Laurence van Lent
| Date of Ph.D. defense: | April 23, 1999 |
| Title of thesis: | Incomplete Contracting Theory in Empirical Accounting Research |
| ISBN: | 90 5668 049 8 |
| Promotor: | Prof.drs. Gijs Bak |
Abstract:
In three essays, the implications of the costly contracting approach in accounting are
investigated. First, the consequences of changing the set of acceptable accounting
techniques in the banking and insurance industry are examined. The regulations imposed
by a government agency alter the contracting equilibrium and cause some contractual
parties to wield more power in the new equilibrium. Second, the contractual function of
accounting earnings, cash flows, and accruals as institutional prices is used to predict their
cross-sectional and dynamic statistical behavior. These properties of accounting numbers
are the outcome of an evolutionary process in which procedures survive only if they are
efficient within the contracting mechanism of firms. Cross-sectional differences in the
properties of these numbers can be explained by the wide variety of contracting
mechanisms employed by firms, each of which face a myriad of contracting partners and
circumstances. Managers are found to use accounting earnings to improve contracting with
outside parties. Third, the organisation of audit firms is examined. The organisational
architecture of audit firms is related to the role of auditing in a firm's contracting process.
The value of the services provided by auditors as adjudicators depends on the degree to
which they are able to guarantee the independence and competence of their certification
procedures. The contractual arrangements of audit firms are explored, primarily focussing
on the changes that occur owing to limiting the legal liability of auditors. The efficiency of the
organisation of the firm is evaluated in terms of the 'fit' between its contractual
arrangements and the demands placed on the audit firm by customers and by owners of
production factors.

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