No Cover Image

Journal article 294 views

The Value of Discretion in Africa: Evidence from Acquired Intangible Assets Under IFRS 3

Tunyi Tunyi Abongeh, Dimu Ehalaiye, Ernest Gyapong, Collins G. Ntim

The International Journal of Accounting, Volume: 55, Issue: 02, Start page: 2050008

Swansea University Author: Tunyi Tunyi Abongeh

Full text not available from this repository: check for access using links below.

Abstract

This paper examines the value of managerial discretion in financial reporting by exploring the value relevance of intangible assets acquired in business combinations (AIA) before and after the 2008 International Financial Reporting Standard (IFRS) 3 amendment. The 2008 IFRS 3 amendment gave managers...

Full description

Published in: The International Journal of Accounting
ISSN: 1094-4060 2213-3933
Published: World Scientific Pub Co Pte Lt 2020
Online Access: Check full text

URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa65111
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Abstract: This paper examines the value of managerial discretion in financial reporting by exploring the value relevance of intangible assets acquired in business combinations (AIA) before and after the 2008 International Financial Reporting Standard (IFRS) 3 amendment. The 2008 IFRS 3 amendment gave managers the discretion to recognize previously unrecognized intangibles in the target firm, hence, we posit that if managerial discretion improves the quality of financial reporting, we should observe an increase in the value relevance of AIA after the amendment. Our empirical analysis is based on a dataset of 603 mergers announced between 2004 and 2016, across seven African countries. Consistent with our main hypothesis, we find that the value relevance of AIA, predominantly acquired goodwill (AGW), increased after the amendment, suggesting that managerial discretion improves the quality of financial information. Our results further show that the value of discretion is moderated by the underlying institutional quality, with the value relevance of AIA being greater in high-quality institutional contexts. Our findings are robust to alternative measures of AIA, alternative models for testing value relevance, and various controls for endogeneity. Overall, our findings have important implications for accounting standard-setters, governments, investors, and practitioners.
Keywords: Managerial discretion, IFRS 3, acquired intangible assets, business combinations, institutional quality, Africa
College: Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
Issue: 02
Start Page: 2050008