0% found this document useful (0 votes)
850 views14 pages

Financial Accounting Theory: William R. Scott

Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
850 views14 pages

Financial Accounting Theory: William R. Scott

Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 14

Financial Accounting Theory

Fifth Edition
William R. Scott

Purpose: To create an awareness


and understanding of the financial
reporting environment in a market
economy

1-1
Copyright © 2009 by Pearson Education Canada
Chapter 1
Introduction

1-2
Copyright © 2009 by Pearson Education Canada
1.2 Some Historical Perspective

• Early development
• Great depression of 1930s reinforced historical
cost accounting
• Alternatives to historical cost
– Cash basis accounting
– Current value accounting
• Value-in-use
• Fair value (exit price)
– Mixed measurement model

Copyright © 2009 by Pearson 1-3


1.2 Financial Reporting Horror
Stories

• Enron
• WorldCom
• Effects on financial reporting
– Sarbanes-Oxley Act
– More conservative accounting?

Copyright © 2009 by Pearson 1-4


1.3 Ethical Behaviour by
Accountants/Auditors
• Was accountant/auditor behaviour leading up to
Enron & WorldCom reporting disasters ethical?
– Serve the client or serve society?
• Why would you behave ethically in similar
circumstances?
– Ethical principles to do the right thing?
– Yours and the profession’s long run interests?
– Note each reason produces similar behaviour
• But mindset differs

Copyright © 2009 by Pearson 1-5


1.6 Role of Information in a Market
Economy
• To improve operation of capital markets
– Adverse selection problem
• To improve operation of managerial labour
markets
– Moral hazard problem
• Both roles crucial
– Results of Enron collapse show importance
• Recession in U.S. economy, 2001
• Increased regulation (SOX)

Copyright © 2009 by Pearson 1-6


1.6 Role of Financial Reporting in a
Market Economy
• Control adverse selection
– Convert inside information into outside
– Supply useful information to investors

• Control moral hazard


– Control manager shirking
– Improve corporate governance

Copyright © 2009 by Pearson 1-7


1.7 The Fundamental Problem Of
Financial Accounting Theory
• The best measure of net income to control adverse
selection not the same as the best measure to
motivate manager performance
– Investors want information about future firm performance
• Current value accounting?
– Good corporate governance requires that managers “work
hard”
• Do historical cost accounting, conservatism better reflect
manager effort?

Copyright © 2009 by Pearson 1-8


1.8 Role of Standard Setting

• Is standard setting needed?


– Market forces motivate firms to produce information
– But market forces subject to failure
• Adverse selection
• Moral hazard
– Regulation steps in to try to correct market failures
• Regulation is costly

» Continued

Copyright © 2009 by Pearson 1-9


1.8 Role of Standard Setting (continued)

• Standard setting mediates between conflicting


interests of investors and managers
– Investors want lots of useful information
– Managers may object to releasing all the information
that investors desire

Copyright © 2009 by Pearson 1-


1.9.5 Ways to Mediate Between
Conflicting Interests

• Due process in standard setting


– Representation of diverse constituencies
– Super-majority voting
– Exposure drafts

Copyright © 2009 by Pearson 1 - 11


1.9.5 Structure of Standard Setting
Bodies
• IASB
– International standards
• FASB
– United States standards
• AcSB
– Canadian standards
• Securities commissions
– Role in enforcing firms to follow standards
– May set standards themselves
– Why do they delegate most standard setting?

Copyright © 2009 by Pearson 1-


Theories Relevant to Financial
Accounting
• The rational investor
– A model of how an investor may use new information to
revise beliefs about future firm performance
– Rationality holds on average, not necessarily for each
individual
• Efficient securities markets
– Share prices fully reflect all publicly available information
– Efficiency is relative to a stock of information
– Role of financial reporting in improving/expanding the stock
of information

» Continued

Copyright © 2009 by Pearson 1-


Theories Relevant to Financial
Accounting (continued)
• Behavioural theories
– Investors do not use all the information in financial
statements → securities markets not fully efficient
• Agency theory
– Efficient contracts to motivate manager performance
and achieve good corporate governance

Copyright © 2009 by Pearson 1-

You might also like