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Financial Accounting & Auditing

See the latest research, articles and faculty on the Financial Accounting & Auditing Area of Expertise at Columbia Business School.

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Financial Accounting & Auditing Faculty

Financial Accounting & Auditing Research

Tax Policy and Entrepreneurial Entry

Authors
William Gentry and R. Glenn Hubbard
Date
May 1, 2000
Format
Journal Article
Journal
American Economic Review

In this article, the authors focus on impacts of tax rates and, in particular, tax progressivity on the decision to become an 'entrepreneur.' While a proportional tax with a full loss offset will not affect the entry decision for a risk-neutral individual, a progressive schedule with imperfect loss offsets can discourage entry. The authors find substantial evidence for this effect on entrepreneurship using variation in tax schedules faced by households in the Panel Study on Income Dynamics (PSID) over the period from 1979 to 1992.

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Intrafirm Trade, Bargaining Power, and Specific Investments

Authors
Tim Baldenius
Date
January 1, 2000
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Review of Accounting Studies

This paper compares the performance of standard-cost with negotiated transfer pricing under asymmetric information. Negotiated transfer pricing generally achieves higher expected contribution margins, as this method tends to be more efficient in aggregating private information into a single transfer price. Standard-cost transfer pricing confers more bargaining power to the supplier and therefore generates better incentives for this division to undertake specific investments. The opposite holds for buyer investments.

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Comparing Alternative Hedge Accounting Standards: Shareholders' Perspectives

Authors
Guy Weyns and Amir Ziv
Date
December 1, 1999
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Review of Accounting Studies

We study the economic consequences of alternative hedge accounting rules in terms of managerial hedging decisions and wealth effects for shareholders. The rules we consider include the "fair-value" and "cash-flow" hedge accounting methods prescribed by the recent SFAS No. 133. We illustrate that the accounting method used influences the manager's hedge decision. We show that under no-hedge accounting, the hedge choice is different from the optimal economic hedge the firm would make under symmetric and public information.

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State Dependent Jump Models: How Do U.S. Equity Markets Jump?

Authors
Michael Johannes, Rohit Kumar, and Nicholas Polson
Date
September 1, 1999
Format
Working Paper

This paper introduces a class of state dependent jump (SDJ) models in which the arrival intensity and jump sizes depend on a given set of state variables, including lagged jumps. With this model, we investigate the structure of jumps to U.S. equity indices, concentrating on the predictability of jumps times if found for all of the indices considered: Standard and Poor's 500 and Mid-Cap, the Russell 1000, 2000, and 3000 indices, the Wilshire 5000 and the Nasdaq 100 (NDX).

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Dividend Taxation in Firm Valuation: New Evidence

Authors
Trevor Harris and Deen Kemsley
Date
January 1, 1999
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Accounting Research

In this paper we develop a residual-income model showing how taxes on dividends affect the relative valuation of retained earnings versus contributed equity, as well as the value of expected future earnings. Tests of predictions from our model for a sample of Compustat firms from 1975-94 suggest that overall firm value, and the relative valuation weights investors assign to retained earnings, contributed equity, and current earnings, all critically depend on dividend taxes.

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The Value of Reporting Comprehensive Income

Authors
Stephen Penman
Date
January 1, 1999
Format
Chapter
Book
Trying Again: Proceedings of the Association of Chartered Certified Accountants Conference on the ASB's 1999 Draft Statement of Principles
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Early Evidence on the Informativeness of the SEC's Market Risk Disclosures: The Case of Commodity Price Risk Exposure of Oil and Gas Producers

Authors
Shivaram Rajgopal
Date
January 1, 1999
Format
Journal Article
Journal
The Accounting Review

The paper provides early evidence on the informativeness of commodity price risk measures required by the Securities and Exchange Commission's new market risk disclosure rules (SEC 1997). I use existing disclosures of oil and gas producers (O&G) to obtain proxies for the tabular and sensitivity analysis disclosures required by the new SEC rules. I find that proxies for the tabular and the sensitivity analysis format are significantly associated with O&G firms' stock return sensitivities to oil and gas price movements.

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A Synthesis of Equity Valuation Techniques and the Terminal Value Calculation for the Dividend Discount Model

Authors
Stephen Penman
Date
December 1, 1998
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Review of Accounting Studies

This paper lays out alternative equity valuation models that involve forecasting for finite periods and shows how they are related to each other. It contrasts dividend discounting models, discounted cash flow models, and "residual income" models based on accrual accounting. It shows that some models that are apparently different yield the same valuation. It gives the general form of the terminal value calculation in these models and shows how this calculation serves to correct errors in the model.

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Investment Incentives Blunted by Changes in Prices of Capital Goods?: International Evidence

Authors
Kevin Hassett and R. Glenn Hubbard
Date
October 1, 1998
Format
Journal Article
Journal
International Finance

Recent research on business investment decisions suggests that real investment in plant and equipment is quite sensitive to changes in the user cost of capital, pointing to the possibility that long-run changes in tax policy may have a significant impact on an economy's capital stock. Indeed, many countries have at times adopted investment tax incentives to stimulate investment. The prevalence of investment incentives suggests that local policy-makers believe these are effective in increasing investment at a reasonable cost in terms of lost revenue.

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