1 / 15

Chapter 4:

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

sterling
Download Presentation

Chapter 4:

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 4: The Economics of Financial Reporting Regulation

  2. Lecture • Financial reporting • unregulated • regulated • Political and economic nature of the regulatory process • Economic consequences of accounting standards

  3. Financial Reporting: Unregulated • Agency theory explains why incentives exist for voluntary reporting to owners • Signalling theory explains wider voluntary reporting to the capital markets • Private contracting

  4. 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

  5. Signalling 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

  6. Signalling 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)

  7. Private Contracting for Information • If information were truly desired beyond that which is publicly available and free of charge, private individuals can buy the desired information. • Market forces should result in the optimal allocation of resources to the production of information

  8. Financial Reporting: Regulated • 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

  9. 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)

  10. 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

  11. Imperfections of Accounting Regulation • a potential over-allocation of social resources to the production of free publicly available accounting information • a wealth transfer from nonusers to users of accounting information. A wealth transfer occurs because users receive the benefits of free accounting information, while nonusers implicitly incur the production costs.

  12. 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

  13. 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

  14. 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

  15. Lecture Recap • Financial reporting • unregulated • regulated • Political and economic nature of the regulatory process • Economic consequences of accounting standards

More Related