This study investigates the extent and the determinants of tunnelling behaviour in five ASEAN countries (i.e. Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, and Thailand). Related party transactions (RPTs) in the form of loans to related parties are used as the proxy for tunnelling. With 200 firm-year observations over the period [2006][2007][2008][2009], this study finds a positive association between managerial ownership and the extent of tunnelling.The other important findings are that business environment (BE), foreign ownership, and independent directors are ineffective governance mechanisms to rein in tunnelling behaviour. This suggests that regulators need to evolve more effective governance mechanisms. The other important findings are that business environment (BE), foreign ownership, and independent directors are ineffective governance mechanisms to rein in tunnelling behaviour. This suggests that regulators need to evolve more effective governance mechanisms.
Purpose This study aims to examine whether International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) convergence process adds value to the accounting quality dimensions, including accruals quality, earnings smoothing, timely loss recognition and earnings persistence. Design/methodology/approach It analyzes the hypothesis of accounting quality changes in post-IFRS convergence by using the univariate and multivariate statistics. Particularly, the authors rely on panel data analyses using industrial companies’ data from 2008 until 2014, comprising 3,861 firm-years observations, in Indonesia. Findings The results indicate that there is no conclusive evidence that all accounting quality dimensions including accruals quality, earnings smoothing, timely loss recognition and earnings persistence increased in post-IFRS convergence. Practical implications The findings of this study may help regulators and standard setters to consider future adoption of IFRS, mostly to figure out the best “formula” to increase the usefulness of accounting information in post-IFRS convergence. Originality/value Rather than doing piecemeal work, the current study focuses on IFRS convergence on a broader aspect of accounting quality dimensions. It also focuses on the convergence process of IFRS as an alternative of full adoption, which has been the focus of many research studies.
This study aims to examine the role of human capital, which is part of intellectual capital, as a mediator in the relationship between audit committee expertise and the number of audit committee meetings with real earnings management. This research is a quantitative study. The data source used is data from manufacturing companies in Indonesia. The sample selection technique used purposive sampling. The analysis technique uses path analysis. The results showed that the expertise of the audit committee had a significant effect on human capital, while the number of audit meetings had no effect on human capital. The results of this study also state that audit committee expertise, number of audit committee meetings and human capital performance have no effect on real earnings management actions. Furthermore, there is empirical evidence that shows that human capital has a mediating effect on the relationship between audit committee expertise and the number of audit committee meetings with real earnings management. The role of human capital in the relationship between the expertise of the audit committee and the number of audit committee meetings becomes originality, so it is the main contribution of research. The limitation of this research is that it only uses human capital as a mediating variable.
Debates on whether the new globally adopted accounting standard outperforms national generally accepted accounting principles have not yet reached the final conclusion. Prior researches were mixed and often yield to contradictory findings. Our study believes that there are numerous institutional backgrounds that contribute to these inconclusive findings. The main objective of this study is to propose a testable framework on the impact of implementation of International Financial Reporting Standards on accounting qualities. The proposed framework based on the assumption that accounting should be linked to its social, political influences and culture. In this regard, we proposed whether the positive effects of IFRS implementation to the increase of accounting qualities may also be enhanced (impaired) by the firms' national culture and corruption at the country level. This study should provide further research some preliminary arguments on how the accounting information quality is not affected by the high-quality accounting standards, per se. Rather, our study conveys worth-looking message that IFRS-accounting quality may also be influenced by those institutional environments. Hopefully, this may provide a way out of the intractable debate of prior research.
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