自我执行的自愿披露

Self-Enforcing Voluntary Disclosures

Journal of Accounting Research · 1994
被引 366
人大 AFT50UTD24ABS 4*

中文导读

提出专有成本反而能增强自愿披露的可信度,解释了为何企业会在无法独立验证的情况下主动披露私有信息,并分析了市场对此的反应。

Abstract

This paper extends previous accounting research which asks why firms do not voluntarily disclose all value-relevant information, as implied by, for example, Grossman [1981] and Milgrom [1981]. While these two models assume disclosures are costless and verifiable, subsequent papers by Verrecchia [1983], Dye [1985 b], Darrough and Stoughton [1990], Wagenhofer [1990], Feltham and Xie [1992], and Newman and Sansing [1993] suggest firms withhold private information to avoid proprietary costs.1 In contrast to these models, I show that proprietary costs can actually increase voluntary disclosures by generating credibility for such disclosures. I model the decision to disclose private information when independent verification is impossible, too costly, or otherwise unavailable. The results rationalize unverified voluntary disclosures, and market reactions to them, by showing that the costs of disclosing proprietary information can make such disclosures credible, even without verification. In the model, a firm with private information about the demand for its product makes a direct public disclosure to both a competitor and the capital market. The firm would like to convince the capital market that the demand for its product is high, thereby increasing the value of the

自愿性披露专有成本信息披露可信度资本市场反应