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Chapter 4: The Economics of Financial Reporting Regulation

Chapter 4: The Economics of Financial Reporting Regulation. Financial reporting unregulated regulated Political and economic nature of the regulatory process Economic consequences of accounting standards . Unregulated financial reporting. Laissez faire

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Chapter 4: The Economics of Financial Reporting Regulation

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  1. Chapter 4: The Economics of Financial Reporting Regulation • Financial reporting • unregulated • regulated • Political and economic nature of the regulatory process • Economic consequences of accounting standards

  2. Unregulated financial reporting • Laissez faire • Agency theory explains why incentives exist for voluntary reporting to owners • Signaling theory explains wider voluntary reporting to the capital markets

  3. Agency Theory • Views the firm as a nexus of agency relationships and seeks to understand behavior by examining how parties maximize their own utility • Management-Owner agency relationship • Potential conflict between goals of two groups • Financial reporting may mitigate conflicts

  4. Signaling Theory • Voluntary disclosure is necessary in order to compete successfully in the market for risk capital • A good reputation with respect to financial reporting will improve a firm’s ability to raise capital • Good reporting would lower a firm’s cost of capital • Less uncertainty about firms that report more extensively and reliably • Less investment risk and a lower required rate of return

  5. Signaling Theory • Economic incentive to report (even bad news) is at the heart of the argument for voluntary financial reporting • Information asymmetry between the firm (insiders) and outsiders (investors)

  6. Regulated Financial Reporting • Can be justified on the grounds that it is in the public interest • Possibility of market failure • Possibility that free markets are contrary to social goals • Creates fairness in the market • Less wealth transfers between those who have information and those who do not • Principle behind the insider trading regulations

  7. Possibility: Market Failures • Firm as a monopoly supplier of information • Failure of financial reporting and auditing to prevent frauds and bankruptcies • Public-goods nature of accounting information and financial reporting • Public goods are underproduced in a market economy • Consumers of public goods without paying for them are called free riders (results from an externality)

  8. Possibility: Contrary to Social Goals • Involves a normative judgment about how society should allocate its resources • SEC assumes that the stock market will be fair only if all potential investors have equal access to the same information • Goal is information symmetry • Referred to as fair reporting

  9. The Regulatory Process • Essentially a political activity • Due process is an important ingredient • Tradition goes back to the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC), one of 1st federal agencies • Seeks to involve all affected parties in the deliberations • Maintains legitimacy of the regulatory process

  10. Regulatory Behavior • Capture theory • The group being regulated eventually comes to the regulatory process to promote its own self-interest • Result is that the regulatory process is considered captured • Life-cycle theory • Argues a regulatory process goes through several distinct phases • Starts out in the public interest, but later becomes an instrument of protecting the regulated group

  11. Economic Consequences of Accounting Standards • Accounting policy • Not simply a matter of economic efficiency • Also affects income and wealth distribution • FASB • Considers cost-benefit of standards • Standards • One set for all firms • Compliance costs are disproportionately high for smaller, nonpublicly traded forms

  12. Chapter 4: The Economics of Financial Reporting Regulation • financial reporting • unregulated • regulated • political and economic nature of the regulatory process • economic consequences of accounting standards

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