Choices of financial reporting regimes and techniques and underlying decision-making processes: a case study analysis of a port authority

Gavin C Reid, Julia A Smith, Yu-Lin Hsu

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    Abstract

    This paper examines how financial reporting modes are determined within a company, from the perspective of perceived costs and benefits. The modes investigated include financial reporting regimes (e.g. International Financial Reporting Standards, UK Generally Accepted Accounting Principles) and the financial reporting techniques which support them (e.g. valuing intangibles and investments, treatment of development costs). A stated preference approach is adopted and applied to a fieldwork analysis of the functioning of a large port authority, which was a member of a group and prepared both consolidated and subsidiary accounts. The analysis is largely qualitative, exploring in-depth such matters as key factors in making choices, the decision-making processes behind choices, and the staging of decisions, but underpinned by a quantitative basis, using a metric for determining net benefits of financial reporting regimes and techniques. Our analysis aims to improve our understanding of a company's choice processes underlying its financial reporting, including its handling of complexity and uncertainty, and its use of innovations in techniques and organisational forms for decision support.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)137-151
    Number of pages15
    JournalNational Accounting Review
    Volume3
    Issue number2
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 9 Apr 2021

    Keywords

    • Financial reporting
    • Decision-making processes
    • Case study
    • Stated preference
    • Fieldwork

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