MBA学生能否作为非专业投资者的良好替代?

Are M.B.A. Students a Good Proxy for Nonprofessional Investors?

Accounting Review · 2007
被引 427
人大 A+FT50UTD24ABS 4*

中文导读

检验了财务会计实验中常用MBA学生替代非专业投资者的有效性,发现任务整合复杂度是关键因素;完成核心课程和财务报表分析课的MBA学生在低复杂度任务中表现良好,但在高复杂度任务中需谨慎。

Abstract

We investigate a key assumption underlying much of the experimental research in financial accounting that graduate business students are a good proxy for nonprofessional investors. To conduct our investigation, we categorize recent experimental studies in financial accounting, based on the relative level of integrative complexity inherent in each study's task. We then conduct experiments using two tasks, one that is relatively low in integrative complexity and one that is relatively high in integrative complexity, and compare the responses of two groups of M.B.A. students and nonprofessional investors. Our results suggest that using M.B.A. students as a proxy for nonprofessional investors is a valid methodological choice, provided researchers give careful consideration to aligning a task's integrative complexity with the appropriate level of M.B.A. student. M.B.A. students who have completed their core M.B.A. courses and are enrolled in or have completed a financial statement analysis course are a good proxy for nonprofessional investors in tasks that are relatively low in integrative complexity. Though less definitive, the majority of our tests also suggest that these students are a good proxy for nonprofessional investors in tasks that are relatively high in integrative complexity. However, care must be taken when using students in the first-year core financial accounting course. In tasks that are relatively low in integrative complexity, these students perform similarly to nonprofessional investors except when they are asked to make an investment decision. In tasks that are relatively high in integrative complexity, these students acquire information similarly to nonprofessional investors, but they do not appear to integrate the information in a similar manner.

MBA学生非专业投资者代理有效性整合复杂性