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Audited financial reporting and voluntary disclosure of corporate social responsibility (CSR) reports

Version 2 2024-06-13, 11:29
Version 1 2016-06-01, 00:00
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-13, 11:29 authored by L Chen, B Srinidhi, A Tsang, W Yu
© 2016, American Accounting Association. All rights reserved. Prior studies show that corporate social responsibility (CSR) reporting is informative to investors but lacks credibility. This study examines whether a commitment to audits of financial outcomes, proxied by audit fees, is associated with greater CSR reporting credibility. We find that audit fees are positively associated with the likelihood of standalone CSR report issuance, and this positive association becomes stronger when managers perceive a greater need for credibility, i.e., when CSR reports are longer or issued with external assurance, when firms have strong CSR concerns, and when reports are issued sporadically. Corroborating our results, we find that CSR reports issued by firms committing to high audit fees accelerate the incorporation of future earnings information into current stock price. Taken together, our findings suggest that a commitment to higher financial reporting quality has the potential to bring positive externality to firms’ nonfinancial disclosures and ultimately affects the issuance of CSR reports.

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Location

Sarasota, Flo.

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal, C Journal article

Copyright notice

2016, American Accounting Association

Journal

Journal of Management Accounting Research

Volume

28

Pagination

53-76

ISSN

1049-2127

eISSN

1558-8033

Issue

2

Publisher

American Accounting Association

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