Abstract

Purpose: The purpose of this research is to investigate the existence of reliability and transparency in the financial statement, for the benefit of investors and analysts. The scope of the study is to find the relationship of accounting standards, corporate governance, external controls, internal controls, and ethical practices with the financial statements, based on the auditors and management views in Malaysia. Methodology: 52 out of 60 questionnaires were taken from audit firms and management firms to test the visibility of transparency and reliability in financial statements. The qualitative data were also analyzed to understand the financial statements further. Findings: According to the data, the existence of transparency and reliability in financial statements was related with accounting standards, ethical practices, internal controls, external controls, and corporate governance. This finding was supported by many tests through SPSS statistic software. Research Limitations/Implications: The implication that first occurred was the intention of auditors and management in hiding the truths behind transparency and reliability of financial statements. Commonly, audit fees and audit sizes are the main truths that are hidden by the auditors. Practical Limitations: The implications of this were the value of transparency and reliability of financial statements hidden from the investors and its capabilities in restoring those into the financial statement. Originality/Value: The results were put through a quantitative approach. Also, additional qualitative analysis was gathered to attain extra knowledge in the transparency. While the rest of the paper is original, previous authors were also discussed for their theories and hypotheses.

Highlights

  • Accounting is the process of identifying, measuring, and communicating economic information to permit informed judgments and decisions by users of the information

  • This paper aims to explain the existence of financial statements and the need for various parties to identify the transparency and reliability of financial statements

  • The findings revealed that it can affect transparency in selective sales of securities and the ways such securities of sales needs to be recorded in the financial statement

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Summary

Introduction

Accounting is the process of identifying, measuring, and communicating economic information to permit informed judgments and decisions by users of the information. A financial statement is a set of accounting that was properly organized into its classification of the income statement; balance sheet; cash flow statement; and statement of equity (Wood & Sangster, 2008) [1]. These classifications make it easier for the current shareholder and the potential shareholder to analyze the transparency and reliability of the financial statements. The issue of transparency and reliability in financial statements has been a dilemma, for the investors, and for the business and the accounting industry. Wood & Sangster (2008) [2] stated that when the relevance, comparability, and understanding were included in the financial statement, the financial statement was capable of relaying information more adequately with the accounting and non-accounting personnel

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