Abstract

This paper presents a new perspective on earnings management analyzing and comparing emerging European countries in the presence of environmental factors of developing countries. We provide empirical evidence on differences in the extent of earnings management across countries. Developing Eastern European countries experienced important changes. They have been in transition over the past decade, and remain making great strides to overcome the drag exerted by their communist heritage. Nevertheless, the studies on earnings management based on emerging economies are rare and hardly pursued due to the presence of institutional and regulatory differences between developed and emerging economies. Therefore, the present study fulfils the important gap in earnings management literature related to developing countries. Our results confirm that managers from different emerging European countries manage earnings differently. Additionally, we identify that there is not a sole reason affecting the managers’ decisions, but a significant number of circumstances and characteristics. Whether a firm’s environment offers more protection or is characterized by a higher level of development, higher foreign investments, it helps to limit the earnings management. In addition, when accounting and tax are not as strongly aligned with market approach as expected, it also limits the earnings management behaviour of managers.

Highlights

  • Earnings management has been the topic of multiple research papers

  • This paper presents a new perspective on earnings management analyzing and Journal of Accounting, Business and Finance Research, 2019, Vol 7, No 2, pp. 59-81 comparing emerging European countries in the presence of environmental factors of developing countries

  • We may observe that coefficients on two of our variables: Strengthrights variable and Listedtomean variable are not significant. This indicates that the degree of creditor and lender protection in emerging Eastern European firms is not significantly related to earnings management and does not explain the differences among Eastern European countries in terms of managers’ decisions regarding earnings management

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Summary

Introduction

Earnings management has been the topic of multiple research papers. Practitioners and academic literature defined earnings management in a variety of forms using a wide range of expressions to describe it, as a major problems with the definition include ambiguity and immeasurability, see some of the most popular definition of Schipper (1989), Healy and Wahlen (1999), Dechow and Skinner (2000) among others.Academics have been interested in the detection of earnings management proposing different methodology. Earnings management has been the topic of multiple research papers. Practitioners and academic literature defined earnings management in a variety of forms using a wide range of expressions to describe it, as a major problems with the definition include ambiguity and immeasurability, see some of the most popular definition of Schipper (1989), Healy and Wahlen (1999), Dechow and Skinner (2000) among others. Academics have been interested in the detection of earnings management proposing different methodology. Research studies are still concerned with the problem of measuring earnings management. Literature confirms that methodology based on accruals is commonly used by the authors (see for example, (Beaver, Mcnichols, & Nelson, 2003; Bernard & Skinner, 1996; Ronen & Yaari, 2008; Subramanyam, 1996))

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