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The Lahore Journal of Economics

19 : 2 (Winter 2014): pp. 2770

The Impact of Corporate Governance and Ownership


Structure on Earnings Management Practices: Evidence from
Listed Companies in Pakistan
Kamran* and Attaullah Shah**
Abstract
This study analyzes the impact of corporate governance and ownership
structure on earnings management for a sample of 372 firms listed on the Karachi
Stock Exchange over the period 200310. We estimate discretionary accruals using
four well-known models: Jones (1991); Dechow, Sloan, and Sweeney (1995); Kasznik
(1999); and Kothari, Leone, and Wasley (2005). The results indicate that
discretionary accruals increase monotonically with the ownership percentage of a
firms directors, their spouses, children, and other family members. This supports the
view that managers who are more entrenched in a firm can more easily influence
corporate decisions and accounting figures in a way that may serve their interests.
This finding is consistent with prior research evidence on the role of dominant
directors in expropriating external minority shareholders in Pakistan. Further, our
results indicate that institutional investors play a significant role in constraining
earnings management practices. We do not find any evidence that CEO duality, the
size of the auditing firm, the number of members on the board of directors, and
ownership concentration influence discretionary accruals. Among the control
variables, we find that firms that are more profitable, are growing, or have higher
leverage actively manage their earnings, while earnings management decreases with
the age of the firm. The results are robust to several alternative specifications.
Keywords: Corporate governance, earnings management, ownership
structure, discretionary accruals, KSE, Pakistan.
JEL classification: G32, G3, M4.
1. Introduction
Corporate governance refers to the set of mechanisms through
which outside investors protect themselves against expropriation by the
insiders (La Porta, Lpez-de-Silanes, Shleifer, & Vishny, 2000), where
insiders include the controlling shareholders and management. The
*

Institute of Management Sciences, Peshawar, Pakistan.


Assistant Professor of Finance, Institute of Management Sciences, Peshawar, Pakistan.

**

Electronic copy available at: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2552570

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Kamran and Attaullah Shah

main objective of corporate governance is to protect the rights of


stockholders and creditors and to ensure that the interests of insiders and
outsiders converge. Good corporate governance can contribute to a
countrys social and economic development by enabling corporations to
perform better.
The 1997 Asian financial crisis, which exposed weak governance in
many corporations, made the business community more sensitive to the
need to examine the effectiveness of corporate governance systems within
firms. In the following years, as increasing instances of fraud surfaced in
the financial statements of several large corporations such as Enron,
WorldCom, Tyco International, Aldelphia, Parmalat, the Taj Company and,
very recently, the Olympus Corporation, many countries drafted codes of
corporate governance to improve their corporate governance mechanisms.
One of the key tasks of a corporate governance structure is to make sure
that financial reporting procedures are transparent.
Earnings management refers to attempts by firm managers to
manipulate accounting figures, thereby making their financial statements
less transparent. While there is no consensus on the definition of earnings
management practices (Beneish, 2001), a widely accepted definition by Healy
and Wahlen (1999) is that earnings management happens when managers
use judgment in financial reporting to either deceive some stakeholders
about the underlying economic performance of the firm or to manipulate
contractual outcomes that rely on reported accounting numbers.
Earnings management entails purposeful involvement in a firms
external financial reporting procedures with the intention of personal
gain (Schipper, 1989). It is legal if the described profits are modified in
line with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), for example,
changing the procedure for inventory estimation and depreciation.
Earnings management becomes fraudulent, however, when it goes
beyond GAAP, such as accelerating income acknowledgment and
deferring cost recognition (Yang, Chun, & Shamsher, 2009).
Financial statements present important information to outside firm
stakeholders. Investors heavy reliance on financial data gives managers a
strong incentive to alter financial statements for their own benefit. Such
incentives may stem from career security, contractual obligations between
outside stakeholders and managers, personal concerns in the existence of
the compensation system, or the need to meet target earnings and market
expectations (Healy & Wahlen, 1999). Earnings management can take

Electronic copy available at: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2552570

Impact of Corporate Governance and Ownership on Earnings Management

29

numerous forms, for example, structuring certain revenues, expenses, and


transactions; altering accounting measures; and accruals management.
Among these, accruals management is harmful to the integrity of financial
information because shareholders are often ignorant of the scope of such
accruals (Mitra, 2002).
Corporations generally set annual earnings targets, which they
might exceed or fall short of in different cases. For this purpose, managers
use accruals to manage actual earnings and present their investors with a
sound picture of the firms targets achieved. However, total accruals do
not necessarily represent earnings management. Rather, they are divided
into discretionary and nondiscretionary accruals where only the former
for example, income-increasing and income-decreasing discretionary
accrualsreflect earnings management. Investors are often ignorant of
such actions and are thus vulnerable to making ineffective decisions
based on manipulated information.
In 1999, the Organization for Economic Co-operation and
Development developed a set of basic criteria for judging a countrys
corporate governance performance. The Securities and Exchange
Commission of Pakistan (SECP) issued the Pakistani Code of Corporate
Governance (PCCG) in March 2002 for the purpose of improving
corporate governance practices and reducing the trust deficit among the
business community, owners, and agents. The code consists of 47 clauses
and sub-clauses, each covering some aspect of corporate governance
standards. In conjunction with the Economic Affairs Division and UNDP,
the code was implemented the same year.
In order to examine corporate governance practices in Pakistan,
the SECP and International Financial Corporation conducted a survey in
2007, which revealed the need to create awareness of corporate
governance among boards of directors. The Karachi Stock Exchange
(KSE) undertook a similar initiative and set up a board to monitor firms
compliance with the PCCG. In the last two years, the SECP has increased
its monitoring of corporations to enhance the quality of their disclosures.
Despite such steps, Pakistans corporate governance environment is
still not mature enough and insider-controlled businesses remain common
(Javid & Iqbal, 2008). Existing studies show that insider-controlling
shareholders play a dominant role in many corporate decisions. Abdullah,
Shah, Iqbal, and Gohar (2011) investigate whether corporate dividend
payouts in Pakistan are determined by minimizing the transaction costs of

