Earnings Quality in U.K. Private Firms
- 2 April 2004
- preprint
- Published by Elsevier in SSRN Electronic Journal
Abstract
UK private and public companies face substantially equivalent regulation on auditing, accounting standards and taxes. We hypothesize that private-company financial reporting nevertheless is lower quality due to different market demand, regulation notwithstanding. A large UK sample supports this hypothesis. Quality is operationalized using Basu's (1997) time-series measure of timely loss recognition and a new accruals-based method. The result is not affected by controls for size, leverage, industry membership and auditor size, or by allowing endogenous listing choice. The result enhances understanding of private companies, which are predominant in the economy. It also provides insight into the economics of accounting standards.Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- Incentives versus Standards: Properties of Accounting Income in Four East Asian Countries, and Implications for Acceptance of IASSSRN Electronic Journal, 2004
- Is the Market Surprised by Poor Earnings Realizations Following Seasoned Equity Offerings?Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, 2001
- Infrastructure Requirements for an Economically Efficient System of Public Financial Reporting and DisclosureBrookings-Wharton Papers on Financial Services, 2001
- Accounting standards, the institutional environment and issuer incentives: Effect on timely loss recognition in ChinaAsia-Pacific Journal of Accounting & Economics, 2000
- The effect of international institutional factors on properties of accounting earningsJournal of Accounting and Economics, 2000
- Changes in the value-relevance of earnings and book values over the past forty yearsJournal of Accounting and Economics, 1997
- The conservatism principle and the asymmetric timeliness of earnings1Journal of Accounting and Economics, 1997
- Repeated Accounting Write-Offs and the Information Content of EarningsJournal of Accounting Research, 1996
- Accounting earnings and cash flows as measures of firm performanceJournal of Accounting and Economics, 1994
- Auditor size and audit qualityJournal of Accounting and Economics, 1981