WHY DO SOME SENIOR MANAGERS INFLATE FIRMS’ REPORTED EARNINGS? ECONOMIC CAUSES AND POTENTIAL SOLUTIONS

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V.G. Sridharan, Farshid Navissi ORCID logo, Alexander Kostyuk ORCID logo

https://doi.org/10.22495/cocv5i1c3p1

Abstract

We examine the economic reasons underlying the behavior of some senior managers to inflate their firms’ reported earnings. While the extant literature cites accounting and corporate governance structure as potential reasons that facilitate the inflating tendency, we conjecture that opportunism at different hierarchical levels within firms do not leave much scope for some senior managers to improve firms’ fundamental performance. To protect their personal utility, they resort to inflating tendency, but only if the firms’ corporate governance has loopholes. A major solution offered here is to improve firms’ internal management control system which could reduce within-firm opportunism. However, this solution must accompany improvements to corporate governance.

Keywords: Earnings, Managers, Corporate Governance

How to cite this paper: Sridharan, V. G., Navissi, F., & Kostyuk, A. (2007). Why do some senior managers inflate firms’ reported earnings? Economic causes and potential solutions. Corporate Ownership & Control, 5(1-3), 414-417. https://doi.org/10.22495/cocv5i1c3p1