Informal institutions and managers’ earnings management choices: evidence from IFRS-adopting countries
Informal institutions and managers’ earnings management choices: evidence from IFRS-adopting countries
In this study, we investigate the role of informal institutions (religiosity and culture) in determining managers’ choices of earnings management methods (accruals vs. real activities), after controlling for formal institutions (investor protection, enforcement quality and equity market development). Using an ethical perspective, we find that managers tend to choose an earnings management strategy that meets the prevailing social (informal) norms of the environment where the firm is headquartered. Specifically, our analysis shows that firms domiciled in countries with strong religious adherence and high-power-distance cultures prefer to manage their earnings ‘upwards’ through real activities rather than accruals. Overall, our results suggest that informal institutions determine managers’ earnings management choices at least as strongly as formal institutions do. It would therefore be misleading to analyze managers’ choices in managing earnings solely from the formal rules perspective without considering the role of informal constraints or vice versa.
Halabi, Hussein
abf2b13e-e1fe-4fe0-8beb-9a48059d8cfa
Alshehabi, Ahmad
df429384-77a3-4c65-b0a2-b98c83c885d7
Zakaria, Idlan
a68372f4-fa04-49c7-a09d-88c816a709b5
24 September 2019
Halabi, Hussein
abf2b13e-e1fe-4fe0-8beb-9a48059d8cfa
Alshehabi, Ahmad
df429384-77a3-4c65-b0a2-b98c83c885d7
Zakaria, Idlan
a68372f4-fa04-49c7-a09d-88c816a709b5
Halabi, Hussein, Alshehabi, Ahmad and Zakaria, Idlan
(2019)
Informal institutions and managers’ earnings management choices: evidence from IFRS-adopting countries.
Journal of Contemporary Accounting and Economics, 15 (3), [100162].
(doi:10.1016/j.jcae.2019.100162).
Abstract
In this study, we investigate the role of informal institutions (religiosity and culture) in determining managers’ choices of earnings management methods (accruals vs. real activities), after controlling for formal institutions (investor protection, enforcement quality and equity market development). Using an ethical perspective, we find that managers tend to choose an earnings management strategy that meets the prevailing social (informal) norms of the environment where the firm is headquartered. Specifically, our analysis shows that firms domiciled in countries with strong religious adherence and high-power-distance cultures prefer to manage their earnings ‘upwards’ through real activities rather than accruals. Overall, our results suggest that informal institutions determine managers’ earnings management choices at least as strongly as formal institutions do. It would therefore be misleading to analyze managers’ choices in managing earnings solely from the formal rules perspective without considering the role of informal constraints or vice versa.
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Accepted/In Press date: 4 September 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 17 September 2019
Published date: 24 September 2019
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Local EPrints ID: 478837
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/478837
PURE UUID: 1efd1255-5279-4846-b9c6-1ad7f19e52f3
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Date deposited: 11 Jul 2023 17:03
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:13
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Author:
Hussein Halabi
Author:
Ahmad Alshehabi
Author:
Idlan Zakaria
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