Abstract

This article is a demonstrative research on the motivation and method for earnings management in the Korean defense industry and its connection with the cost of equity capital. The data for this article comes from the Korean DICS (Defense Integrated Cost System). The difference between the cost data submitted by defense corporations and those verified by DAPA (Defense Acquisition Program Administration) serves as an indicator of earnings management; such a direct measurement of earnings management distinguishes this research from previous studies focusing on indirect indicators of earnings management, such as discretionary accruals. This article purposefully names such a specific form of earnings management as ‘cost adjustment’ that takes advantage of the difference between the submitted cost and the verified cost. The result of the research shows that cost adjustment activities in the defense industry are proportional to the capital cost required by shareholders. It is also notable that the cost adjustment activities in the defense industry are mostly done by making use of direct costs, in contrast to other industries utilizing indirect costs, which are hardly traceable. As a result of cost adjustment to meet short-term target profit, the long-term sustainability of the company would get impaired from the inflated costs in direct cost adjustments.

Highlights

  • Fraud in earnings management significantly contributes to the far-reaching corruption and unsustainability of the Korean defense industry

  • Quotation) 30 companies related to the Korean defense industry were used to test Hypothesis 1 (H1)

  • If populations were expanded to the whole defense firm, defense sales of sample selected companies accounted for 28% of the total domestic sales of the Korean defense industry in 2012

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Summary

Introduction

Fraud in earnings management significantly contributes to the far-reaching corruption and unsustainability of the Korean defense industry. The world total figure has been raised by 19% over 10 years [1] Such reductions in western military expenditure, we assume, mean that the overall size of an economic pie granted for western defense firms becomes smaller. Those companies in the west should take the best advantage of the deals they manage to get, which can drive them to make use of financial tactics that are not directly related to the company’s actual performance, i.e., earnings management.

Trends
Average
Prior Research and Different Concepts of Earnings Management
Hypotheses
Main Research Model and Variable Definitions
Sample Selection
Data Deduction
Descriptive Statistics
Empirical Results
Robust Test
Conclusions
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