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This book provides an overview of earnings quality (EQ) in the
context of financial reporting and offers suggestions for defining
and measuring it. Although EQ has received increasing attention
from investors, creditors, regulators, and researchers in different
areas, there are various definitions of it and different approaches
for its measurement. The book describes the relationship between EQ
and earnings management (EM) since they can be considered related
challenges, especially in the context of international financial
reporting standards (IAS/IFRSs). EM occurs when managers make
discretionary accounting choices that are regarded as either an
efficient communication of private information to improve the
informativeness of a firm's current and future performance, or a
distorting disclosure to mislead the firm's true performance. The
intentional manipulation of earnings by managers, within the limits
allowed by the accounting standards, may alter the usefulness of
financial reporting and lead to lower quality of earnings. The use
of fair value in financial reporting has created a current debate
about the impact it might have on EQ. At times, the high
subjectivity in estimating fair value can allow opportunities for
the exercise of management judgments and intentional bias, which
can reduce the quality of financial reporting. Management
discretion can result in high EM and hence in a reduction of EQ.
Particularly during difficult financial periods, managers engage in
EM to mask the negative effects of the turmoil, and in such
circumstances accruals and earnings smoothing are attempts to
reduce abnormal variations of earnings in such circumstances. This
book is a valuable resource for those interested in wider
perspectives on EQ and it adds to the research studies on this
topic in the context of financial reporting.
This book provides an overview of earnings quality (EQ) in the
context of financial reporting and offers suggestions for defining
and measuring it. Although EQ has received increasing attention
from investors, creditors, regulators, and researchers in different
areas, there are various definitions of it and different approaches
for its measurement. The book describes the relationship between EQ
and earnings management (EM) since they can be considered related
challenges, especially in the context of international financial
reporting standards (IAS/IFRSs). EM occurs when managers make
discretionary accounting choices that are regarded as either an
efficient communication of private information to improve the
informativeness of a firm's current and future performance, or a
distorting disclosure to mislead the firm's true performance. The
intentional manipulation of earnings by managers, within the limits
allowed by the accounting standards, may alter the usefulness of
financial reporting and lead to lower quality of earnings. The use
of fair value in financial reporting has created a current debate
about the impact it might have on EQ. At times, the high
subjectivity in estimating fair value can allow opportunities for
the exercise of management judgments and intentional bias, which
can reduce the quality of financial reporting. Management
discretion can result in high EM and hence in a reduction of EQ.
Particularly during difficult financial periods, managers engage in
EM to mask the negative effects of the turmoil, and in such
circumstances accruals and earnings smoothing are attempts to
reduce abnormal variations of earnings in such circumstances. This
book is a valuable resource for those interested in wider
perspectives on EQ and it adds to the research studies on this
topic in the context of financial reporting.
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