Issues in the Recognition versus Disclosure of Financial Information Debate

Empirical evidence from the academic literature on capital market effects of financial information placement (i.e., recognition on the face of the primary financial statements versus disclosure in the notes to the financial statements) is not straightforward. Therefore, the purpose of this paper is...

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Main Author: Novak Aleš
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2016-12-01
Series:Naše Gospodarstvo
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/ngoe-2016-0024
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spelling doaj-127451806e7f40948ef5dbc2ec5dbc832021-09-06T19:21:05ZengSciendoNaše Gospodarstvo2385-80522016-12-01624526110.1515/ngoe-2016-0024ngoe-2016-0024Issues in the Recognition versus Disclosure of Financial Information DebateNovak Aleš0University of Maribor, Faculty of Organizational Sciences, SloveniaEmpirical evidence from the academic literature on capital market effects of financial information placement (i.e., recognition on the face of the primary financial statements versus disclosure in the notes to the financial statements) is not straightforward. Therefore, the purpose of this paper is to contribute to the recognition versus required disclosure debate in a standard-setting context by exploring possible reasons for perceived differences between recognized and disclosed amounts. These differences, in our view, arise due to demonstrated auditors’ greater tolerance for misstatement in disclosed amounts, allowed noncompliance with disclosure requirements even in strong enforcement regimes, lesser care that preparers of financial statements devote to disclosures relative to recognized items as well as behavioural factors and differential processing costs related to the users of financial information. We believe that these arguments strengthen the case for the general preference for the recognition of financial information in the standard-setting context. The original scientific contribution of this paper is to systematically identify the reasons for the differences between recognized and disclosed amounts in financial statements. As such, this paper may provide a suitable basis for the justification of certain conceptual changes in the field of international accounting standards that are currently underway.https://doi.org/10.1515/ngoe-2016-0024auditingdisclosurefinancial informationnotesrecognition
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Novak Aleš
spellingShingle Novak Aleš
Issues in the Recognition versus Disclosure of Financial Information Debate
Naše Gospodarstvo
auditing
disclosure
financial information
notes
recognition
author_facet Novak Aleš
author_sort Novak Aleš
title Issues in the Recognition versus Disclosure of Financial Information Debate
title_short Issues in the Recognition versus Disclosure of Financial Information Debate
title_full Issues in the Recognition versus Disclosure of Financial Information Debate
title_fullStr Issues in the Recognition versus Disclosure of Financial Information Debate
title_full_unstemmed Issues in the Recognition versus Disclosure of Financial Information Debate
title_sort issues in the recognition versus disclosure of financial information debate
publisher Sciendo
series Naše Gospodarstvo
issn 2385-8052
publishDate 2016-12-01
description Empirical evidence from the academic literature on capital market effects of financial information placement (i.e., recognition on the face of the primary financial statements versus disclosure in the notes to the financial statements) is not straightforward. Therefore, the purpose of this paper is to contribute to the recognition versus required disclosure debate in a standard-setting context by exploring possible reasons for perceived differences between recognized and disclosed amounts. These differences, in our view, arise due to demonstrated auditors’ greater tolerance for misstatement in disclosed amounts, allowed noncompliance with disclosure requirements even in strong enforcement regimes, lesser care that preparers of financial statements devote to disclosures relative to recognized items as well as behavioural factors and differential processing costs related to the users of financial information. We believe that these arguments strengthen the case for the general preference for the recognition of financial information in the standard-setting context. The original scientific contribution of this paper is to systematically identify the reasons for the differences between recognized and disclosed amounts in financial statements. As such, this paper may provide a suitable basis for the justification of certain conceptual changes in the field of international accounting standards that are currently underway.
topic auditing
disclosure
financial information
notes
recognition
url https://doi.org/10.1515/ngoe-2016-0024
work_keys_str_mv AT novakales issuesintherecognitionversusdisclosureoffinancialinformationdebate
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