Why Do Politicians Intervene in Accounting Regulation? The Role of Ideology and Special Interests
Politicians frequently intervene in the regulation of financial accounting. Evidence from the accounting literature shows that regulatory capture by special interests helps explain these interventions. However, many accounting rules have broad economic or social consequences, such as their effects o...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of accounting research 2020-06, Vol.58 (3), p.589-642 |
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description | Politicians frequently intervene in the regulation of financial accounting. Evidence from the accounting literature shows that regulatory capture by special interests helps explain these interventions. However, many accounting rules have broad economic or social consequences, such as their effects on income distribution or private sector subsidies. The perception of these consequences varies with a politician's ideology. Therefore, if accounting rules produce those consequences, ideology plausibly spills over and explains a politician's stance on the technical accounting issue, beyond special interest pressure. We use two prominent U.S. political debates about fair value accounting and the expensing of employee stock options to disentangle the role of ideology from special interest pressure. In both debates, ideology explains politicians’ involvement at exactly those points when the debate focuses on the economic consequences of accounting regulation (i.e., bank bailouts and top management compensation). Once the debates focus on more technical issues, connections to special interests remain the dominant force. |
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We use two prominent U.S. political debates about fair value accounting and the expensing of employee stock options to disentangle the role of ideology from special interest pressure. In both debates, ideology explains politicians’ involvement at exactly those points when the debate focuses on the economic consequences of accounting regulation (i.e., bank bailouts and top management compensation). 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subjects | Accounting accounting regulation accounting standard setting Bailouts Compensation Fair value financial crisis G01 G28 Ideology Income distribution K22 L51 M40 M41 M48 P16 political economy Politicians Politics Private sector Regulation stock option expensing Subsidies Top management |
title | Why Do Politicians Intervene in Accounting Regulation? The Role of Ideology and Special Interests |
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