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Kamran and Attaullah Shah

external finance or by the relative power of insider-controlling


shareholders and external shareholders. The authors consider nonpayment
of dividends an indication of the expropriation of external minority
shareholders. They conclude that, in the absence of powerful external
shareholders, insider-controlled firms will not willingly pay out dividends.
This evidence suggests that insider-controlled businesses have the
potential to expropriate minority shareholders.
Does the market see such businesses negatively? Abdullah, Shah,
and Khan (2012) study 183 firms listed on the KSE between 2003 and 2008
and find that insider-controlled firms perform poorly in terms of marketas well as accounting-based measures. This provides the rationale for the
present study to develop and test several hypotheses related to
ownership structure and earnings management in Pakistan. We argue
that the presence of insider-controlled businesses should result in a
higher incidence of earnings management. Control over decision rights
gives owner-managers enough power to expropriate external minority
shareholders in different ways, while earnings management can serve as
an effective tool to this end.
Few studies have focused on assessing the relationship between
earnings management and corporate governance and ownership
structure in Pakistans context. Shah, Zafar, and Durrani (2009), who
investigate the relationship between board composition and earnings
management for 120 companies listed on the KSE between 2003 and 2007,
fail to find any significant association between these variables. However,
their study includes only two variables and does not consider other
important board composition and control variables.
Shah, Butt, and Hassan (2009) investigate the association between
earnings management practices and corporate governance mechanisms.
Their sample of 53 firms listed on the KSE-100 index in 2006 yields
significant results. The positive association between corporate governance
and earnings management is surprising, but may be explained by the fact
that (i) the sample period is only a year long, and (ii) Pakistani firms were
in transition after the promulgation of the PCCG in 2002, which then
brought about a tendency to boost discretionary accruals as a risk
aversion measure.
The present study aims to include all nonfinancial firms listed on
the KSE over the period 200310 to assess the impact of ownership
structure and corporate governance on earnings management. We

Impact of Corporate Governance and Ownership on Earnings Management

31

include several important explanatory variables such as ownership


concentration, institutional ownership, managerial ownership, audit
quality, chief executive officer (CEO) duality, and board size alongside an
extensive set of control variables.
The study contributes to the literature on several counts. First, it
provides evidence on earnings management practices for a country where
insider-controlled firms are ubiquitous. Such firms are characterized by a
different set of agency problems compared to widely held firms. Unlike the
latter, where the conflict of interest is between managers and shareholders,
insider-controlled firms feature a conflict of interest between majority and
minority shareholders. Dominant insiders can easily manipulate
accounting figures in their favor. This makes it relevant to test whether
governance mechanisms to control earnings management practices are
effective in the presence of dominant corporate insiders. We use the
percentage of shares owned by a firms directors, their spouses, children,
and other family members as a proxy for insider dominance.
Second, unlike other Pakistan-based studies, we use four different
models to calculate discretionary accruals as a proxy for earnings
management: (i) Jones (1991), (ii) Dechow, Sloan, and Sweeney (1995), (iii)
Kasznik (1999), and (iv) Kothari, Leone, and Wasley (2005). The existing
literature on discretionary accruals does not conclusively support any one
specific model. Aaker and Gjesdal (2010) argue that the detection of
earnings management through financial statements often requires jointly
testing accrual models and earnings management; relying on one model
alone can yield misleading results. Apart from employing four of the most
widely used models for detecting earnings management, we also calculate
their average value of discretionary accruals as a robustness check.
Third, compared to existing studies on Pakistan,1 we use a larger
dataset in terms of sample period and number of firms. Where our
sample comprises 370 firms between 2003 and 2010, other studies have
used data for 120 firms or fewer and for a period of up to five years.
The rest of the study is organized as follows. Section 2 discusses
the literature on earnings management and the role of ownership
structure in association with corporate governance; this leads to the
development of our hypotheses. Section 3 describes the data and

As mentioned above, only two other studies have examined corporate governance and earnings
management in Pakistan: Shah, Zafar et al. (2009) and Shah, Butt et al. (2009).

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Kamran and Attaullah Shah

methodology of the study, followed by an analysis of the results in


Section 4. Section 5 presents a conclusion and policy implications.
2. Literature Review
While there is no consensus on the impact of corporate
governance on earnings management (Siregar & Utama, 2008), several
studies have investigated the relationship between the two variables and,
in most cases, found a significant association (see, for example, Saleh,
Iskandar, & Rahmat, 2005; Shen & Chih, 2007; Liu & Lu, 2007; Lo, Wong,
& Firth, 2010; Bekiris & Doukakis, 2011; Chen, Elder, & Hsieh, 2007).
Karamanou and Vafeas (2005) examine the relationship between
corporate boards, audit committees, and earnings management and
present results that are consistent with the literature.
Corporate ownership structure can potentially affect the
monitoring mechanisms used to control agency costs and earnings
management activities (Siregar & Utama, 2008). Javid and Iqbal (2008) note
that, in Pakistan, company ownership is commonly concentrated in the
hands of a few large stockholders. They also argue that, in most emerging
markets (such as Pakistan), closely held firmscontrolled by families, the
state, or financial institutionstend to dominate the corporate scenario.
Different proxies can be used to gauge ownership structure.
Garca-Meca and Ballesta (2009), for example, use ownership
concentration, institutional ownership, and managerial ownership to
measure ownership structure and investigate its relationship with
earnings management. Cornett, Marcus, and Tehranian (2008) use
institutional and managerial ownership as proxies for ownership
structure. In this study, we use ownership concentration, institutional
ownership, and managerial ownership to measure ownership structure,
while CEO duality, audit quality, and board size are used as proxies for
board characteristics. The following sections discuss each proxy and its
association with earnings management.
2.1. Institutional Ownership and Earnings Management
Institutional investors have a strong incentive to gather information
about the corporations in which they have invested or intend to invest.
Further, such motivation grows with the level of investment involved.
Large ownership is likely to spur institutions to actively observe any
manipulation of earnings and relevant policy decisions (Mitra, 2002).

Impact of Corporate Governance and Ownership on Earnings Management

33

There are two schools of thought concerning the role of


institutional ownership in deterring earnings management. In the first
view, institutional investors have both the power and incentive to restrict
opportunistic behavior by executives in the form of earnings
management practices. In the second view, institutional investors are
often more concerned with short-term returns and are not interested in
controlling managers: they would rather sell their stakes than monitor or
remove incompetent management.
Chung, Firth, and Kim (2002) argue that large institutional
shareholders with a substantial stake can deter earnings management
because they have the incentive and resources to monitor it. They also
note that, under the GAAP rules, managers may be tempted to transfer
profits from one accounting period to the next in order to take advantage
of bonuses or promotions by using reported income-increasing or
decreasing accruals. Institutional investors are often long-term investors
and discourage earnings management. Their advanced level of
knowledge and experience, coupled with their substantial stake in a
company, leads to decreasing information asymmetry between owners
and agents, making it harder for the latter to manipulate earnings (AlFayoumi, Abuzayed, & Alexander, 2010).
High levels of institutional ownership and low levels of company
performance can deter managers incentives to employ income-increasing
discretionary accruals (Chung et al., 2002). This is because, in most cases,
institutional investors are long-term investors who want to maximize
company performance and share value rather than encourage earnings
management. Bushee (1998) provides evidence that institutional investors
create fewer incentives for management to cut R&D expenditure in order
to attain short-term targets and play a key role in monitoring
management behavior. Other studies such as Majumdar and Nagarajan
(1997), Cheng and Reitenga (2000), and Rajgopal and Venkatachalam
(1997) present results that are consistent with this view.
In the second view, institutional investors are short-term-oriented,
which some studies refer to as being transient or myopic: such owners
focus primarily on current rather than long-term earnings (Bushee, 2001).
They engage less in monitoring the management, and if they sense
something is amiss, they would rather sell their shares than remove or
monitor inefficient managers (Coffee, 1991).

