The Measurement of Harmonisation and the Comparability of Financial Statement Items: Within-Country and Between-Country Effects

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Abstract

This paper reports on an analysis of accounting policy choices made by European companies with an international shareholding. The accounting policies analysed in depth in this paper comprise the treatment of goodwill and accounting for deferred taxation. In the paper, the van der Tas comparability index is developed by separating the index into two components relating to the within-country (intra-national) effects of domestic standardisation and the between-country (international) effects of harmonisation. It is shown in this paper that the value of the index may be interpreted as the probability that two companies selected at random will report financial information that is comparable, and that the lowest level of comparability exists when the accounting methods are assumed to be distributed equiprobably over the companies, the outcome of a random selection of accounting policies. The paper also considers the problems of non-disclosure, and a comprehensive ‘disclosure-adjusted’ comparability index is proposed. © 1995, Taylor & Francis Group, LLC. All rights reserved.

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Archer, S., Delvaille, P., & McLeay, S. (1995). The Measurement of Harmonisation and the Comparability of Financial Statement Items: Within-Country and Between-Country Effects. Accounting and Business Research, 25(98), 67–80. https://doi.org/10.1080/00014788.1995.9729930

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