Forschungsarbeit, 2008
44 Seiten, Note: A
1. Introduction
2. Literature review
2.1 Adoption of IFRS
2.1.1 Pros and cons of the adoption of IFRS
2.1.2 The balance sheet
2.2 Information in the balance sheet
2.2.1 Materiality
2.2.2 Recognition materiality
2.2.3 Determining recognition materiality
2.3 Countries
2.3.1 High enforcement versus low enforcement
2.3.2 Prior rules-based versus principles-based
2.3.3 Code law versus common law
3. Research design
3.1 Sample selection
3.2 Variables
3.3 Testing the Hypotheses
4. Results
4.1 Relation between variables
4.2 Data analyses
4.2.1 High or low enforcement
4.2.2 Prior rules- or principles-based
4.2.3 Common law or code law
5. Conclusion
6. Limitations and suggestions
This study aims to investigate whether cross-country differences in balance sheet disclosure exist among listed companies in the European Union that are subject to the same IFRS requirements, specifically by examining the influence of legal systems, enforcement levels, and prior accounting traditions.
2.2.1 Materiality
Every listed companies’ annual report contains a statement that it is the managements’ and auditors’ responsibility to provide financial statements which are free from material misstatements. Every investor has some kind of estimation of a material misstatement, but a clear definition of materiality is not provided in the financial statements. In the literature, different definitions of materiality are available. The definition of materiality according to the IASB is defined in International Accounting Standard (IAS) 8.5 (2010), it states:
“Omissions or misstatements of items are material if they could, individually or collectively, influence the economic decisions that users make on the basis of the financial statements. Materiality depends on the size and nature of the omission or misstatement judged in the surrounding circumstances. The size or nature of the item, or a combination of both, could be the determining factor.”
1. Introduction: Presents the background of IFRS adoption in the EU and establishes the central research question regarding disclosure differences despite harmonized standards.
2. Literature review: Discusses the theoretical framework including IFRS adoption, the concept of materiality, and the classification of countries based on enforcement and legal systems.
3. Research design: Describes the methodology, sample selection of 170 companies, and the selection of variables to measure disclosure detail in balance sheets.
4. Results: Details the empirical data analysis, testing of the three hypotheses through regression models, and an evaluation of the correlations between variables.
5. Conclusion: Summarizes the findings, confirming that legal systems have the strongest impact on disclosure detail, while acknowledging limitations.
6. Limitations and suggestions: Reflects on the study's scope, specifically the focus on balance sheets, and proposes directions for future research into other financial statement components.
IFRS, Financial Reporting, Balance Sheet, Disclosure, Materiality, Recognition Materiality, Enforcement, Legal System, Common Law, Code Law, Accounting Quality, European Union, Disclosure Detail, Rules-based, Principles-based
The study examines whether cross-country differences in balance sheet disclosure persist among EU companies that have adopted the same IFRS guidelines.
The study explores how enforcement levels, prior accounting traditions (rules-based vs. principles-based), and legal systems (common law vs. code law) affect financial reporting detail.
The research asks: What differences exist in the disclosure in balance sheets of companies in different countries, which apply the same rules and guidelines?
The author uses empirical quantitative analysis, specifically independent samples T-tests and linear regression, to evaluate disclosure variables derived from 2010 annual reports of 170 companies.
It covers the literature on materiality and IFRS, the development of a research design based on recognition materiality, and an extensive analysis of three hypotheses comparing different country groupings.
Key concepts include IFRS, balance sheet disclosure, materiality, enforcement, legal systems, and financial reporting quality.
The study concludes that the legal system is the most significant factor, with common law countries consistently providing more detailed balance sheet information than code law countries.
Enforcement is analyzed to determine if variations in regulatory oversight result in different compliance levels and disclosure details despite the uniform application of IFRS standards.
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