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Kamran and Attaullah Shah

Bhide (1993) notes that institutional owners involvement in


corporate governance is bound to be inactive either because of their
transient or fragmented ownership. Transient institutional owners may
trade off control for liquidity (Coffee, 1991). Hsu and Koh (2005) investigate
the impact of long-term and short-term institutional ownership on the
degree of earnings management in Australian corporations. Their results
provide evidence that long-term institutional and transient owners can coexist and have different impacts on earnings management. Transitory
institutional owners are associated with income-increasing accruals, while
long-term institutional owners are likely to deter this activity.
Charitou, Lambertides, and Trigeorgis (2007) examine managers
earnings behavior in times of financial distress, using a sample of 859 US
firms that filed for bankruptcy from 1986 to 2004. They show that such
companies management with higher (lower) institutional ownership is
less (more) likely to engage in downward earnings management,
respectively. Roodposhti and Chashmi (2011) find a significant positive
relationship between earnings management and institutional ownership
for a sample of firms in Iran.
In light of the above discussion, we hypothesize that institutional
ownership has a negative effect on earnings management (H1). To
account for the transient nature of intuitional investors, we test this
hypothesis using the 2SLS regression technique.
2.2. Managerial Ownership and Earnings Management
While the division of control and ownership in corporations is now
common in the modern business environment, it also creates a severe
conflict of interest between owners and agents. Managers who possess
power may have an incentive to use firm resources for their own benefit
and expropriate wealth in terms of bonuses or other benefits at the cost of
shareholders (Beasley, 1996; Fama, 1980). Berle and Means (1932) argue
that, whenever a little equity is held by the managers of a firm whose
owners are scattered, then the former will use the firms resources for their
own benefit rather than for the benefit of their shareholders. Legally,
managers are bound to utilize resources effectively and efficiently in order
to maximize shareholders wealth. However, as rational actors, managers
tend to make choices that mostly benefit them (Eccles, 2001).
What happens when we increase the ownership stake of managers
in a firm? The answer is not straightforward, but can be addressed using

Impact of Corporate Governance and Ownership on Earnings Management

35

two hypotheses: (i) alignment of interest and (ii) entrenchment. The


alignment-of-interest hypothesis states that, when managers ownership
stake in a firm increases, it reduces the agency conflict between
shareholders and managers (Jensen & Meckling, 1976). This should, in
turn, reduce the scope for opportunistic behavior on the part of managers.
Consistent with this idea, Demsetz and Lehn (1985) find a positive
association between managerial ownership and firm performance.
The entrenchment hypothesis states that ownership stakes beyond
a certain level put managers in a dominant position, which they can use
to exploit external minority shareholders (Morck, Shleifer, & Vishny,
1988). Teshima and Shuto (2008), who investigate the association between
managerial ownership and earnings management in Japanese firms, have
developed a theoretical model according to which earnings management
incentives are lower when the level of managerial ownership is either low
or high; incentives are higher at an intermediate level of managerial
ownership. Thus, there is a cubical or nonlinear relationship between
earnings management and managerial ownership. Correspondingly,
managerial ownership is significantly and negatively associated with
discretionary accruals at low and high levels, and positively associated
with discretionary accruals at an intermediate level. Warfield, Wild, and
Wild (1995) and Banderlipe (2009) find an inverse association between
earnings management and managerial ownership.
In light of the existing evidence on the role of insiders dominance
in Pakistan,2 we expect the entrenchment hypothesis to hold strongly.
Specifically, we expect that higher levels of managerial ownership give
managers enough power to engage in earnings management in the form of
bonuses, perks, and perquisites, which they are in a position to approve in
their favor. Also, at higher levels of ownership, managers benefit equally
from any improvement in operational profitability. Thus, owner-managers
will have high incentive to derive all possible benefits from earnings
management, such as obtaining external finance at a lower cost (Dechow,
Sloan, & Sweeney, 1996). Thus, we hypothesize that managerial ownership
is positively associated with earnings management (H2).
2.3. Ownership Concentration and Earnings Management
Shleifer and Vishny (1997) suggest that concentrated ownership has
comparatively large advantages in developing countries, where property
2

Insider-controlled firms pay smaller dividends and usually have lower market share prices
(Abdullah et al., 2011; Abdullah et al., 2012).

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Kamran and Attaullah Shah

rights are not well defined and protected by legal systems. La Porta, Lpezde-Silanes, Shleifer, and Vishny (1999) confirm this proposition: using the
ownership concentration of the three largest shareholders of the biggest
companies in countries around the world, they find that weak legal and
institutional environments (laws and implementations) are linked with
extremely concentrated company ownership.
Ownership concentration has two alternative effects on earnings
management: alignment and entrenchment. According to the alignment
impact, owners in a concentrated ownership structure have more
incentive to monitor management because it costs less to do so than the
anticipated advantages of their large stakes in the company. Ramsay and
Blair (1993) suggest that concentrated ownership provides sufficient
incentive to larger shareholders to monitor management. Their greater
voting power allows them to affect the board-of-directors composition
and its decisions (Persons, 2006).
The alignment impact decreases the controlling owners incentive
to expropriate firms for their personal benefit and to minimize earnings
management practices in order to secure firms and their own future (Fan &
Wong, 2002). Consistent with this view, Roodposhti and Chashmi (2011),
Alves (2012), and Abdoli (2011) find a significant and inverse association
between earnings management practices and ownership concentration.
In contrast to this, Bebchuk (1994) and Stiglitz (1985) suggest that
concentrated ownership might inversely influence the value of the firm,
given the capacity of larger shareholders to exploit their dominant
position at the cost of minority stockholders. Liu and Lu (2007) argue that
the expropriation of minority shareholders by majority shareholders is
directly associated with the extent of the latters power in a firm. Their
study finds a positive and significant association between the level of
ownership concentration and earnings management practices.
Fan and Wong (2002) and Claessens, Djankov, and Lang (2000)
provide empirical evidence that poor governance and lack of fair
financial information disclosure are the main results of concentrated
ownership in Asian corporations. Wang (2006) investigates the
association between the presence of concentrated owners and the
incidence of fraud, and finds that high ownership concentration is linked
with a higher likelihood of fraud and a tendency to commit fraud. Choi,
Jeon, and Park (2004) and Kim and Yoon (2008) also document a positive
association between ownership concentration and earnings management.

