Publication | Closed Access
Incentives to Cheat: The Influence of Executive Compensation and Firm Performance on Financial Misrepresentation
753
Citations
81
References
2007
Year
Firm PerformanceFinancial Statement Fraud DetectionCorporate MisconductManagementCorporate ComplianceFinancial AccountingAccounting ProblemFinancial CrimeFinancial MisrepresentationFinancial ManagementAccountingBehavioral TheoryCorporate GovernanceFinanceAccounting EthicAccounting PolicyBusinessFirm ImproprietyCorporate Finance
Despite the many undesirable outcomes of corporate misconduct, scholars have an inadequate understanding of corporate misconduct’s causes and mechanisms. We extend the behavioral theory of the firm, which traditionally assumes away the possibility of firm impropriety, to develop hypotheses predicting that top management incentive compensation and poor organizational performance relative to aspirations increase the likelihood of financial misrepresentation. Using a sample of financial restatements prompted by accounting irregularities and identified by the U.S. Government Accountability Office, we find empirical support for both incentive and relative performance influences on financial statement misrepresentation.
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