Formal and informal institutions and fair value opinion shopping: an institutional anomie theory perspective
Formal and informal institutions and fair value opinion shopping: an institutional anomie theory perspective
Purpose: the objective of this study is to examine how formal and informal institutional environment influences managers’ fair value opinion shopping behaviour in the largest International Financial Reporting Standards adopter, China.
Design/methodology/approach: to test the hypotheses, I conduct a 2 × 2 between-subject randomised experiment since the inferences about cause and effect are important in this study. The between-subject experimental situations are manipulated on the basis of the financial condition of companies and boards’ oversight.
Findings: I find that managers are likely to seek favourable fair value opinions from external valuation professionals when they are under the weak boards’ oversight and high stress to meet the regulation target of the China Securities Regulatory Commission. These results are more pronounced for managers with higher both rent-seeking and favour-seeking guanxi orientations are more likely to engage in fair value opinion shopping.
Originality/value: consistent with theoretical analysis of Balfoort et al. (2017), this study provides empirical evidence that guanxi influences the neutrality and faithful representation in fair value measurement in China. In addition, the findings extend Salzsieder’s study (2015) and reflect the context-embeddedness nature of accounting.
289-313
Cao, June
af0d62ff-d54c-412f-a152-cc04c63c7290
25 January 2023
Cao, June
af0d62ff-d54c-412f-a152-cc04c63c7290
Cao, June
(2023)
Formal and informal institutions and fair value opinion shopping: an institutional anomie theory perspective.
Journal of Accounting Literature, 45 (2), .
(doi:10.1108/JAL-10-2022-0103).
Abstract
Purpose: the objective of this study is to examine how formal and informal institutional environment influences managers’ fair value opinion shopping behaviour in the largest International Financial Reporting Standards adopter, China.
Design/methodology/approach: to test the hypotheses, I conduct a 2 × 2 between-subject randomised experiment since the inferences about cause and effect are important in this study. The between-subject experimental situations are manipulated on the basis of the financial condition of companies and boards’ oversight.
Findings: I find that managers are likely to seek favourable fair value opinions from external valuation professionals when they are under the weak boards’ oversight and high stress to meet the regulation target of the China Securities Regulatory Commission. These results are more pronounced for managers with higher both rent-seeking and favour-seeking guanxi orientations are more likely to engage in fair value opinion shopping.
Originality/value: consistent with theoretical analysis of Balfoort et al. (2017), this study provides empirical evidence that guanxi influences the neutrality and faithful representation in fair value measurement in China. In addition, the findings extend Salzsieder’s study (2015) and reflect the context-embeddedness nature of accounting.
Text
Formal and informal institutions and fair value opinion shopping an institutional anomie theory perspective
- Version of Record
Restricted to Repository staff only
Request a copy
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 7 January 2023
Published date: 25 January 2023
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 501339
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/501339
ISSN: 0737-4607
PURE UUID: d28a1c23-2736-400e-944e-799c18886413
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 29 May 2025 16:47
Last modified: 28 Jun 2025 04:25
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
June Cao
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics