards
(SFFAS) No. 7, "Accounting for Revenue and Other Financing
Sources," requires certain disclosures regarding "dedicated
collections," including fiduciary funds. During discussion
of this issue at the Federal Accounting Standards Advisory
Board (FASAB), questions arose about what type of
disclosures should be provided regarding the Indian trust
funds.
INTERPRETATION
3. The assets, liabilities and operating transactions of
the Indian trust funds are not part of DOI and should not be
included in the balance sheet, statement of net cost, and
statement of changes in financial position of the Department
or of the United States Government. However, the Department
does have a fiduciary responsibility for these funds and is
required to report on them in footnotes to the financial
statements by SFFAS No. 7, paragraphs 83-87.
SCOPE OF INTERPRETATION
4. This Interpretation deals with what information about
Indian trust funds should be included in the general purpose
financial report of DOI and the consolidated financial
statements of the United States Government. It does not
address issues regarding: (1) reporting formats for the
footnote disclosure required by SFFAS No. 7, (2) inclusion
or exclusion of other fiduciary funds as components of the
Federal reporting entity, (3) inclusion or exclusion of any
funds or entities in the Budget of the United States
Government, or (4) reporting on other funds labeled "trust
funds" in the Federal Budget, reporting for trust funds, or
reporting on deposit funds generally.1
EFFECTIVE DATE
5. The interpretation is effective upon implementation of
SFFAS No. 7, which is effective for reporting periods that
begin after September 30, 1997. Earlier application of
SFFAS No. 7 is encouraged.
APPENDIX: BASIS FOR CONCLUSIONS
ENTITY CRITERIA
6. In its discussion of the budgetary perspective, SFFAC
No. 2 notes:
18. Care must be taken in determining the nature
of all trust funds and their relationship to the
entity responsible for them. A few trust funds
are truly fiduciary in nature. Most trust funds
included in the Federal Budget are not of a
fiduciary nature and are used in Federal financing
in a way that differs from the common
understanding of trust funds outside the Federal
Government. In many ways, these trust funds can
be similar to revolving or special funds in that
their spending is financed by earmarked
collections.
19. In customary usage, the term "trust fund"
refers to money belonging to one party and held
"in trust" by another party operating as a
fiduciary. The money in a trust must be used in
accordance with the trust's terms, which the
trustee cannot unilaterally modify, and is
maintained separately and not commingled with the
trustee's own funds. This is not the case for
most Federal funds that are included in the
Federal Budget -- the fiduciary relationship
usually does not exist. The beneficiaries do not
own the funds and the terms in the law that
created the trust fund can be unilaterally altered
by Congress.
7. Indian trust funds are "true" trust funds in the
customary sense, in which there is a legal fiduciary
relationship between the Federal Government as trustee and
the Indians as trustor. The Federal Government does not own
the assets of the funds. In some cases, the Federal
Government's trustee relationship is with individuals, in
other cases with tribes. For many of the funds involved, a
tribe or individual can use the funds or dissolve the trust
at any time; however, there is a restriction on the use of
funds that have been received through legal judgments.
Those funds are generally not available until the
beneficiaries agree how the funds are to be distributed
among them.
8. The Federal Budget treats the two types of Indian trust
funds differently. Tribal funds are included in the Federal
Budget. Individuals' funds are not in the Federal Budget;
they are treated as deposit funds. The Indian tribal trust
funds appear to meet SFFAC No. 2's conclusive criterion
because of their budgetary treatment. The question
regarding these funds is whether this implies that these
funds should be reported on the face of DOI's financial
statements, with the assets, liabilities, revenues and
expenses of the Department.
9. Another question arises regarding the Indian trust funds
that do not appear to meet the conclusive criterion: would
they meet the indicative criteria? DOI interprets the
indicative criteria in paragraph 44 of SFFAC No. 2 to mean
that the Indian trust funds do not possess any of these
characteristics.
10. Some people believe that the sixth indicative criterion
does, in fact, apply: "... a fiduciary relationship with
a reporting entity ..." However, they believe that meeting
any single indicative criterion is not necessarily
sufficient to define the Indian trust funds as part of a
reporting entity. SFFAC No. 2 cautioned expressly that "no
single indicative criterion is a conclusive criterion."
11. Other people do not believe that even this indicative
criterion applies. They believe that, notwithstanding the
use of this terminology, the relationship discussed in the
sixth indicative criterion concerns factors relating to
committing the component entity financially, controlling the
collection and disbursement of funds, or having financial
interdependence. They believe that this type of financial
control and interdependence does not exist between the
Indian trust funds and the Federal Government.
12. While the Indian tribal funds might appear to meet the
criteria for inclusion as a component of the Federal
reporting entity (by virtue of the budgetary criterion, if
no other), the sovereignty of the Indian tribes as entities
outside the Federal Government, and the fiduciary
relationship between the Federal Government and the Indians,
indicate that the criteria stated in SFFAC No. 2 should not
be interpreted to suggest that the assets, liabilities,
revenues and expenses of these fiduciary funds should be
reported on the face of DOI's financial statements.
