Earnings Management Under IAS 19 –An analysis of the extent to which entities alter assumptions when accounting for employee benefits before and after the amendment of IAS 19
Abstract
The amendments to the existing standard IAS 19 published in 2011 changed the
requirements concerning the reporting of defined benefit plans for public entities
applying IFRS, effective as of January 2013 with full retrospective application.
The revised standard from 2011 prevent earnings management through the
deferring and concealment of some actuarial gains and losses, but still leave
scope for professional assumptions concerning the determination of the discount
rate. The purpose of this thesis is to study the extent to which earnings
management occurs when accounting for defined benefit plans, before and after
the amendment of IAS 19. A multiple regression analysis has been carried out in
two different parts, where two different samples are used. We have limited our
scope to Nordic entities in part one, and entities from all over the world listed on
markets regulated by ESMA in part two. The uniform criterion for the included
entities in both parts is the reporting in accordance with IFRS for defined benefit
plans. Part one process the corridor approach in order to discuss circumstances
before the amendment of IAS 19, and part two process the discount rate in order
to discuss circumstances both before and after the amendment as well as its
effects on one of few factors still possible to manipulate. We have selected three
independent variables that represent a selection of entities’ incentives to
manipulate earnings, namely leverage, deficits in pension plans and
profitability. Our major findings indicate that earnings management did occur to
a certain extent under the previous standard, and that the amendment seems to
have decreased the use of earnings management when accounting for defined
benefit plans. Our suggestions on further research on the subject is an analysis
of the standard with regard to earnings management, carried out with additional
or entirely different earnings management incentives such as ownership
structure, management’s bonus scheme and degree of corporate governance.
Degree
Student essay
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Date
2014-06-11Author
Isufi, Jetmire
Hedberg, Wilma
Keywords
IAS 19, defined benefit plans, earnings management, the corridor
Series/Report no.
Externredovisning
13-14-50
Language
eng