Impact of Corporate Governance and Ownership on Earnings Management

37

Given the corporate landscape in Pakistan where family


businesses are common, concentrated ownership can imply the
concentration of shares in the hands of a few family membersmaking
the entrenchment hypothesis even more relevant. Thus, we hypothesize
that there is a positive relationship between ownership concentration and
earnings management (H3).
2.4. Audit Quality and Earnings Management
Auditors play a key role in their clients disclosure practices and
procedures. Concerns regarding the quality of financial information and its
association with the quality of the auditing process have grown with time,
given the rising incidence of fraud in big businesses, failures, and litigation
(Chambers, 1999; Tie, 1999). The auditing procedure serves as an
investigation tool that can constrain managers incentive to influence a
firms reported earnings (Wallace, 1980). Thus, auditing may reduce
misreporting and mispricing in financial reporting and control managerial
incentives and discretion with respect to earnings management.
DeAngelo (1981) characterizes audit quality as the mutual
likelihood of reporting and detecting errors in a companys financial
statements; this depends partially on the auditors independence.
External quality auditors are linked with financial reports featuring fewer
earnings manipulation practices. Larger auditing firms have more
incentive to preserve their reputation as well as more resources, which
allows them to perform better auditing services than smaller auditors
(Palmrose, 1988).
There are several proxies for measuring audit quality, including
the size of the auditing firm (DeAngelo, 1981), the auditors tenure with
its clients (Johnson, Khurana, & Reynolds, 2002), and the presence of an
industry-specific auditor. However, there is sufficient evidence that the
size of the auditing firm is a good proxy for audit quality (see Francis,
Maydew, & Sparks, 1999; Becker, DeFond, Jiambalvo, & Subramanyam,
1998; Chia, Lapsley, & Lee, 2007). Consistent with the literature, we
hypothesize that there is a negative relationship between audit quality
and earnings management (H4).
2.5. CEO Duality and Earnings Management
When the same person serves as both a firms CEO and board
chairperson, we refer to this as CEO duality. Under Clause VI of the

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Kamran and Attaullah Shah

revised PCCG 2002,3 the SECP recommends a division of roles between


board chairperson and CEO to avoid substantial concentration of control.
However, given that 32 percent of the sample firms feature CEO duality,
we consider it to be a significant variable.
Previous studies that have investigated CEO duality include Peng,
Zhang, and Li (2007), and Dalton, Daily, Ellstrand, and Johnson (1998).
The impartiality and quality of board control is generally perceived to
suffer if the CEO is also the board chairperson. The centralization of
authority in a firm may tempt the CEO to exercise excessive influence
over the board, such as in managing meetings, setting board agendas,
and controlling the stream of information made available to board
members (Persons, 2006).
The literature puts forward two views on the role of CEO duality:
the agency theory and stewardship theory (Abdul Rahman & Haniffa,
2005). Under the agency theory, it is essential that these two roles are kept
separate to ensure effectual board control over the firms managers: this is
provided through crosschecks to minimize any combative strategies by
the CEO (Hashim & Devi, 2008). When one person holds two key
positions, they are more likely to follow policies that benefit them instead
of all the firms shareholders. Zulkafli, Abdul-Samad, and Ismail (2005)
support this view and show that a division of power between the CEO
and board chair permits effective monitoring via the firms board.
Anderson, Mansi, and Reeb (2003) indicate that the reliability of
information on accounting earnings is positively associated with the
division of roles between board chair and CEO. Firms that commit fraud
are more likely to have CEOs who also chair the board (CEO duality)
(Chen, Firth, Gao, & Rui, 2006). Worrell, Nemec, and Davidson (1997)
document an inverse association between firm performance and CEO
duality, which is consistent with the agency theory. Other studies,
however, find no evidence of an association between these variables (see
Daily & Dalton, 1997; Peasnell, Pope, & Young, 2000a; Bdard, Chtourou,
& Courteau, 2004; Kao & Chen, 2004; Xie, Davidson, & DaDalt, 2003;
Rahman & Ali, 2006).
Contrary to the above view, the stewardship theory states that
combining the two roles of CEO and board chair enhances decisionmaking and enables strategic vision, allowing the chair/CEO to lead the
3

The PCCG was revised in 2012 and is available at www.secp.gov.pk

Impact of Corporate Governance and Ownership on Earnings Management

39

board toward the firms goals and objectives with minimal intervention
from the board. Given the problems of coordination, some boards favor
CEO duality (Finkelstein & DAveni, 1994). In addition, Haniffa and
Cooke (2002) find that firms with CEO duality are subject to less
interference in management, while depending on strong boards to
provide adequate checks.
While the discussion above shows that studies have not reached a
consensus on whether CEO duality reflects poor corporate governance
and increases earnings management or vice versa, we have followed the
literature and the PCCG in proposing that the roles of CEO and chair be
separated. Thus, we hypothesize that CEO duality is positively associated
with earnings management practices (H5).
2.6. Board Size and Earnings Management
Several studies show that larger boards have greater monitoring
power over management activities. Some studies use board size to measure
board expertise (Bacon, 1973; Herman, 1981), while Jensen (1993) argues
that size is a value-relevant aspect of corporate boards. Smaller boards are
believed to work more effectively than larger boards because they are easier
to coordinate (Jensen, 1993). Yermack (1996) links better firm performance
with smaller boards, specifically for large industrial corporations in the US,
where firms with smaller boards have a higher market value.
Jensen (1993) and Lipton and Lorsch (1992) find that smaller boards
are more effective than larger boards: the latter may be less efficient in
carrying out oversight duties if the CEO tends to dominate board matters.
Moreover, larger boards may be subject to a greater degree of protocol and
etiquette, making it easier for the CEO to control the board (Jensen, 1993).
Rahman and Ali (2006) and Chin, Firth, and Rui (2006) find a positive
association between board size and earnings management.
The other view is that larger boards are able to contribute more
time and effort to supervising management (Monks & Minow, 1995). This
argument is supported by Klein (2002), who suggests that larger boards are
positively associated with effective monitoring, given their collective
experience and ability to allocate the workload across several board
members. Peasnell et al. (2000a), Bdard et al. (2004), and Xie et al. (2003)
provide empirical evidence that earnings management practices are less
common in firms with larger boards. Pearce and Zahra (1992) confirm that
larger boards have a comparative advantage in terms of information and

