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An unprecedented privatisation of mandatory standard-setting: The case of European accounting policy
Authors:Eve Chiapello  Karim Medjad
Institution:1. University of Ottawa, Telfer School of Management, 55 Laurier Avenue East, Ottawa, Ontario K1N 6N5, Canada;2. Université Laval, Faculté des Sciences de l’Administration, 2325 Rue de la Terrasse, Québec, Québec G1V 0A6, Canada;1. Department of Business Taxation, Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf, Universitätsstraße 1, 40225 Düsseldorf, Germany;2. Department of Financial Accounting and Auditing (Treuhandseminar), University of Cologne, Albertus-Magnus-Platz, 50923 Cologne, Germany;1. Department of Accounting and Finance, Lancaster University Management School, Lancaster LA1 4YX, UK;2. University of Exeter Business School, Streatham Court, Rennes Drive, Exeter EX4 4PU, UK
Abstract:The EU-member States have long intended to harmonise their respective accounting rules in order to facilitate the comparison between European companies. This process was brutally accelerated by a 2002 regulation announcing that as of 2005, listed companies would be required to comply with the accounting standards enacted by the IASB (International Accounting Standards Board), a private body which, until then, had no public mandate.After having tried to harmonise internally the respective standards of its members, the EU has thus decided to resort to private subcontracting, an even more puzzling decision when one realizes that at the time, the EU had simply no statutory control means on the IASB.Building on this striking episode of privatisation of the regulatory process, we first examine the structure and governance of the IASB, and the process leading to the transplantation of its norms into EU law. In a second part, we argue that while diverse, the reasons behind such relinquishment of public authority lie primarily within the EU itself. In a third part, we show that in the area of accounting, such transfer of competences went well beyond known forms of delegation to private sector. In a final part, we discuss the subsequent—and so far successful attempt of the EU to reassert its authority as well as its agenda in this area.
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