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An empirical model of the relationship between the environmental remediation expense recognition and accounting accruals and the effect on the earnings response coefficient

Posted on:2004-11-10Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:Southern Illinois University at CarbondaleCandidate:Elbannan, Mohamed AFull Text:PDF
GTID:1469390011463723Subject:Business Administration
Abstract/Summary:
This study investigates whether polluting firms manage earnings in the year a material environmental remediation expense (ERE) is recognized (the event year) and whether the market reacts to the ERE recognition (measured through the effect on the earnings response coefficients of polluters). Using a sample of 118 firms designated as potentially responsible parties by the EPA, I estimate the discretionary accruals around the event year using the performance-matched modified Jones model. Overall, results suggest that polluters take income-decreasing accruals in year -1, income-increasing accruals in year 0 (the event year), and income-increasing accruals in year +1; the practice of earnings management is uniform across firms regardless of the level of materiality of the ERE; the informativeness of earnings for polluters declines after they release earnings containing a material ERE and that it is lower than that of non-polluters; and polluters spend in general more on environmental non-remediation expenses in the event year.
Keywords/Search Tags:Earnings, Environmental, Year, ERE, Accruals, Polluters
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