Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5107729 | Journal of Accounting and Public Policy | 2016 | 25 Pages |
Abstract
We examine how China's adoption of a new set of Chinese Accounting Standards (CAS) that is substantially converged with the IFRS affects the managerial pay-for-accounting performance sensitivity of publicly listed Chinese firms. We find that central-government-controlled firms adopted an economically significant managerial pay-for-accounting performance sensitivity prior to the new CAS adoption. However, the pay-for-accounting performance sensitivity declined significantly after the new CAS adoption, especially for central-government-controlled firms that were more significantly affected by the new CAS adoption. We do not find similar evidence for local-government-controlled firms whose managers were not subject to economically significant pay-for-accounting performance sensitivity prior to the new CAS adoption. There is no evidence that the difference in results between the two types of firms is due to confounding events. Overall, our results suggest that China's new CAS adoption reduces the stewardship usefulness of financial reporting.
Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities
Business, Management and Accounting
Accounting
Authors
Bin Ke, Yubo Li, Hongqi Yuan,