Empirical Evidence on the Impact of External Monitoring on Book-Tax Differences

Advances in Accounting, Vol. 28, Issue 2, 2012

Posted: 31 Aug 2012 Last revised: 8 Nov 2018

Date Written: June 30, 2012

Abstract

This study investigates whether institutional ownership levels are associated with levels of and time-series variability in book-tax differences (BTDs). Firm and year fixed-effects regression results suggest that institutional ownership is negatively associated with total, permanent, and temporary BTDs. This effect is driven primarily by permanent BTDs in the pre-SOX era but is consistently present for both permanent and temporary BTDs post-SOX. Further, this negative association is present regardless of firms’ classification as “tax planners” and/or “earnings managers.” Finally, the results provide some evidence that stronger monitoring by the board and audit committee (i.e., a smaller and more independent board and a larger audit committee) is associated with lower permanent BTDs but is not consistently related with total or temporary BTDs. Overall, these findings are consistent with higher levels of institutional ownership equating to more effective monitoring of management, resulting in lower BTDs (both in terms of levels and time-series variability).

Suggested Citation

Moore, Jared A., Empirical Evidence on the Impact of External Monitoring on Book-Tax Differences (June 30, 2012). Advances in Accounting, Vol. 28, Issue 2, 2012, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2139031

Jared A. Moore (Contact Author)

Western Washington University ( email )

Bellingham, WA 98225-9071
United States
360-650-6252 (Phone)

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