The accounting quality of the incurred versus expected credit loss allowances
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University of Pretoria
Abstract
The impairment model in International Accounting Standard 39 Financial Instruments:
Recognition and Measurement (IAS 39) is an incurred credit losses (ICL) model, and
it was replaced by an expected credit losses (ECL) model under International Financial
Reporting Standard 9 Financial Instruments (IFRS 9). The ECL model incorporates
greater management discretion, but the impact of this on accounting quality in general,
and on credit losses in particular, is uncertain.
Samples in existing literature on this topic have been dominated by code law countries.
Legal systems govern the legal rules which ultimately influence financial markets (La
Porta, Lopez-de-Silanes, Shleifer & Vishny, 2000). Accounting quality often differs
between code law and common law countries, as legal systems have a direct impact
on various elements of financial markets, management discretion, management
incentives, laws and investor protection in a country. Thus, the impact of the change
from the ICL model to the ECL model under the different legal and institutional
environments in common law countries is unclear. This study therefore investigates
the impact of the shift from an ICL model to an ECL model on accounting quality of
listed banks in four common law countries, namely Australia, Canada, South Africa
and the United Kingdom, and develops theoretical expectations specific for these
countries. It focuses on three measures of accounting quality: income smoothing,
timely loss recognition, and value relevance. In line with theoretical expectations,
findings from a multivariate regression approach show that overall, accounting quality
has not changed or that, at best, it has only improved slightly in common law countries
since the adoption of the ECL model.
This study also challenges the theoretical argument that stage 3 credit losses under
IFRS 9 are the equivalent of the ICL model under IAS 39. The findings provide
empirical evidence that the accounting properties of stage 3 impairments in the ECL
model are not the same as in the ICL model. Furthermore, additional analyses of the
stages of the ECL model provide preliminary evidence of the drivers behind changing
accounting quality metrics and the differences in accounting quality between the
stages.
The sample years used for the post-ECL implementation period are limited. Future
researchers may therefore wish to repeat the study when data are available for more
sample years, as the limited sample period precludes the potential impact of a learning
effect. The findings of the current study may be of interest to standard setters,
academics, regulators, preparers of financial statements, investors, and other
participants in the banking industry.
Description
Thesis (PhD Accounting Sciences)--University of Pretoria, 2024.
Keywords
UCTD, Expected credit losses, Incurred credit losses, Accounting quality, Income smoothing, Timely loss recognition, Value relevance
Sustainable Development Goals
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