The Usefulness of Long-Term Accruals |
| |
Authors: | Wayne R. Guay,& Baljit K. Sidhu |
| |
Affiliation: | Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania,;Accounting and Finance at the Australian Graduate School of Management |
| |
Abstract: | Though empirical evidence strongly supports the role of short-term operating accruals in improving operating cash flows as a measure of performance, there is little support or consensus with respect to the effect of long-term accruals. We provide evidence that long-term accruals do reduce timing and matching problems in cash flows. In return-earnings regressions, long-term accruals are found to improve earnings as a measure of firm performance, although not to the same extent as short-term accruals. Further, our analysis highlights differences in economic and statistical properties between short-term and long-term accruals and demonstrates how these differences impede the ability of long-term accruals to improve earnings as a performance measure in a return-earnings context. The incremental explanatory power of long-term accruals is shown to be hampered by the lack of present-value considerations in the existing accounting model, timeliness problems, and measurement error in the indirect method of computing cash flows and accruals. |
| |
Keywords: | |
|
|