Diffusion Theory, National Corruption and IFRS Adoption around the World

Forthcoming, Journal of International Accounting, Auditing & Taxation

52 Pages Posted: 4 Nov 2019

See all articles by Moataz El-Helaly

Moataz El-Helaly

School of Business, The American University in Cairo

Collins G. Ntim

University of Southampton Business School, UK; University of Southampton

Manar Al-Gazzar

affiliation not provided to SSRN

Date Written: October 24, 2019

Abstract

International financial reporting standards (IFRS) have been widely adopted around the world. However, whilst there is a lot of evidence on the economic consequences of IFRS adoption (e.g., foreign direct investments; development of financial markets; financial accounting quality; access to capital; and stock market liquidity), especially at the firm-level, few studies examine the national factors that may impede or facilitate the adoption of IFRS at the country-level. This paper seeks to make two new contributions to the extant international accounting literature by examining the influence of national corruption on the (i) speed and (ii) extent of IFRS adoption around the world. Relying on Rogers’ (1962) theory on diffusions of innovation (i.e., early adopters, early majority, late majority, and laggards), this study uses data relating to 89 non-EU countries, collected over the 2003–2014 period. Our proposition is based on theoretical and empirical evidence that suggests that country-level IFRS adoption decisions are a function of a country’s institutional environment, such as the level of corruption. The findings show that the level (control) of corruption is negatively (positively) associated with a country’s (i) speed and (ii) extent of IFRS adoption.

Suggested Citation

El-Helaly, Moataz and Ntim, Collins G. and Al-Gazzar, Manar, Diffusion Theory, National Corruption and IFRS Adoption around the World (October 24, 2019). Forthcoming, Journal of International Accounting, Auditing & Taxation, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3474863

Moataz El-Helaly (Contact Author)

School of Business, The American University in Cairo ( email )

New Cairo
New Cairo
Egypt
11341 (Fax)

Collins G. Ntim

University of Southampton Business School, UK ( email )

Southampton Business School
Highfield
Southampton, England SO17 IBJ
United Kingdom
+44 (0) 238059 4285 (Phone)
+44 (0) 238059 3844 (Fax)

HOME PAGE: http://www.southampton.ac.uk/business-school/about/staff/cgn1n11.page

University of Southampton ( email )

Southampton, SO17 1BJ
United Kingdom

Manar Al-Gazzar

affiliation not provided to SSRN

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