Cita:
Di Meo, F., García Lara, J. M., & Surroca, J. A. (2017). Managerial entrenchment and earnings management. Journal of Accounting and Public Policy, 36 (5), pp. 399-414.
Patrocinador:
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España) Universidad Carlos III de Madrid Comunidad de Madrid
Agradecimientos:
We acknowledge financial contribution from the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation, grants ECO2016-77579 and ECO2013-48328, Ministry of Economy, Industry and Competitiveness, grant ECO2012-34734, and from the CAM-UC3M, grant CCG10-UC3M/HUM-4760 and H2015/HUM-3417, INNCOMCON-CM
Proyecto:
Comunidad de Madrid. CCG10-UC3M/HUM-4760 Gobierno de España. ECO2012-34734 Comunidad de Madrid. S2015/HUM-3417 Gobierno de España. ECO2013-48328-C3-2-P Gobierno de España. ECO2016-77579-C3-2-P
Agency theorists have long contended that managerial entrenchment is detrimental for shareholders,
because it protects managers from the discipline of corporate governance. However, as a
competing hypothesis, we argue that entrenchment can also provide benefAgency theorists have long contended that managerial entrenchment is detrimental for shareholders,
because it protects managers from the discipline of corporate governance. However, as a
competing hypothesis, we argue that entrenchment can also provide benefits for the firm’s
owners: it leads managers to be less myopic in managing earnings to meet short-term financial
reporting goals. Our findings are consistent with this prediction as they suggest that, when there
are incentives to manipulate firms’ performance, entrenched managers are less prone to engage
in earnings management activities that hurt shareholders. Specifically, we focus on firms that just
meet or marginally beat earnings benchmarks and document a negative association between
managerial entrenchment and both the opportunistic use of accruals and the manipulation of real
activities. We also show that earnings management is less detrimental to firm value if the
manager is entrenched. Finally, we find that these effects of entrenchment on earnings management
are only present for firms domiciled in Delaware.[+][-]