Forschungsarbeit, 2008
44 Seiten, Note: A
This research aims to analyze cross-country differences in balance sheet disclosures among European Union companies after the mandatory adoption of IFRS in 2005. The study investigates whether the harmonization of accounting standards under IFRS resulted in uniform disclosure practices across countries with varying legal, regulatory, and historical accounting backgrounds.
1 Introduction: This chapter introduces the research's context, highlighting the mandatory adoption of IFRS in the EU in 2005 and its aim to improve comparability and transparency in financial reporting. It emphasizes the existing diversity among EU countries' legal and accounting systems and proposes to investigate how these differences affect balance sheet disclosures using the recognition materiality concept. The research question is clearly stated, focusing on the discrepancies in balance sheet disclosures despite the uniform application of IFRS.
2 Literature review: This chapter provides a comprehensive overview of existing research on IFRS adoption, balance sheet information, and the materiality concept, particularly recognition materiality. It lays the groundwork for the current research by discussing the pros and cons of IFRS adoption, the importance of information in balance sheets, and the methods of determining recognition materiality. The chapter further explores the impact of enforcement levels, prior accounting systems (rules-based versus principles-based), and legal systems (common law versus code law) on financial reporting practices. It sets the stage for the research methodology and hypotheses by examining previous studies and identifying gaps in the existing literature.
3 Research design: This chapter outlines the methodology used in the research, including sample selection (170 companies from five EU countries: France, Germany, the Netherlands, Spain, and the UK), variable definition (based on the recognition materiality concept to measure the level of detail in balance sheet disclosures), and hypothesis testing. The chapter provides a detailed description of the empirical approach to investigate the research question by explaining how the variables are measured and how the data will be analyzed to test the hypotheses.
4 Results: This chapter presents the findings of the empirical analysis, focusing on the relationships between the defined variables. The analysis explores how enforcement levels, prior accounting systems, and legal systems influence the level of detail in balance sheet disclosures. It is anticipated that this chapter will provide a detailed account of the statistical analysis and its results, highlighting the relative importance of each factor and their combined effects on balance sheet disclosure differences across the selected countries.
IFRS, balance sheet disclosure, recognition materiality, cross-country comparison, legal system, enforcement, accounting standards, comparability, transparency, common law, code law, rules-based accounting, principles-based accounting, European Union.
This research aims to analyze cross-country differences in balance sheet disclosures among European Union companies after the mandatory adoption of IFRS in 2005. It investigates whether the harmonization of accounting standards under IFRS resulted in uniform disclosure practices across countries with varying legal, regulatory, and historical accounting backgrounds. The study focuses on the discrepancies in balance sheet disclosures despite the uniform application of IFRS.
The study investigates the impact of legal systems (common law vs. code law), the influence of prior domestic Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) (rules-based vs. principles-based), the relationship between enforcement levels and the detail of balance sheet disclosures, the application of the recognition materiality concept in different national contexts, and the cross-country comparability of financial statements after IFRS adoption.
The paper is structured as follows: 1. Introduction; 2. Literature review (including sections on IFRS adoption, information in the balance sheet, materiality, and country-specific factors); 3. Research design (including sample selection, variables, and hypothesis testing); 4. Results (including data analysis on enforcement, prior accounting systems, and legal systems); 5. Conclusion; and 6. Limitations and suggestions.
The study includes a sample of 170 companies from five EU countries: France, Germany, the Netherlands, Spain, and the UK.
The research employs an empirical approach. The variables are defined based on the recognition materiality concept to measure the level of detail in balance sheet disclosures. The data is analyzed to test the hypotheses regarding the influence of enforcement levels, prior accounting systems, and legal systems on balance sheet disclosure practices.
The results chapter will present the findings of the empirical analysis, focusing on the relationships between the defined variables. It will explore how enforcement levels, prior accounting systems, and legal systems influence the level of detail in balance sheet disclosures. The analysis will highlight the relative importance of each factor and their combined effects on balance sheet disclosure differences across the selected countries.
The literature review covers IFRS adoption, balance sheet information, materiality (especially recognition materiality), enforcement levels, prior accounting systems (rules-based vs. principles-based), and legal systems (common law vs. code law).
IFRS, balance sheet disclosure, recognition materiality, cross-country comparison, legal system, enforcement, accounting standards, comparability, transparency, common law, code law, rules-based accounting, principles-based accounting, European Union.
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