An examination of proprietary costs and their impact on the quality of financial reporting for domestic publicly listed firms for year 2000-2004

In a globalized economy where competition among firms intensifies and where the demand for greater quality of financial disclosures heightens, the need for companies to strike a balance between the preservation of their competitive position in the market and commitment to transparent financial repor...

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Main Authors: Boncan, Athena, Martinez, Carren, Saw, Sarabeth, Torchiva, Kervin John
Format: text
Language:English
Published: Animo Repository 2006
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_bachelors/14162
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Institution: De La Salle University
Language: English
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:etd_bachelors-148042021-11-10T05:30:41Z An examination of proprietary costs and their impact on the quality of financial reporting for domestic publicly listed firms for year 2000-2004 Boncan, Athena Martinez, Carren Saw, Sarabeth Torchiva, Kervin John In a globalized economy where competition among firms intensifies and where the demand for greater quality of financial disclosures heightens, the need for companies to strike a balance between the preservation of their competitive position in the market and commitment to transparent financial reporting is never more imperative. In order to achieve this equilibrium, there is a need to account for all the possible disclosure related costs vis-Ã -vis the related benefits of greater transparency in financial reporting. To shed new perspective in investigating the financial reporting quality, this study investigates how a firm's competitive costs affect its financial reporting quality. The researchers interpret a firm's financial reporting policy as a choice precision for the disclosed accounting earnings. Literature identifies these competitive costs as those related to disclosing propriety information, hence the term proprietary cost. Using the proprietary cost theory, the researchers provide empirical evidence that the higher the proprietary costs, the lower the quality of reported accounting earnings. These findings support the disclosure theory which suggest that all else held constant, as the proprietary cost of disclosure increases, earnings quality decreases. 2006-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_bachelors/14162 Bachelor's Theses English Animo Repository Financial statements Accounting Corporations-- Accounting Corporations--Finance Corporation reports Accounting
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
language English
topic Financial statements
Accounting
Corporations-- Accounting
Corporations--Finance
Corporation reports
Accounting
spellingShingle Financial statements
Accounting
Corporations-- Accounting
Corporations--Finance
Corporation reports
Accounting
Boncan, Athena
Martinez, Carren
Saw, Sarabeth
Torchiva, Kervin John
An examination of proprietary costs and their impact on the quality of financial reporting for domestic publicly listed firms for year 2000-2004
description In a globalized economy where competition among firms intensifies and where the demand for greater quality of financial disclosures heightens, the need for companies to strike a balance between the preservation of their competitive position in the market and commitment to transparent financial reporting is never more imperative. In order to achieve this equilibrium, there is a need to account for all the possible disclosure related costs vis-Ã -vis the related benefits of greater transparency in financial reporting. To shed new perspective in investigating the financial reporting quality, this study investigates how a firm's competitive costs affect its financial reporting quality. The researchers interpret a firm's financial reporting policy as a choice precision for the disclosed accounting earnings. Literature identifies these competitive costs as those related to disclosing propriety information, hence the term proprietary cost. Using the proprietary cost theory, the researchers provide empirical evidence that the higher the proprietary costs, the lower the quality of reported accounting earnings. These findings support the disclosure theory which suggest that all else held constant, as the proprietary cost of disclosure increases, earnings quality decreases.
format text
author Boncan, Athena
Martinez, Carren
Saw, Sarabeth
Torchiva, Kervin John
author_facet Boncan, Athena
Martinez, Carren
Saw, Sarabeth
Torchiva, Kervin John
author_sort Boncan, Athena
title An examination of proprietary costs and their impact on the quality of financial reporting for domestic publicly listed firms for year 2000-2004
title_short An examination of proprietary costs and their impact on the quality of financial reporting for domestic publicly listed firms for year 2000-2004
title_full An examination of proprietary costs and their impact on the quality of financial reporting for domestic publicly listed firms for year 2000-2004
title_fullStr An examination of proprietary costs and their impact on the quality of financial reporting for domestic publicly listed firms for year 2000-2004
title_full_unstemmed An examination of proprietary costs and their impact on the quality of financial reporting for domestic publicly listed firms for year 2000-2004
title_sort examination of proprietary costs and their impact on the quality of financial reporting for domestic publicly listed firms for year 2000-2004
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2006
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_bachelors/14162
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