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Kamran and Attaullah Shah

expertise over smaller boards. In most bankruptcy cases, for instance, firms
are found to have smaller boards (Chaganti, Mahajan, & Sharma, 1985).
Dalton, Daily, Johnson, and Ellstrand (1999) show that firm
performance is positively associated with board size because larger
boards have greater access to important resources such as financial
support and expertise and more external linkages than smaller boards in
executing company operations. Smaller boards are perceived as unable to
detect or constrain earnings management (Yu, 2008) if dominated by
large shareholders or management. Larger boards are better able to
monitor the actions of top management (Zahra & Pearce, 1989).
Larger boards with a more diverse range of academic and
technical backgrounds, expertise, and perspectives on how to develop the
quality of decision making are more likely to protect and represent
shareholders interests. They are thus less vulnerable to CEO dominance.
Given this, we hypothesize that there is a negative relationship between
board size and earnings management (H6).
2.7. Control Variables
Moses (1987) argues that larger firms are more visible, which means
that they are expected to manage their earnings to reduce their visibility.
Ashari, Koh, Tan, and Wong (1994), however, show that larger firms are
subject to closer scrutiny by analysts and investors because there is more
information available on them in the market. Sun and Rath (2009)
investigate earnings management practices among Australian firms and
find that most firms are involved in earnings management, of which the
return on assets (ROA) and firm size are key determinants. Kim, Liu, and
Rhee (2003) show that smaller firms engage in more earnings management
practices than large firms. In view of this, we expect a negative relationship
between firm size and earnings management.
We also include financial leverage as a control variable. Sweeney
(1994) argues that managers use discretionary accruals to assure debt
agreement requirements because highly leveraged companies have
greater incentive to boost earnings. Becker et al. (1998) support this view
and provide evidence that managers respond to debt contracting by
strategically reporting discretionary accruals.
Dechow and Skinner (2000), however, argue that firms with a high
leverage ratio are expected to report little boost in earnings. Similarly,
Sveilby (2001) establishes that firms with a low financial leverage are

Impact of Corporate Governance and Ownership on Earnings Management

41

expected to increase rather than decrease earnings. Chung and Kallapur


(2003) examine the association between discretionary accruals and
leverage, but fail to find a significant relationship between the two. In this
study, we measure leverage as the ratio of total liabilities to total assets,
denoted by LEVG.
We include ROA to control for long-term growth forecasting
errors with respect to the incentive for earnings management (Kasznik,
1999; Dechow et al., 1995). Bartov, Gul, and Tsui (2000) argue that the
incentive to engage in earnings management is greater among firms that
are experiencing financial difficulty and performing poorly, i.e., in terms
of ROA and cash flow. Several studies on corporate governance and
earnings management include ROA as a control variable (see, for
example, Ali, Salleh, & Hassan, 2008; Rahman & Ali, 2006; Chen, Cheng,
& Wang, 2010). We expect a positive association between ROA and
earnings management.
Other control variables include the age of the firm (AGE),
cumulative loss (LOSS), the book-to-market ratio (BM), growth in sales
(GROWTH), and volatility of net income (VOL). We include all these in the
studys model, given that they can potentially influence the firms tendency
to manage its earnings. For example, older firms, which are likely to have a
higher cash flow, less operational risk, and a good reputation, are expected
to avoid earnings management practices. Concerning the growth variable,
the literature reveals that firms with high growth opportunities are often
involved in earnings management in order to avail external finance at a
lower cost. Similarly, firms with a volatile cash flow are expected to
manage their earnings. Finally, Butler, Leone, and Willenborg (2004)
suggest that discretionary accruals are higher for financially distressed
firms. Therefore, we expect a positive relationship between discretionary
accruals and existing accumulated loss.
3. Data and Methodology
This section presents an overview of the data, variables, and
methodology used in the study.
3.1. Sample and Data Sources
Given that the SECP announced the PCCG in March 2002, the
studys sample period spans 2003 to 2010. The sample consists of all firms
listed on the KSE. However, the analysis does not include financial firms
and firms for which there is incomplete data. Financial firms are uniquely

42

Kamran and Attaullah Shah

regulated: their accruals behavior is different from that of nonfinancial


firms (Klein, 2002) and is less easily captured by total accrual models
(Peasnell, Pope, & Young, 2000b).
Roodposhti and Chashmi (2011) observe that financial firms
(including banks) are excluded because the industry is regulated and
likely to have fundamentally different cash flows and accrual processes.
Other studies provide evidence that commercial banks use loan loss
provisions to manage their earnings (Beatty, Chamberlain, & Magliolo,
1995). Klein (2002), for instance, excludes 53 banks (SIC codes: 6000 to
6199) and 36 insurance companies (SIC codes: 6300-6411) because it is
difficult to define accruals and abnormal accruals for financial services
firms. Bdard et al. (2004) exclude financial firms for similar reasons.
Table 1 describes the sample selection procedure. The sample is
adjusted for outliers using a residual versus predicted scatter plot. In this
analysis, the residuals are plotted on the y-axis and the predicted values
on the x-axis; extreme values are identified and eliminated because they
might distort the regression results and make generalization difficult. The
data used has been collected from the annual reports of the companies
listed on the KSE and from their respective websites.
Table 1: Sample selection details
Total number of firms listed on the KSE in MarJul 2010
Financial firms excluded
Firms with incomplete data
Number of firms included in the analysis
Firm-year observations available for calculation of accruals
Firm-year observations available in discretionary accruals in all models

650
146
132
372
1,551
986

Source: Authors calculations.

3.2. Calculation of the Dependent Variable


The dependent variable in this study is discretionary accruals
(DAC). Accruals are defined as the difference between net income and
cash flows from operations (Jones, 1991; Chen, Lin, & Zhou, 2007). They
can be further divided into discretionary (nonobligatory expenses) and
nondiscretionary accruals (obligatory expenses). Discretionary accruals
represent the modifications made to the cash flow by the firms managers;
nondiscretionary accruals are accounting-based adjustments to the firms
cash flow, which are directed by bodies that set accounting standards

Impact of Corporate Governance and Ownership on Earnings Management

43

(Rao & Dandale, 2008). Following Subramanyam (1996), Jones (1991),


Shah et al. (2009), and Roodposhti and Chashmi (2011), we use
discretionary accruals to estimate earnings management.
The first step in calculating discretionary accruals is to estimate
total accruals, following which a particular model can be used to separate
discretionary accruals from total accruals. Total accruals are defined as
the difference between net income and the cash flow from operations
scaled by the lagged total assets (Kasznik, 1999; Dechow et al., 1995).
TAit = NIit CFOit

(1)

where TAit refers to the total accruals of firm i at time t, NIit is the net
income of firm i at time t, and CFOit refers to the cash flow from operations.
There are four well-known models used to separate accruals into
their nondiscretionary and discretionary components. As explained in
Section 1, we use all four models to calculate discretionary accruals for
comparison and to determine the robustness of the results. These models
are discussed below.
Prior to Jones (1991), nondiscretionary accruals were assumed to
be constant over time. Jones introduced a model that accounted for the
firms changing economic circumstances in explaining total accruals. Her
model is given below:

