Rotman Management

The Economic Usefulness of Accounting

FACULTY FOCUS Ole-Kristian Hope, Professor of Accounting, Rotman School of Management

In a recent paper, you examined the ‘economic usefulness’ of accounting for private firms. What did you find?

For some privately-held firms, the costs of providing high-quality, accrual-based financial statements outweigh the benefits of accommodating the demands of their stakeholders — who may rely more on cash flows or have direct access to management. But for other private firms, greater stakeholder demand for their financial information necessitates highquality accounting.

Using a large sample of U.S. private firms, we confirmed that accrual quality in private firms is associated with the ability of accruals to predict future cash flows; next, we found that accrual quality increases with the demand for monitoring by equity investors, lenders and suppliers. Overall, our evidence suggests that for private U.S. firms, accrual quality is useful, has economic consequences, and varies predictably with certain firm characteristics.

Why did you focus on private firms?

I’ve been interested in private firms and their accounting issues for some because we always hear in the media about publicly-listed companies. Yet, if you aggregate the economic activity in private firms, they have, in total, four times as many employees; three times the total revenue; and twice as much in total assets and scale as publicly-listed companies.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Rotman Management

Rotman Management13 min read
ESG RISK: What’s on Your Radar?
IN THE CURRENT ENVIRONMENT, ESG risks pose one of the greatest threats to public companies’ abilities to deliver predictable results. A recent Bank of America study calculated that 24 ESG incidents in the period 2014–2019 cost U.S. public companies o
Rotman Management4 min read
Sustainability Tools: The Regenerative Compass
We are well into what climate experts are calling ‘the decisive decade’ for sustainability and Net Zero commitments. And yet, significant action and momentum are missing in most organizations. Even in companies that have made bold commitments for 203
Rotman Management8 min read
Management: Philosophy in Action
LOOKING BACK OVER MY CAREER, I sometimes I think of a roller-coaster as an analogy for the relative arbitrariness of a career: there are ups and downs, not necessarily related to personal effort or work. Today’s success does not guarantee tomorrow’s

Related Books & Audiobooks