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Friendships to perish and friendships to cherish: corporate political tactic and earnings management method

Friendships to perish and friendships to cherish: corporate political tactic and earnings management method
Friendships to perish and friendships to cherish: corporate political tactic and earnings management method
Critical of a literature which examines corporate political connections with scant attention to their dynamic nature, we blend political theory with inter-organizational exchange research to propose and test a framework based on which firms’ earnings management (EM) method can vary predictably with their political tactic. Using hand-collected data on political money spent by US firms, we reveal an unknown dichotomy. Firms taking a transactional approach to politics tend to use the least costly EM method, substituting accruals-based EM (AEM) for real EM (REM). Conversely, firms following a relational approach, concerned that possible detection may alienate career-focused politicians, substitute REM for AEM. Consistent with the goodwill trust in the firm–politicians relationship moderating the EM trade-off, firms revert to AEM when the trust is impaired and they no longer perceive the need to insulate politicians from reputational damage. Notwithstanding the firm’s political tactic, the total EM remains unaffected, suggesting perfect substitution. As a refined and dynamic lens for examining firm-politicians exchanges, our framework reconciles the conflicting evidence of prior studies on how political connections affect reported earnings and is generalizable to other third-party affiliations that may have important reputational stakes but no monitoring capacity over the production of financial information.
1045-3172
Kallias, Antonios
ba6723df-e7e0-4b5b-862a-e3c6864ef913
Kallias, Konstantinos
8b2c2483-4244-4cd3-a8eb-e0d1429678c3
Liu, Jia
7215e1d5-3fcf-40da-9ae1-dd8bfeebcdce
Malikov, Kamran
c06bf7c0-0e21-4eda-9be3-4d85e9965d34
Zhang, Song
28b90233-86ba-466e-92d7-2a8365c38df0
Kallias, Antonios
ba6723df-e7e0-4b5b-862a-e3c6864ef913
Kallias, Konstantinos
8b2c2483-4244-4cd3-a8eb-e0d1429678c3
Liu, Jia
7215e1d5-3fcf-40da-9ae1-dd8bfeebcdce
Malikov, Kamran
c06bf7c0-0e21-4eda-9be3-4d85e9965d34
Zhang, Song
28b90233-86ba-466e-92d7-2a8365c38df0

Kallias, Antonios, Kallias, Konstantinos, Liu, Jia, Malikov, Kamran and Zhang, Song (2025) Friendships to perish and friendships to cherish: corporate political tactic and earnings management method. British Journal of Management. (In Press)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Critical of a literature which examines corporate political connections with scant attention to their dynamic nature, we blend political theory with inter-organizational exchange research to propose and test a framework based on which firms’ earnings management (EM) method can vary predictably with their political tactic. Using hand-collected data on political money spent by US firms, we reveal an unknown dichotomy. Firms taking a transactional approach to politics tend to use the least costly EM method, substituting accruals-based EM (AEM) for real EM (REM). Conversely, firms following a relational approach, concerned that possible detection may alienate career-focused politicians, substitute REM for AEM. Consistent with the goodwill trust in the firm–politicians relationship moderating the EM trade-off, firms revert to AEM when the trust is impaired and they no longer perceive the need to insulate politicians from reputational damage. Notwithstanding the firm’s political tactic, the total EM remains unaffected, suggesting perfect substitution. As a refined and dynamic lens for examining firm-politicians exchanges, our framework reconciles the conflicting evidence of prior studies on how political connections affect reported earnings and is generalizable to other third-party affiliations that may have important reputational stakes but no monitoring capacity over the production of financial information.

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BJM_manusript_without_author's_information_23.5.2025 - Accepted Manuscript
Restricted to Repository staff only until 27 May 2027.
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Accepted/In Press date: 27 May 2025

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 502945
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/502945
ISSN: 1045-3172
PURE UUID: 57e0af84-87a0-489b-b63b-d5ff633aaf61

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Date deposited: 14 Jul 2025 16:46
Last modified: 14 Jul 2025 16:46

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Contributors

Author: Antonios Kallias
Author: Konstantinos Kallias
Author: Jia Liu
Author: Kamran Malikov
Author: Song Zhang

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