13. SFFAC No. 2's discussion of the budget perspective
cautions that, when defining a reporting entity, care must
be taken in determining the nature of all trust funds and
their relationship to the entity responsible for them (SFFAC
No. 2, paragraph 18). This provides some common sense
advice relevant to the Indian trust funds.
DISCLOSURES FOR DEDICATED COLLECTIONS
14. As noted, the disclosure requirements for dedicated
collections in SFFAS No. 7, paragraphs 83-87, are applicable
to the Indian trust funds. DOI should include this
information in footnotes to its basic financial statements.
In addressing the comments received on the exposure draft
leading to SFFAS No. 7, the Board specifically noted that:
226.1 The proposed standard did not cover funds
administered by a Federal entity in a fiduciary
relationship with beneficiaries that were not
included in the entity's financial statement. In
addition, it did not cover other funds which are
of the same nature as many trust funds. The
standard now requires disclosures for these funds
also.
4. Once the claim is either settled or a court judgment is
assessed against the Federal entity and the Judgment Fund is
determined to be the appropriate source for the payment of
the claim, the liability should be removed from the
financial statements of the entity that incurred the
liability and an "other financing source"2
amount (which represents the amount to be paid by the Judgment Fund) would
be recognized. If the Judgment Fund is responsible for only
a portion of the claim or settlement, the imputed financing
source amount would reflect only that amount to be paid by
the Judgment Fund on behalf of the Federal entity.
Accounting by the Treasury Judgment Fund
5. Once the claim is either settled or a court judgment is
assessed and the Judgment Fund is determined to be the
appropriate source for payment of the claim, the Judgment
Fund would recognize an expense and an accounts payable or a
cash outlay for the full cost of the loss. According to
SFFAS No. 4, the imputed financing source amount recognized
by the Federal entity and the expense recognized by the
Judgment Fund would be eliminated at the Federal
consolidated financial report level.
EFFECTIVE DATE
6. This interpretation is effective upon implementation of
SFFAS No. 4 and SFFAS No. 5, which become effective for
fiscal periods beginning after September 30, 1996.
APPENDIX A: BASIS FOR CONCLUSIONS
7. This interpretation is primarily based on the principles
of SFFAS No. 5 and SFFAS No. 4. The following brief
discussion explains the basis for the interpretation in
terms of those standards which are the foundation for the
interpretation.
8. In accordance with the general principles of the
liability standard (SFFAS No. 5), once a legal claim is
filed against a Federal entity, the entity's management
should determine the likelihood that the Federal entity will
incur a loss related to the claim,3 regardless of the fact
that the payment may be paid in full or in part by the
Judgment Fund. The contingencies4 section of SFFAS No. 5
states that, if the likelihood of the contingent loss is
remote, no reporting is necessary; if the likelihood of the
loss is reasonably possible and the amount is measurable,
the estimated loss should be disclosed; and, if the
likelihood of loss is probable (more likely than not which
is a greater than 50 percent chance of occurrence) and
estimable, the estimated loss must be recognized as a
liability. If the probability of the loss is changed at any
time prior to payment of the claim, the proper adjustments
should be recognized (e.g., from disclosure (reasonably
possible) to recognition (probable)). If at any time the
estimated loss amount changes, the liability and expense
should be adjusted to reflect the change.5
9. In accordance with the principles of SFFAS No. 4,6 a
Federal entity incurring a loss or expense must recognize
the full cost of the loss (claim), regardless of who is
actually paying the (settlement or judgment) amount. The
standard requires the Federal entity incurring a loss or
expense to use an estimate of the cost if the actual cost
information is not provided. The estimate must be
reasonable and should be aimed at determining realistic
losses expected.
APPENDIX B: ILLUSTRATIVE JOURNAL ENTRIES
Based on the above noted accounting standards and the
generalized events described below, the conceptual journal
entries7 should be as follows:
Federal entity entries:
The Federal entity's management, through the advisement of
DOJ, has determined that the probability of the legal claim
ending in a loss against the Federal entity is probable and
the loss is estimable. The entity would recognize an
expense and liability for the full amount of the expected
loss. The expense and liability would be adjusted as
necessary based on any changes in the estimated loss.
Entry #1:
Debit
Expense
Credit
Liability -- Legal claims
Once the claim is either settled or a court judgment is
assessed against the Federal entity and the Judgment Fund is
determined to be the appropriate source for payment of the
claim, the liability should be removed and an other
financing source recognized. If the Judgment Fund is
responsible for only a portion of the claim or settlement,
the imputed financing source amount would only reflect that
amount paid by the Judgment Fund on behalf of the Federal
entity.
Entry #2:
Debit
Liability -- Legal claims
Credit
Imputed Financing Source -- Expenses Paid by Other
Entities8
Treasury Judgment Fund entries:
The claim is either settled or a court judgment is assessed
and the Judgment Fund is determined to be the appropriate
source for payment.