Published 2018 | Version v1
Dissertation Open

The Effects of Financial-Reporting Regulation on Market-Wide Resource Allocation

  • 1. University of Chicago

Contributors

Description

I investigate the impact of mandatory reporting and auditing of firms' financial statements on industry-wide resource allocation. Using size-based reporting and auditing requirements for limited liability firms in 26 European countries, I document reporting regulation, mandating a greater share of firms in an industry to disclose a full set of financial statements, fosters a competitive and dispersed type of resource allocation in product and capital markets, but does not unambiguously improve the efficiency of resource allocation. By contrast, I find auditing regulation, mandating a greater share of firms to obtain a financial-statement audit, imposes a net fixed cost of operating on firms, deterring entry of smaller firms. I do not find any other effects of auditing regulation on industry-wide resource allocation in my setting. My findings suggest reporting regulation substitutes a transactional type of resource allocation based on public information for a relational one based on private information. This substitution, however, fails to spur economic growth. With respect to firms' auditing, my findings suggest it lacks significant industry-wide externalities compensating for firms' costs of mandatory auditing.

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Other
oai:knowledge.uchicago.edu:342

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Booth School of Business
Department(s)
Booth School of Business Dissertations