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The Role of Financial Reporting in Corporate Governance

Historical Developments in the Accountancy Profession, Financial Reporting, and Accounting Theory

ISBN: 978-1-80117-805-1, eISBN: 978-1-80117-804-4

Publication date: 15 November 2021

Abstract

At a congress of the European Accounting Association, held more than 20 years ago, the President of the Belgian Institute of Registered Auditors, Paul Behets (1998), delivered a plenary speech with the title: Are Financial Statements an Obsolete Product? Behets’ answer was “no,” that financial statements are an essential component of the financial reporting system that is necessary for the proper functioning of capital markets. In this chapter, we reach a similar conclusion, but for somewhat different reasons. A central argument of this chapter is that an effective system of corporate governance requires an effective financial reporting system, and that an effective financial reporting system requires a well-ordered system of financial accounting. Behet’s speech provides evidence that financial reporting, and the role of traditional audited financial statements within financial reporting, have undergone a period of change. The future of financial reporting is difficult to predict with any degree of certainty, but it is likely to be a future marked by change. One possible path for change was suggested by Elliot (1994), who indicated that the accepted model of financial reporting might be replaced by electronic information systems providing financial and other forms of information about companies, not necessarily in the form of audited financial statements, which would be widely available via the Internet. Under this scenario, a decision-maker could decide on the types of information that were important to them, and then arrange the information in the ways they see fit. Financial reports in their present form (i.e., audited financial statements) might become obsolete as users decide individually on the types of information that are important to them. If this scenario came to pass, the question arises whether there would be a continuing need for financial reports as presently constituted. It is the argument of this chapter that, even if it is technologically feasible for financial reports to be changed from their present form, there would still be a need for financial reports as an important component of corporate governance.

Citation

Baker, C.R. and Persson, M.E. (2021), "The Role of Financial Reporting in Corporate Governance", Baker, C.R. and Persson, M.E. (Ed.) Historical Developments in the Accountancy Profession, Financial Reporting, and Accounting Theory (Studies in the Development of Accounting Thought, Vol. 25), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 67-80. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1479-350420210000025005

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022 C. Richard Baker and Martin E. Persson