The including of rent for premises as costs for leases -Compliance with disclosure requirements for leases in K3 regarding rent for premises
Abstract
In recent years, Swedish accounting has undergone major changes, particularly
regarding the K3 regulatory framework. Bigger companies whose financial year began
after December 31, 2013 have to comply with K3, however, K3 compliance is optional
for smaller companies who could instead choose to comply with K2. We have discovered
some companies in the trade industry do not include rent for premises in lease
disclosures, which is, compared to previous regulations, a new requirement for K3.
The purpose of the thesis is to not only investigate to what extent K3 compliant
companies include rent for premises in the disclosure of leases, but also to investigate
underlying factors as to whether or not rent for premises is included in the lease
disclosures.
We have, based on two existing theories and previous research, formed hypotheses that
we have tested in order to find explanations for the companies’ accounting choices and
lack of disclosure regarding the rent for premises. Previous research has mostly dealt
with earlier standards in Sweden and the IFRS. However, we focused on the K3 in our
study using a quantitative method based on company annual reports from 2014. It
turned out that 56 of our total sample of 178 companies did not include rent for
premises in the disclosure for leases.
We conducted a regression analysis which shows that the agency theory, stakeholder
perspective and previous research about the relationship between information and
audit firms can explain the omission of rent for premises in the disclosure of leases.
Degree
Student essay
View/ Open
Date
2016-03-15Author
Pagerup, Andreas
Gustafsson, Mikael
Series/Report no.
Externredovisning
15-16-16
Language
eng