Accounting and auditing of credit loss estimates: The hard and the soft

A key goal of financial reporting is to address information asymmetries, which are amplified in the case of banks given their credit, maturity and liquidity transformation and complex, judgmental accounting standards dealing with expected credit losses (ECL).The paper explores the role of bank manag...

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Main Author: Pablo Pérez Rodríguez
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-06-01
Series:Latin American Journal of Central Banking
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666143821000077
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spelling doaj-ef407fafcdee41fdba18faa0439236882021-06-23T04:21:49ZengElsevierLatin American Journal of Central Banking2666-14382021-06-0122100027Accounting and auditing of credit loss estimates: The hard and the softPablo Pérez Rodríguez0Banco de EspañaA key goal of financial reporting is to address information asymmetries, which are amplified in the case of banks given their credit, maturity and liquidity transformation and complex, judgmental accounting standards dealing with expected credit losses (ECL).The paper explores the role of bank management in estimating and recognizing ECL, and how external auditors challenge the resulting figures. Based on analysis of G-SIB disclosures, it concludes that management and auditors tend to prioritize observable and verifiable, hard information to reduce challenge to their reported estimates and protect against the threat of legal liability. Emphasis on such information facilitates loss deferral, damaging the reliability of banks’ financial reporting, obscuring their safety and soundness picture and jeopardizing financial stability.Based on these conclusions, the paper seeks to open a new path to the research and policy analysis of credit loss recognition, introducing proposals to address the procyclicality of credit loss accounting by tackling inappropriate incentives that decouple risk taking from its translation onto banks’ financial statements.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666143821000077Expected Credit LossesInformation asymmetriesDisclosuresExternalitiesFinancial stabilityProcyclicality
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pablo Pérez Rodríguez
spellingShingle Pablo Pérez Rodríguez
Accounting and auditing of credit loss estimates: The hard and the soft
Latin American Journal of Central Banking
Expected Credit Losses
Information asymmetries
Disclosures
Externalities
Financial stability
Procyclicality
author_facet Pablo Pérez Rodríguez
author_sort Pablo Pérez Rodríguez
title Accounting and auditing of credit loss estimates: The hard and the soft
title_short Accounting and auditing of credit loss estimates: The hard and the soft
title_full Accounting and auditing of credit loss estimates: The hard and the soft
title_fullStr Accounting and auditing of credit loss estimates: The hard and the soft
title_full_unstemmed Accounting and auditing of credit loss estimates: The hard and the soft
title_sort accounting and auditing of credit loss estimates: the hard and the soft
publisher Elsevier
series Latin American Journal of Central Banking
issn 2666-1438
publishDate 2021-06-01
description A key goal of financial reporting is to address information asymmetries, which are amplified in the case of banks given their credit, maturity and liquidity transformation and complex, judgmental accounting standards dealing with expected credit losses (ECL).The paper explores the role of bank management in estimating and recognizing ECL, and how external auditors challenge the resulting figures. Based on analysis of G-SIB disclosures, it concludes that management and auditors tend to prioritize observable and verifiable, hard information to reduce challenge to their reported estimates and protect against the threat of legal liability. Emphasis on such information facilitates loss deferral, damaging the reliability of banks’ financial reporting, obscuring their safety and soundness picture and jeopardizing financial stability.Based on these conclusions, the paper seeks to open a new path to the research and policy analysis of credit loss recognition, introducing proposals to address the procyclicality of credit loss accounting by tackling inappropriate incentives that decouple risk taking from its translation onto banks’ financial statements.
topic Expected Credit Losses
Information asymmetries
Disclosures
Externalities
Financial stability
Procyclicality
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666143821000077
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