TAit/Ait1 = 1[1/Ait1] + 2[REVit/Ait1] + 3[PPEit/Ait1] + eit

(2)

where REVit is the change in revenue for firm i from time t 1, Ait1
refers to lagged total assets, and PPEit denotes gross property, plant, and
equipment for firm i in time t.
The model includes PPE and REV to control for changes in
nondiscretionary accruals caused by the firms changing macroeconomic
circumstances. Changes in revenue can serve as an objective proxy for
shifting economic conditions, while gross property, plant, and equipment
captures the effect of nondiscretionary depreciation expenses on total
accruals. All the variables are scaled by lagged total assets (Ait1) to
control for heteroskedasticity (see Kothari et al., 2005; Rajgopal &
Venkatachalam, 1997; Jones, Krishnan, & Melendrez, 2007; Liu & Lu,
2007). Equation (2) is then estimated for each year in a cross-sectional
regression, where the regression residuals for each firm are calculated to
determine DAC.

44

Kamran and Attaullah Shah

Although Jones (1991) assumes that the firms managers do not


manage its revenues, i.e., revenues are nondiscretionary, there may be
situations where managers choose to manipulate revenue figures. For
example, Dechow et al. (1995) argue that, if managers decide to accrue the
firms revenues at the years end where the cash has yet to be received,
then the revenues will reflect an inflated amount in that year with a
commensurate increase in account receivables. The authors adjust the
Jones (1991) model to account for this managerial discretion over
revenues. They deduct the change in account receivables (REC) from the
change in revenues (REV). Their model is shown in equation (3):

TAit/Ait1 = 1[1/Ait1] + 2[REVit RECit)/Ait1] + 3[PPEit/Ait1] + eit (3)


Kasznik (1999) adds the change in free cash flows (CFO) to the
Dechow et al. (1995) model because evidence from Dechow (1994)
suggests that CFO is negatively correlated with total accruals. Omitting
CFO from the accruals equation results in a higher estimation error. The
Kasznik model is given below:

TAit/Ait1 = 1[1/Ait1] + 2[REVit RECit)/Ait1] + 3[PPEit/Ait1] +


4[CFOit/Ait1] + eit
(4)
Kothari et al. (2005) employ a technique similar to Dechow et al.
(1995) and add lagged ROA. They argue that the earnings management
proxy would suffer from measurement error if one did not control for
past performance. This is because accruals are associated with operating
performance. They propose the following model:

TAit/Ait1 = 1[1/Ait1] + 2[REVit RECit)/Ait1] + 3[PPEit/Ait1] +


3[ROAit/Ait1] + eit
(5)
3.3. Model Specification and Tests
Having constructed DAC, we follow the literature with respect to
including other key variables and control variables in a regression model
to assess the relationship between corporate governance and ownership
structure and DAC (see, for example, Becker et al., 1998; Liu & Lu, 2007;
Ashbaugh-Skaife, Collins, Kinney, & LaFond, 2008; Prawitt, Smith, &
Wood, 2009; Dhaliwal, Naiker, & Navissi, 2010).
3.3.1.

Model for Estimating DAC


The studys model is written as

Impact of Corporate Governance and Ownership on Earnings Management

45

DACit = + 1DIROWNit + 2INSTOWNit + 3OWNCONit + 4AUDQ +


5BSIZit + 6CEOit + 7BIG5OWNit + 8FSIZit + 9LEVGit + 10ROAit +
11AGEit + 12GROWTHit + 13MBit + 14VOLit + 15LOSSt + eit
(6)
where DACit refers to the discretionary accruals (as a proxy for earnings
management) of firm i at time t while eit is the error term. Table 2 defines
the other explanatory and control variables in the model.
Table 2: Description of explanatory and control variables
Variable
Ownership
OWNCONit
concentration
Institutional
INSTOWNit
ownership
Managerial
DIROWNit
ownership
Audit quality
AUDQ

Board size
CEO duality

BSIZit
CEOit

Big 5
ownership
Firm size
Leverage

BIG5OWNit

Return on
assets
Firm age

ROAit

Firm growth

GROWTHit

FSIZit
LEVGit

AGEit

Market-to-book MBit
value
Volatility
VOLit
Loss

LOSSt

Measured by
Natural log of the number of firm shareholders
(Rozeff, 1982)
Percentage of common stock held by
institutions (Chashmi & Roodposhti, 2011)
Percentage of common stock held by
management (Saleh et al., 2005)
Dummy variable = 1 if firm is audited by the
Big Four (PwC, Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu,
Ernst & Young, KPMG) and 0 otherwise
(Siregar & Utama, 2008)
Number of board members (Zhou & Chen, 2004)
Dummy variable = 1 if CEO is also board
chairperson and 0 otherwise (Roodposhti &
Chashmi, 2011)
Sum of ownership percentage of the five biggest
firm shareholders
Log of total assets (Roodposhti & Chashmi, 2011)
Ratio of total liabilities to total assets
(Roodposhti & Chashmi, 2011)
Ratio of net income to total assets (Bekiris &
Doukakis, 2011)
Difference between focal year and year of
incorporation
Geometric mean of the annual percentage
increase in total sales calculated in a rolling
window of four years
Ratio of market value per share to book value
per share
Coefficient of the variation in net income in a
rolling window of four years
Dummy variable = 1 if the firm has accumulated
losses in balance sheet and 0 otherwise

46

Kamran and Attaullah Shah

Since we are using panel data, we must choose from among a


pooled, fixed, or random effects model. Assuming that there are no
systematic differences in earnings management practices across firms,
years, and industries, pooled OLS is the preferred choice. However, the
results of the Breusch-Pagan Lagrangian multiplier test (which helps
choose between a random effects and pooled OLS model) show that
pooled OLS cannot be used.
To choose between using a random and fixed effects model, we
apply the Hausman specification test, the results of which favor the use of
fixed effects (Table 3). Following the existing studies on earnings
management, we include year and industry dummies to control for
unobservable fixed effects in a given year or given industry while
adjusting the errors for clustering at the firm level (see Badolato,
Donelson, & Ege, 2014; Dechow et al., 1995).
Table 3: Hausman specification test for fixed and random effects
Model

Chi2 value

P-value

Kothari et al. (2005)

19.86

0.0306

Kasznik (1999)

32.90

0.0030

6.76

0.0700

12.78

0.0540

Dechow et al. (1995)


Jones (1991)
Source: Authors calculations.

Some of the independent variables and control variables are


significantly correlated. In order to avoid over-specifying the model, we
do not include all the variables in one regression; instead, we gradually
add and drop variables in different models. Therefore, we estimate seven
different regressions for each of the four accrual models discussed above.
3.3.2.

