Management and Economics Review (Jun 2018)
An Empirical Study on the Relationship between Accounting Conservatism and Asset Impairment Recognition: Evidence from Companies in Taiwan
Abstract
In this study, we investigate the impact of the conservatism of a company’s financial statements on management’s motivation to recognize asset impairment, and the impact of accounting conservatism on prior period impairment losses and gains on impairment reversal. The empirical results showed that a higher accounting conservatism level can reduce management manipulation for recognized more impairment losses in the prior period and then more gains on impairment reversal. That is, a higher level of accounting conservatism can reduce prior period impairment losses, recognized by managers, to make reserves to facilitate the recognition of gains on impairment reversal in a later period, to apparently ‘improve’ earnings.
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