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Financial globalization paired with the relaxation of constraints
on capital flows between countries before the 2008 crisis,
increased merger activities among the World's largest stock
exchanges. The financial crisis of 2008 had a severe impact on the
development of equity markets, corporate financial stability, and
corporate governance, and a multi-step approach is needed to fully
appreciate the causes and effects of this event. This book engages
the separate strands of literature to advance a more holistic
understanding of whether and how the national institutional
environments in selected countries around the world has been
changed after the crisis. Institutions and Accounting Practices
after the Financial Crisis: International Perspective sets out a
framework for the analysis of institutional environments and
accounting practices in in selected countries around the world
during the pre-crisis period, followed by an examination of the
impact of the crisis. It scrutinizes the changing roles of debt and
equity markets; the shift in accounting practices and capital
financing choices due to the economic downturn; and the lessons
that can be obtained from the financial crisis, while considering
the institutional architecture of international business
environments. This ongoing process of integration and globalization
increases interdependence between world markets, and allows shocks
to propagate across national and continental lines, making the
understanding of international markets vitally important to
American investors. Aimed at primarily researchers, academics and
students in the fields of international accounting, management and
finance, Institutions and Accounting Practices after the Financial
Crisis: International Perspective will additionally be of value to
practitioners and policy makers, supplying them with information
regarding the changes in accounting practices and risk evaluation
due to the crisis.
Financial globalization paired with the relaxation of constraints
on capital flows between countries before the 2008 crisis,
increased merger activities among the World's largest stock
exchanges. The financial crisis of 2008 had a severe impact on the
development of equity markets, corporate financial stability, and
corporate governance, and a multi-step approach is needed to fully
appreciate the causes and effects of this event. This book engages
the separate strands of literature to advance a more holistic
understanding of whether and how the national institutional
environments in selected countries around the world has been
changed after the crisis. Institutions and Accounting Practices
after the Financial Crisis: International Perspective sets out a
framework for the analysis of institutional environments and
accounting practices in in selected countries around the world
during the pre-crisis period, followed by an examination of the
impact of the crisis. It scrutinizes the changing roles of debt and
equity markets; the shift in accounting practices and capital
financing choices due to the economic downturn; and the lessons
that can be obtained from the financial crisis, while considering
the institutional architecture of international business
environments. This ongoing process of integration and globalization
increases interdependence between world markets, and allows shocks
to propagate across national and continental lines, making the
understanding of international markets vitally important to
American investors. Aimed at primarily researchers, academics and
students in the fields of international accounting, management and
finance, Institutions and Accounting Practices after the Financial
Crisis: International Perspective will additionally be of value to
practitioners and policy makers, supplying them with information
regarding the changes in accounting practices and risk evaluation
due to the crisis.
The growing internationalization of markets, the relaxation of
constraints on capital flows between countries, and the creation of
different economic unions -- the European Union in particular --
initiated the flow of capital, goods, and services across national
borders, growth and diffusion of shareholding, and increased merger
activity among the world's largest stock exchanges. These changes
have stimulated an interest in understanding developments in
accounting and corporate governance in a newly qualitative way.
Law, Corporate Governance, and Accounting sets out a framework for
the analysis of institutional environments as the interconnected
key tools of modern public corporations. Along with examining
latest developments in the integrated formal structures for the
formulation of international accounting principles, analyzing new
accounting regulations and the extrapolating on the lessons that
can be learned from the harmonization of accounting principles in
Europe, this monograph provides the analyses of the convergence in
both auditing and corporate governance as well as US perspective on
IFRS adoption.
The growing internationalization of markets, the relaxation of
constraints on capital flows between countries, and the creation of
different economic unions -- the European Union in particular --
initiated the flow of capital, goods, and services across national
borders, growth and diffusion of shareholding, and increased merger
activity among the world's largest stock exchanges. These changes
have stimulated an interest in understanding developments in
accounting and corporate governance in a newly qualitative way.
Law, Corporate Governance, and Accounting sets out a framework for
the analysis of institutional environments as the interconnected
key tools of modern public corporations. Along with examining
latest developments in the integrated formal structures for the
formulation of international accounting principles, analyzing new
accounting regulations and the extrapolating on the lessons that
can be learned from the harmonization of accounting principles in
Europe, this monograph provides the analyses of the convergence in
both auditing and corporate governance as well as US perspective on
IFRS adoption.
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