Endogeneity Test

It is possible that some of the ownership variables and DAC are


endogenously determined. For example, knowing that a firm will engage
in earnings management through tactics that are beyond their control,
institutional investors might choose not to invest in the firm or to simply
leave once they discover instances of earnings management. In such
cases, the causality can run from accrual management to institutional
ownership or vice versa.

Impact of Corporate Governance and Ownership on Earnings Management

47

We test for this possibility using the Wu-Hausman endogeneity


test, the results of which (Table 4) show that institutional ownership is
endogenous in relation to accruals. Therefore, we run a 2SLS regression to
test the relationship between DAC and institutional ownership. The
instruments selected for institutional ownership are ASMAT (fixed assets
to total assets) and CASH (cash to total assets). These are selected on the
basis of their high correlation with the INSTOWN variable, but
nonsignificant correlation with the error term.
Table 4: Hausman-Wu test for endogeneity of institutional ownership
Model

Degrees of freedom

F-test value

P-value

Kothari et al. (2005)

F(1, 896)

12.96600

0.0003

Kasznik (1999)

F(1, 896)

14.98060

0.0001

Dechow et al. (1995)

F(1, 896)

9.97134

0.0016

Jones (1991)

F(1, 1,170)

13.76600

0.0002

Source: Authors calculations.

4. Analysis of Results
This section examines the descriptive statistics and regression results.
4.1. Descriptive Statistics
Table 5 gives descriptive statistics for the dependent and
explanatory variables. These are calculated only for those observations
for which values for the dependent variables were available. The mean
values of DAC using the Kothari, Kasznik, Dechow, and Jones models are
0.0035, 0.0000, 0.0254, and 0.0253, respectively. About 55 percent of the
sample firms are audited by one of the Big Four auditors. Almost 31
percent have CEO duality, while 68 percent have separated the roles of
CEO and chair. The mean board size is 7.98, which is near the minimum
requirement for the board of directors under Clause II, Section 174 of the
Companies Ordinance 1984.

48

Kamran and Attaullah Shah

Table 5: Descriptive statistics


Variable
Observations
DAC_Kothari
986
DAC_Kasznik
986
DAC_Jones
986
DAC_Dechow
986
DIROWN
967
INSTOWN
968
BIG5OWN
698
BSIZE
986
CEO
986
AUDQ
980
CONC
966
ROA
986
AGE
986
GROWTH
986
MB
929
LEVG
986
VOL
986
FSIZE
986

Mean
0.0035
0.0000
0.0253
0.0254
0.2801
0.3637
0.6267
7.9899
0.3093
0.5500
7.2110
0.0971
2.1552
0.1976
1.3790
0.5452
0.0579
7.9058

SD
0.1461
0.1270
0.2150
0.2014
0.2771
0.2521
0.2070
1.5969
0.4625
0.4977
1.2290
0.1317
0.8056
0.3868
2.2779
0.2049
0.0864
1.5910

Min.
0.7200
0.3555
4.6217
3.4098
0.0000
0.0000
0.0000
7.0000
0.0000
0.0000
3.3262
0.3004
1.0000
0.2758
13.0000
0.0017
0.0014
2.8622

Max.
0.7217
1.8224
1.8688
1.8735
0.9775
0.9817
0.9972
15.0000
1.0000
1.0000
10.9868
1.9046
3.0000
11.2394
13.0000
0.9996
1.1882
12.2456

Source: Authors calculations.

On average, directors, their spouses, children, and other relatives


hold 28 percent of common equity in firms while institutional
shareholders hold almost 36.4 percent. Shah et al. (2009) report a similar
level of institutional ownership for Pakistani firms. Of 426 firm-year
observations, institutional investors hold stock equal to 50 percent or
more; out of 423 firm-year observations, managers account for 50 percent
or more ownership. The mean value of concentration is 7.24 while firms
average leverage ratio is 54.5 percent. The sample firms are profitable
with a mean ROA of 9.7 percent. Their average size is 7.7 log million.
The correlation coefficients are presented in Table 6, which shows
that there is no serious multicollinearity problem: none of the coefficients
among the explanatory variables is more than 0.7. This is verified by the
variance inflation factor, which should not exceed 10. The correlation
coefficients show that DAC is positively related to director ownership
and audit quality in three models, and negatively correlated with
institutional ownership, the ownership percentage of the five largest
shareholders, and the concentration of ownership.

49

Impact of Corporate Governance and Ownership on Earnings Management

Table 6: Correlations matrix


DAC

DIROWN INSTOWN BIG5OWN BSIZE CEO AUDQ CONC ROA AGE GROW MB LEVG VOL

Kothari

1.00

Kasznik

0.46

1.00

Jones

0.62

0.43

1.000

Dechow

0.80

0.48

0.930

1.000

DIROWN

0.08 0.10

0.001

0.030

1.00

INSTOWN 0.09

0.02 0.052 0.080

0.62

1.00

BIG5OWN 0.10

0.06 0.038 0.060

0.11

0.12

1.00

BSIZE

0.08

0.010 0.017

0.24

0.25

0.03

1.000

0.00 0.04

0.010 0.001

0.200

CEO

0.06

0.10

0.11

0.04

AUDQ

0.02

0.22

0.010

0.19

0.15

0.04

0.200 0.23

1.00

CONC

0.08

0.01 0.001 0.020

0.40

0.30

0.09

0.300 0.10

0.27

0.77

0.151

0.190

0.15

0.04

0.03

0.120 0.08

0.30

0.01 0.02

0.040

0.010

0.05

0.01

0.10

0.001 0.101

0.01

0.00

0.02

0.020 0.04

0.07

0.02

ROA
AGE
GROWTH
MB
LEVG

0.11

0.010

1.00
1.00
0.10

1.00

0.01 0.01

1.00

0.07

0.06

0.060

0.060

0.04

0.06

0.25

0.050

0.030

0.24

0.09

0.10

0.145 0.01

0.26

0.16

0.34

0.07

0.00 1.00

0.01 0.17

0.080

0.040

0.01

0.10

0.03

0.120 0.00

0.01

0.08 0.16

0.04

0.05 0.15

1.00

0.02 0.00

0.04

0.00 0.02

0.06

0.17 0.00

0.16 0.11

VOL

0.00

0.02 0.001 0.010

0.00

0.05

0.04

0.010 0.11

0.07

FSIZE

0.04

0.04

0.28

0.25

0.04

0.380 0.16

0.29

0.030

Source: Authors calculations.

