The Effect of Uncertainty About Future Accounting Standards on Financial Reporting Quality

Published Online:https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2023.01469

Financial statement preparers frequently trade off the benefit of reporting biased estimates with potential penalties for misreporting. In making this trade-off, preparers often face uncertainty about potential changes to accounting standards (“standard-setting uncertainty”) that could affect the future benefits of biased reporting. Our experiment documents two novel behavioral effects of standard-setting uncertainty on preparers’ estimates. First, standard-setting uncertainty causes preparers to make less biased estimates, even though reduced bias conflicts with their financial incentives in our setting. Second, standard-setting uncertainty increases preparers’ sensitivity to measurement imprecision, which is important for high-quality financial reporting. Although standard-setting uncertainty is often criticized, our theory and results suggest that increased financial reporting quality can be an unanticipated benefit of the uncertainty that naturally arises from a measured and deliberative standard-setting process.

This paper was accepted by Ranjani Krishnan, accounting.

Funding: Research funding was provided by The University of Arizona, The University of Texas at Austin, and Cornell University.

Supplemental Material: The online appendix and data files are available at https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2023.01469.

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