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We posit that family firms in China exhibit accounting properties consistent with the prevalence of Type II agency problems. In contrast to the owners of non-family firms, the owners of family firms have more incentives to seek private benefits of control at the expense of minority shareholders...
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A firm's risk-taking behavior can have powerful implications for its employees and shareholders, and even surrounding communities. Corporate risk-taking may associate with firms' affiliation with the government and the incentives of their highest-ranking executives, rather than with strategic...
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We investigate whether accounting expertise on audit committees curtails expectations management to avoid negative earnings surprises. Controlling for the endogenous choice of an accounting expert, we find that firms with an accounting expert serving on the audit committee exhibit: (1) less...
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Net income adjustments resulting from mandatory 2005 IFRS adoption in Europe are value relevant for financial and non-financial firms. Differences in relevance of the aggregate adjustment and adjustments related to several IFRS standards, for financial and non-financial firms and across country...
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Tunneling behavior, which is defined as the transfer of assets and profits out of a firm for the benefit of the firms controlling shareholders, has become the focus of increasing attention in the theoretical and empirical literature. There are some corporate governance procedures, however, that...
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