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A Signaling Theory of Accounting Conservatism


Richard Zhe Wang


Eastern Illinois University

Ciaran Ó Hogartaigh


University College Dublin (UCD) - College of Business and Law

Tony Van Zijl


Victoria University of Wellington - Faculty of Commerce and Administration

June 6, 2009


Abstract:     
In this paper, we offer a new theory for the economic demand of accounting conservatism, which emphasizes the signaling role of conservatism in a debt market with asymmetric information. In our model, accounting conservatism serves as a signal by which the borrower firm can convey their private information about its own operating risk to the lenders, prior to signing the debt contract. In developing this signaling theory of conservatism, our paper achieves two major outcomes: (1) we analytically derive four basic properties of accounting conservatism, based on Basu's (1997) asymmetric timeliness of earnings definition of conservatism; (2) we develop a signaling model of the debt market, where accounting conservatism serves as a signaling device.

Our conservatism-signaling model has a dominant separating equilibrium, in which the low risk firms choose a high level of conservatism and the high risk firms choose a low (zero) level of conservatism. We show that this is the only stable equilibrium in our model that can pass Cho and Kreps's Intuitive Criterion (1987). Our results indicate that conservatism benefits the debt market by reducing the information asymmetry in the debt market.

Number of Pages in PDF File: 50

Keywords: accounting conservatism, Basu, asymmetric timeliness, risk, signaling, game theory

JEL Classification: G82, G30, M41

working papers series


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Date posted: June 8, 2009 ; Last revised: May 20, 2011

Suggested Citation

Wang, Richard Zhe, Ó Hogartaigh, Ciaran and Van Zijl, Tony, A Signaling Theory of Accounting Conservatism (June 6, 2009). Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1415305 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1415305

Contact Information

Richard Zhe Wang (Contact Author)
Eastern Illinois University ( email )
Charleston, IL 61920-3099
United States
Ciaran Ó Hogartaigh
University College Dublin (UCD) - College of Business and Law ( email )
Dublin
Ireland
+353-1-7164856 (Phone)
Tony Van Zijl
Victoria University of Wellington - Faculty of Commerce and Administration ( email )
RH 606, Pipitea Campus, 6th Floor, Rutherford Hous
23 Lambton Quay
Wellington
Australia
Feedback to SSRN (Beta)


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