Research Output

Research Output

Mandatory Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) Reporting and Financial Reporting Quality: Evidence from a Quasi-Natural Experiment

Kangtao Ye   Professor

Accounting

Research direction:

The Role of Accounting in Firm Value Creation, Labor and Accounting

Lecture course:

Management Accounting, Accounting Research Methodology

Published inJOURNAL OF BUSINESS ETHICS

Abstract:This study examines the impact of mandatory Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) reporting on firms’ financial reporting quality using a quasi-natural experiment in China that mandates a subset of firms to report their CSR activities starting in 2008. We find that mandatory CSR disclosure firms constrain earnings management after the policy. The result is robust to a battery of sensitivity tests and more prominent for firms with lower analyst coverage. Further analyses reveal that upward earnings management by mandatory disclosure firms is more likely to be caught after the policy. The findings suggest that mandatory CSR disclosure mitigates information asymmetry by improving financial reporting quality.

Keywords:Corporate Social Responsibility(CSR), Earnings management, Information asymmetry