
Public
release date: 14-May-2008
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Contact: Bryan E. Jones
jonesbry@missouri.edu
573-882-9144
University of Missouri-Columbia
COLUMBIA, Mo. – How much a particular hill of
beans is worth may depend on who’s counting the beans. When it comes to
accounting standards in the business world, every bean counts, but the
quality of financial reporting differs from country to country. In a recent
study, a University of Missouri researcher found that uniform and strict
auditor enforcement may be more important than a country’s accounting
standards, and the quality of reporting can affect the whole economy.
“To improve the quality of accounting, which
improves the flow of capital to the right places in the economy and
facilitates economic growth, you must have an environment that includes
scrutiny by corporate regulators and independent auditors,” said Jere
Francis, MU chair of accountancy in the Robert J. Trulaske, Sr. College of
Business. “The auditor’s job is to be the local policeman on the beat,
making sure people aren’t crossing the line. We need those cops to help good
people stay good.”
According to Francis, there is a movement
toward adopting International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS). The goal
of implementing the IFRS is to establish a single set of globally accepted
accounting standards. The concept is rapidly gaining support by key groups
such as the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the World Bank.
IFRS are now used for public reporting purposes in more than 100 countries.
According to financial services firm Deloitte and Touche, by 2011, almost
every country, including the United States, will be using IFRS.
“On one hand, some SEC representatives think
that because people are using these standards, their financial reports are
going to be of good quality, but not necessarily,” Francis said. “IFRS, in
principle, are a good idea but the only thing being adopted are the
standards themselves. We don’t know how well those standards are being
implemented; that’s a function of the auditor looking over the company’s
shoulder to see if they are dotting the ‘i’s and crossing the ‘t’s.”
Francis found that, in countries that have
stronger investor protection (for example, the ability of an entity like the
SEC to punish misconduct), the quality of reporting is improved. The quality
of accounting reports is as much a function of the auditors’ incentives to
do a good job as it is the adoption of standards, according to Francis.
Auditors have stronger incentives to do rigorous audits in countries like
the United States where they will be more severely punished if they fail to
perform at an exacting level.
According to Francis, one result of
implementing global accounting standards is increased investment in global
capital. Transparent and regulated financial reporting facilitates global
capital flow which, in turn, yields increased confidence in the economy.
“A common accounting basis seems to simplify
global economic activity, but quality is currently country specific due to
poor enforcement,” Francis said. “Accounting quality is clearly on the front
burner. For example, the World Bank now requires countries to show progress
in order to get loans, grants and other financing from the international
donor community. Countries need to commit to reforming their accounting
practices and this includes the all-important incentives for the local cop
on the beat, the auditor, to do a good job.”
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Francis’ study was published in the Spring
2008 edition of Contemporary Accounting Research.
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