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The Economic Consequences of Accounting Standards: Evidence from Risk-Taking in Pension Plans
42
Citations
34
References
2017
Year
Economic ConsequencesFinancial Risk ManagementCorporate TaxCost Of CapitalAccounting StandardsCorporate Risk ManagementFinancial SecurityManagementU.s. FirmsInsurance RegulationsFinancial AccountingFinancial ManagementAccountingPension Accounting RulesFinancial PerspectiveFinanceEconomic AccountingAccounting PolicyBusinessPension PlansFinancial Decision-makingNet IncomeFinancingAccounting RuleCorporate FinanceFinancial Risk
ABSTRACT Experts have long conjectured that pension accounting rules, by which pension expense depends on a managerial estimate that is directly tied to the riskiness of plan assets (i.e., the expected rate of return, or ERR, on plan assets), encourage risk-taking with pension investments. The recent passage of IAS 19, Employee Benefits (Revised) (hereafter, IAS 19R) eliminates the ERR and replaces it with a managerial estimate unrelated to plan asset riskiness (the discount rate). We demonstrate that a sample of Canadian firms affected by IAS 19R reduces risk-taking in pension investments post-IAS 19R, compared to a control sample of U.S. firms unaffected by IAS 19R. Therefore, removing firms' ability to recognize immediately in net income the expected higher returns from risk-taking (via a higher ERR) reduces their propensity for that risk-taking—providing some of the first empirical evidence on the economic consequences of eliminating the ERR-based pension accounting model.
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