TY - JOUR
T1 - Chief financial officer power and conditional accounting conservatism
AU - Ferdous, Lutfa Tilat
AU - Atawnah, Nader
AU - Liu, Jia
AU - Zhou, Yifan
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature 2025.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - This study investigates the influence of chief financial officer (CFO) power on firms' accounting conservatism. Drawing on managerial power and self-focus theories, we find a significant negative relationship between CFO power and conditional accounting conservatism. We further demonstrate that the documented relationship is most pronounced in firms with weak corporate governance and high information asymmetry. We explore the mechanism related to CFO compensation, finding that powerful CFOs with high remuneration incentives tend to reduce accounting conservatism, likely to maximize their compensation. Our results remain robust to various sensitivity tests and endogeneity concerns, addressed through the Heckman self-selection model, Difference-in-Differences test, and alternative variable measurements. In additional analysis, we find that stronger social ties between CFOs and CEOs, proxied by age and gender similarity, are associated with lower accounting conservatism. Our study emphasises the motivation of powerful CFOs in influencing the asymmetric recognition of good and bad news and contributes to both managerial power and financial reporting literature and has policy implications.
AB - This study investigates the influence of chief financial officer (CFO) power on firms' accounting conservatism. Drawing on managerial power and self-focus theories, we find a significant negative relationship between CFO power and conditional accounting conservatism. We further demonstrate that the documented relationship is most pronounced in firms with weak corporate governance and high information asymmetry. We explore the mechanism related to CFO compensation, finding that powerful CFOs with high remuneration incentives tend to reduce accounting conservatism, likely to maximize their compensation. Our results remain robust to various sensitivity tests and endogeneity concerns, addressed through the Heckman self-selection model, Difference-in-Differences test, and alternative variable measurements. In additional analysis, we find that stronger social ties between CFOs and CEOs, proxied by age and gender similarity, are associated with lower accounting conservatism. Our study emphasises the motivation of powerful CFOs in influencing the asymmetric recognition of good and bad news and contributes to both managerial power and financial reporting literature and has policy implications.
KW - Accounting conservatism
KW - CFO power
KW - Corporate governance
KW - Information asymmetry
KW - Managerial compensation
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U2 - 10.1007/s11156-025-01396-3
DO - 10.1007/s11156-025-01396-3
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105001172868
SN - 0924-865X
JO - Review of Quantitative Finance and Accounting
JF - Review of Quantitative Finance and Accounting
ER -