Accounting Research Journal | 2021

Drivers of mandatory disclosure in GCC region firms

 
 
 

Abstract


\nPurpose\nThis paper aims to investigate firm-level variations in the extent of mandatory disclosures and address the drivers of mandatory disclosure using data from the Gulf Co-operation Council (GCC) region.\n\n\nDesign/methodology/approach\nThe extent of mandatory disclosure is examined using a disclosure index created with reference to 24 International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRSs).\n\n\nFindings\nThe authors find that the extent of mandatory disclosure required by applicable IFRSs/International Accounting Standards increases with international presence, group firms, the level of voluntary disclosure, firm age and the education level of company financial controllers. It decreases with firm size and the proportion of institutional share ownership. The degree of board independence is positively related to the level of mandatory disclosure in firms with no state ownership. Profitability positively affects the level of mandatory disclosure to a greater extent in more liquid GCC firms. The results confirm that there is a greater sensitivity of mandatory disclosure to loss than to profit. Loss increases, whilst profit decreases, the extent of mandatory disclosure.\n\n\nResearch limitations/implications\nThe results promote further understanding of international financial reporting differences in an emerging country setting.\n\n\nPractical implications\nThe findings provide a detailed insight to investors, financial analysts, practitioners and academics.\n\n\nOriginality/value\nThe authors develop a highly granular mandatory disclosure index in a developing country setting and identify key drivers of such disclosure.\n

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1108/arj-12-2020-0366
Language English
Journal Accounting Research Journal

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