宗教社会规范与企业财务报告

Religious Social Norms and Corporate Financial Reporting

Journal of Business Finance & Accounting · 2012
被引 498 · 同刊同年前 2%
人大 A-ABS 3

中文导读

研究发现,美国公司总部所在县的宗教虔诚度越高,企业财务重述和报表错报风险越低,应计利润偏差越小,且更少进行避税、更及时披露坏消息。

Abstract

Abstract: Religion has been shown to influence economic choices and outcomes in a variety of contexts. Honesty and risk aversion are two social norms forwarded to characterize the religious. Using the level of religious adherence in the county of a US firm's headquarters as a proxy for these religious social norms, we find that higher levels of religious adherence are associated with both a lower likelihood of financial restatement and less risk that financial statements are misrepresented because of overstated (understated) revenue/assets (expenses/liabilities). We also find that accruals of managers in areas of high religious adherence exhibit smaller deviations from expectations, and deviations, when they occur, tend to improve the time series mapping of accruals into cash flows. These results hold overall and separately for both Catholic and Protestant religious adherence. Further analysis reveals that the effects of religious social norms extend beyond accrual choices. We find that firms located in areas of high religious adherence are less likely to engage in tax sheltering, and are more forthcoming with bad news in their voluntary disclosures. Collectively, our results provide new evidence on the role of religion and social norms in corporate financial reporting.

宗教社会规范财务重述应计质量避税行为