Scientific journal paper Q1
Dirty surplus accounting flows: international evidence
Helena Isidro (Isidro, H.); John O'Hanlon (O'Hanlon, J.); Steve Young (Young, S.);
Journal Title
Accounting and Business Research
Year (definitive publication)
2004
Language
English
Country
United Kingdom
More Information
Web of Science®

This publication is not indexed in Web of Science®

Scopus

Times Cited: 25

(Last checked: 2024-09-25 00:41)

View record in Scopus


: 0.8
Google Scholar

Times Cited: 60

(Last checked: 2024-09-29 21:01)

View record in Google Scholar

Abstract
It has been suggested that dirty surplus accounting (violation of the clean surplus relationship (CSR)) may result in mismeasurement of performance and value, and that cross-country variation in dirty surplus accounting may cause particular problems for international comparisons. Using articulated data that are largely hand-collected, we evaluate the potential impact of dirty surplus accounting in France, Germany, the UK and the US for the period 1993-2001. First, we report summary statistics on dirty surplus accounting flows. These indicate that distributions of dirty surplus flows are often not centred on zero, and that there is significant cross-country variation in such flows. Then, we use a measure of multi-period abnormal performance to document the bias and inaccuracy, and cross-country variation therein, that would have arisen from omitting dirty surplus flows in measuring performance. Where significant bias and cross-country variation therein arise, they are largely caused by omission of goodwill-related flows, which regulators are eliminating as a dirty surplus item. In contrast, all classes of dirty surplus flow contribute to significant cross-country variation in inaccuracy. Finally, we address the issue of dirty surplus flows from the valuation perspective. We use the residual income valuation model, which relies partly on CSR, to test whether perfect-foresight forecasts of dirty surplus accounting flows explain beginning-of-interval market-to-book ratios after controlling for other inputs to the valuation model. We find little evidence to suggest that omission of dirty surplus flows from residual income value estimates would have caused systematic valuation errors in the period and countries examined.
Acknowledgements
--
Keywords
Valuation,Clean surplus
  • Economics and Business - Social Sciences
Funding Records
Funding Reference Funding Entity
SFRH/BD/6021/2001 Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia
HPRN-CT-2000-00062 Comissão Europeia

With the objective to increase the research activity directed towards the achievement of the United Nations 2030 Sustainable Development Goals, the possibility of associating scientific publications with the Sustainable Development Goals is now available in Ciência-IUL. These are the Sustainable Development Goals identified by the author(s) for this publication. For more detailed information on the Sustainable Development Goals, click here.