Abstract
We examine the consequences of real earnings management from an innovation perspective and investigate the patent output of firms likely to be managing earnings through altering their R&D expenditures. We find that R&D cuts related to earnings management lead to fewer patents, less influential patent output, and lower innovative efficiency compared to other R&D cuts. Our results thus suggest that real earnings management may obstruct firms’ technological progress and highlight the potential costs of managerial manipulation of R&D expenditures to alter reported earnings.
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CITATION STYLE
Bereskin, F. L., Hsu, P. H., & Rotenberg, W. (2018). The Real Effects of Real Earnings Management: Evidence from Innovation. Contemporary Accounting Research, 35(1), 525–557. https://doi.org/10.1111/1911-3846.12376
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