Financial reporting readability: Managerial choices versus firm fundamentals




Hesarzadeh Reza, Bazrafshan Ameneh, Rajabalizadeh Javad

PublisherTaylor & Francis

2020

Spanish Journal of Finance and Accounting/Revista Española de Financiación y Contabilidad

49

4

452

482

31

0210-2412

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1080/02102412.2019.1668219



An implicit premise of regulators and much empirical research is that financial reporting readability (readability) substantially reflects management choices. To investigate this issue, we decompose readability into its discretionary and innate components. To validate this decomposition, we examine whether these two components have different uncertainty effects. Our empirical findings show that readability is primarily the result of firm fundamentals rather than managerial choices. Furthermore, consistent with expectation, discretionary readability has a weaker uncertainty effect than innate readability. The findings are robust to a variety of additional tests. This study contributes to regulators to better assess readability and to empirical literature to construct more accurate tests.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 13:50