Disappearing Working Capital: Implications for Accounting Research

This dissertation examines the implications of technological advances on the net working capital balance of U.S. firms over the past five decades. I find that the annual mean value of the net working capital balance of U.S. firms has sharply declined, from 28.9% of average total assets in the 1970s...

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Main Author: Na, Hyun Jong
Language:ENG
Published: The George Washington University 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=27542571
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spelling ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-275425712020-01-02T03:22:31Z Disappearing Working Capital: Implications for Accounting Research Na, Hyun Jong Accounting|Business administration|Finance This dissertation examines the implications of technological advances on the net working capital balance of U.S. firms over the past five decades. I find that the annual mean value of the net working capital balance of U.S. firms has sharply declined, from 28.9% of average total assets in the 1970s to 6.5% in the 2010s. I also show that an increase in IT spending is associated with a reduction in net working capital balance, after controlling for alternative explanations. This real (vis-à-vis accounting) change in net working capital balance has significant implications for practical financial management and accounting research. On one hand, companies have become more efficient in managing their working capital and thus in conserving cash, leading to an increased cash savings at U.S. firms. On the other, the declining working capital balance has reduced accounting current accruals from 18.8% to 5.4% of earnings, which, in turn, has reduced the explanatory power of the Jones (1991) model from 23.7% to 3.7% and increased the correlation between earnings and cash flows from 0.689 to 0.947 over time. Such a structural change is worth noting for accounting research addressing the relationship between accruals, cash flows, and earnings. The George Washington University 2020-01-01 00:00:01.0 thesis http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=27542571 ENG
collection NDLTD
language ENG
sources NDLTD
topic Accounting|Business administration|Finance
spellingShingle Accounting|Business administration|Finance
Na, Hyun Jong
Disappearing Working Capital: Implications for Accounting Research
description This dissertation examines the implications of technological advances on the net working capital balance of U.S. firms over the past five decades. I find that the annual mean value of the net working capital balance of U.S. firms has sharply declined, from 28.9% of average total assets in the 1970s to 6.5% in the 2010s. I also show that an increase in IT spending is associated with a reduction in net working capital balance, after controlling for alternative explanations. This real (vis-à-vis accounting) change in net working capital balance has significant implications for practical financial management and accounting research. On one hand, companies have become more efficient in managing their working capital and thus in conserving cash, leading to an increased cash savings at U.S. firms. On the other, the declining working capital balance has reduced accounting current accruals from 18.8% to 5.4% of earnings, which, in turn, has reduced the explanatory power of the Jones (1991) model from 23.7% to 3.7% and increased the correlation between earnings and cash flows from 0.689 to 0.947 over time. Such a structural change is worth noting for accounting research addressing the relationship between accruals, cash flows, and earnings.
author Na, Hyun Jong
author_facet Na, Hyun Jong
author_sort Na, Hyun Jong
title Disappearing Working Capital: Implications for Accounting Research
title_short Disappearing Working Capital: Implications for Accounting Research
title_full Disappearing Working Capital: Implications for Accounting Research
title_fullStr Disappearing Working Capital: Implications for Accounting Research
title_full_unstemmed Disappearing Working Capital: Implications for Accounting Research
title_sort disappearing working capital: implications for accounting research
publisher The George Washington University
publishDate 2020
url http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=27542571
work_keys_str_mv AT nahyunjong disappearingworkingcapitalimplicationsforaccountingresearch
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