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Earnings Management and the Financial Statement Analyst
Author(s) -
Steven C. Hall,
Vipin K Agrawal,
Pushpa Agrawal
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
accounting and finance research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1927-5994
pISSN - 1927-5986
DOI - 10.5430/afr.v2n2p105
Subject(s) - financial statement , financial statement analysis , statement (logic) , business , earnings management , work (physics) , incentive , finance , accounting , statement of changes in financial position , earnings , financial analysis , accounting management , actuarial science , perspective (graphical) , economics , computer science , audit , political science , accounting information system , mechanical engineering , artificial intelligence , law , microeconomics , engineering

This paper reviews earnings management literature from the perspective of the financial statement analyst. The analyst will want to know if the company being analyzed is likely to have manipulated or managed the financial statement numbers, which numbers in the financial statements are most likely to have been managed, and the magnitude of the management.

For several decades researchers have been documenting the manipulation or management of financial statement numbers. They have documented various management devices and a host of contexts that provide incentive to manage. Yet, this review reveals that an individual analyst, working to understand a single company, has little to guide him or her in assessing the probability that the firm under consideration has managed financial statement numbers, which numbers may have been managed, and to what extent they may have been managed. While much work has been done and many papers published, the hard work of making the research useful to the financial statement user remains to be done.

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