Keywords
COMPANIESBUSINESS ENVIRONMENTS
TAX
ECONOMIC REFORMS
DIVERSIFICATION
STATE-OWNED ENTERPRISES
CREDIT RATINGS
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
POLITICAL ECONOMY
INVESTOR PROTECTION
SALES GROWTH
INSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENT
LENDERS
LINE OF CREDIT
BUSINESS PERFORMANCE
FINANCIAL INFORMATION
INDEPENDENCE
INVESTORS
MARKETS
GOVERNANCE INDICATORS
EXTERNAL FINANCING
PRICES
ENTERPRISE
PROPERTY RIGHTS
INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY
FINANCING
COST OF CAPITAL
FIRMS
POOR GOVERNANCE
EXCHANGE
COUNTRY FIXED EFFECTS
ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE
BUSINESS LICENSING
COMPANY
LAW
PARTIES
FIRM GROWTH
DISCLOSURE
TAX RATES
FIXED ASSETS
FIRM SIZE
TRANSPARENCY
STATE OWNERSHIP
LEGAL CONSTRAINTS
FINANCIAL INSTITUTION
LOCAL CURRENCY
INSURANCE
TAXATION
CAPITAL INVESTMENTS
INCOME
AGENCY COSTS
GOVERNMENTS
INVESTMENT
CAPITAL STRUCTURE
LINES OF CREDIT
COUNTRY DUMMY
REGULATION
UNDERDEVELOPED MARKETS
FIRM
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
FINANCIAL INTERMEDIATION
FISCAL
CURRENCY
GOVERNMENT
CORPORATE DISCLOSURES
OWNERSHIP STRUCTURE
STATE
MARKET DEVELOPMENT
STATE GOVERNMENT
STARTUPS
SHARE
STATES
PRICE
PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
GOVERNMENT OWNERSHIP
REAL GROWTH RATE
COMPETITION
FINANCIAL HEALTH
INFORMAL SECTOR
FOREIGN COMPANIES
STRONG GOVERNANCE
FINANCIAL OBSTACLES
INVESTMENT DECISIONS
POLITICAL INSTABILITY
SMALL FIRMS
GOVERNMENT EXPROPRIATION
SOCIAL CAPITAL
LEGAL SYSTEM
INDIVIDUAL FIRM
EXPENDITURE
CORPORATE FINANCE
WORLD DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS
RED TAPE
CORRUPTION
TAXES
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
FUTURE
GROWTH RATES
DEPOSIT
TAX COLLECTION
LOAN
FIRM PERFORMANCE
FINANCIAL OBSTACLE
INVESTOR
CLIENT
SUPPLIERS
ENTERPRISES
FINANCIAL CONSTRAINTS
FINANCIAL MARKET
FINANCIAL CRISIS
FUTURE PROSPECTS
BANKING
FOREIGN COMPANY
COMPETITORS
CUSTOMERS
REPUTATION
BANK LENDING
GROWTH RATE
INFORMATION SHARING
SECURITY
LICENSING
INFORMATION ASYMMETRY
FOREIGN OWNERSHIP
FINANCIAL STATEMENT
TAX COLLECTIONS
INITIAL PUBLIC OFFERINGS
CITIZENS
MARKET
SMALL BUSINESS
EXPOSURE
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
GOVERNANCE INDICES
CAPITAL INVESTMENT
GOVERNANCE
FINANCIAL MARKET DEVELOPMENT
FINANCIAL DEVELOPMENT
MANUFACTURING INDUSTRIES
INSTITUTIONAL ENVIRONMENT
PRIVATIZATION
CONSUMER PRICE INDICES
INVESTMENTS
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
EXTERNAL FINANCE
SEE
LIQUIDITY
AUDIT
Full record
Show full item recordOnline Access
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/21989Abstract
This paper studies the effects of voluntary accounting information disclosure through auditing on firm access to finance, exposure to corruption, and sales growth. Relying on a data set of more than 70,000 firms in 121 countries, the analysis finds that disclosure can be a double-edged sword. On the one hand, audited firms exhibit a slightly lower level of financial constraints than unaudited firms. On the other hand, audited firms face a significantly higher level of corruption obstacles. The net effects of voluntary information disclosure on firm growth are negative, which can largely be explained by the fact that most of the countries in the sample are developing countries where institutions are weak. The beneficial effect of disclosure increases as a country’s property rights protection improves. The qualitative results are robust to considerations of the endogeneity of auditing and to alternative measures of corruption and financial constraints. The findings reveal the dark side of voluntary information disclosure: exposing firms to government expropriation where institutions are weak.Date
2015-05Type
Working PaperIdentifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/21989http://hdl.handle.net/10986/21989
Copyright/License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/Collections
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