0.010

0.67

0.03 0.06

1.00

1.00

0.08 0.10

50

Kamran and Attaullah Shah

4.2. Regression Results


The results of the regression analysis are presented in Tables 7, 8,
9, and 10 using the accruals models of Kothari et al. (2005), Kasznik
(1999), Dechow et al. (1995), and Jones (1991), respectively. DAC is
regressed on several explanatory and control variables. The explanatory
power of these models ranges from 10 percent (Jones model) to 68.7
percent (Kasznik model) as denoted by the R2 value. Overall, the
regression models are highly significant. The low value of R2 in some of
the models shows that only a small part of the variability of DAC is
explained by the variability of the independent variables. However, this
number is acceptable for any study employing DAC as a proxy for
earnings management (Peasnell et al., 2000b).
In each table, columns (1) to (7) give different regression
estimates; the ownership variables and highly correlated variables were
entered separately in order to eliminate any over-identification. All the
regressions include year and industry dummies. Apart from the
institutional ownership regression, all the other models were estimated
using fixed effects. The choice of a fixed effects model is based on the
Hausman test results reported in Table 3. The test compares the
coefficients of fixed and random effects models for systematic differences.
If the coefficients of both models are systematically different, the null
hypothesis of no difference is rejected. As shown in Table 3, the p-value
of the Hausman test for all four models is below 10 percent, thus
supporting the use of fixed effects.
As explained earlier, we find that institutional ownership is
endogenously determined with DAC (see Table 4) and thus use the 2SLS
technique to resolve the endogeneity issue. We use cash to total assets
and fixed assets to total assets as instruments for institutional ownership
in the first-stage 2SLS regression.
The results of the four models in Tables 7 to 10 show that director
ownership has a positive impact on DAC. This relationship is statistically
significant in three models and insignificant in the Jones (1999) model.
DIROWN has a positive sign, which is in line with our hypothesis that, as
the directors ownership in a firm increases, they become more powerful
and can influence corporate decisions more easily. This supports the
entrenchment hypothesis as well as prior evidence from Pakistan that
director ownership is associated with lower dividend payments
(Abdullah et al., 2011) and lower firm performance (Abdullah et al., 2012).

51

Impact of Corporate Governance and Ownership on Earnings Management

Table 7: Results for DAC regressed on ownership and control variables


(Kothari et al. model)
(1)
DIR
Variable
ROA
AGE
GROWTH
MB
LEVG
FSIZE
VOL
LOSS
DIROWN

0.293***
(0.075)
0.011*
(0.006)
0.030***
(0.010)
0.004
(0.003)
0.076***
(0.024)
0.001
(0.005)
0.037
(0.053)
0.002
(0.017)
0.035**
(0.016)

INSTOWN

(2)
INST
2SLS
0.249***
(0.048)
0.000
(0.007)
0.021
(0.015)
0.000
(0.003)
0.008
(0.034)
0.008
(0.006)
0.035
(0.069)
0.005
(0.018)

(3)
BIG5

(4)
AUDQ

(5)
BSIZE

(6)
CEO

(7)
CONC

0.293***
(0.082)
0.002
(0.008)
0.028***
(0.008)
0.005
(0.003)
0.100***
(0.032)
0.002
(0.006)
0.015
(0.061)
0.005
(0.019)

0.279***
(0.075)
0.008
(0.006)
0.030***
(0.011)
0.004
(0.003)
0.078***
(0.024)
0.001
(0.005)
0.047
(0.052)
0.007
(0.017)

0.286***
(0.075)
0.009
(0.006)
0.029***
(0.011)
0.004
(0.003)
0.082***
(0.024)
0.001
(0.004)
0.054
(0.052)
0.006
(0.016)

0.285***
(0.075)
0.009
(0.006)
0.030***
(0.011)
0.004
(0.003)
0.079***
(0.024)
0.000
(0.004)
0.052
(0.052)
0.006
(0.016)

0.291***
(0.074)
0.010
(0.006)
0.029***
(0.011)
0.004
(0.003)
0.078***
(0.024)

0.397***
(0.121)

BIG5OWN

0.047
(0.030)

AUDQ

0.006
(0.010)

BSIZE

0.004
(0.003)

CEO

0.002
(0.009)

CONC
Constant
Observations
R2
Industry and
year dummies

0.030
(0.051)
0.003
(0.016)

0.074*
(0.044)
908
0.155
Yes

0.068*
(0.040)
907

0.061
(0.056)
655
0.173
Yes

0.058
(0.042)
921
0.143
Yes

0.045
(0.047)
927
0.145
Yes

0.065
(0.043)
927
0.144
Yes

0.004
(0.004)
0.038
(0.042)
909
0.151
Yes

Note: Robust standard errors adjusted for clustering at the firm level are reported in
parentheses beneath the coefficients of the explanatory variables. Statistical significance is
denoted by ***, **, and * at 1, 5, and 10 percent, respectively.
Source: Authors calculations.

52

Kamran and Attaullah Shah

The next most important finding is the negative association


between institutional ownership and DAC. The coefficient of INSTOWN
is negative and statistically significant at the 1 percent level in all four
models. This finding supports our hypothesis (H1) that institutional
investors play an important role in monitoring the activities of managers,
using their knowledge and dominant ownership stake in doing so. This
finding is in line with the literature on the role of institutional investors in
Pakistan. For example, Abdullah et al. (2011) find that institutional
investors in Pakistan use their power to force entrenched managers to
pay out dividends.
Of the other ownership variables, none is statistically significant in
any model except for ownership concentration (CONC), which is
statistically significant and negatively related to DAC only in the Kasznik
(1999) model in Table 8. The ownership concentration of the five largest
shareholders (BIG5OWN) carries the expected negative sign in three
models, but is statistically insignificant. One reason for its nonsignificance
may be that the largest shareholders play an effective role in monitoring
only when they are external. If they are part of the management or family
group, then their role is similar to that of entrenched managers. Since our
data does not allow us to differentiate between external and internal
block holders, the variable BIG5OWN may have mixed these two roles.
The coefficients of the other ownership variablesaudit quality
(AUDQ), board size (BSIZE), and CEO duality (CEO)are all
insignificant. This may relate to managers control over the selection of
board members and decisions, in turn leading to ineffective monitoring
(Kosnik, 1987) and/or the lack of fair disclosure by the corporation.
Among the control variables, ROA has a positive and statistically
significant coefficient in all the models. This implies that firms with
higher earnings manage their earnings to a larger degree. Older firms are
seen to engage less in earnings management. The coefficient of AGE is
negative in most models and statistically significant. Older firms take on
less risk and enjoy a more sound reputation, which helps them avail
external finance more easily and at a lower cost. This, in turn, makes
earnings management a less attractive option for them.

53

Impact of Corporate Governance and Ownership on Earnings Management

Table 8: Results for DAC regressed on ownership and control variables


(Kasznik model)
(1)
DIR

Variable
ROA
AGE
GROWTH
MB
LEVG
FSIZE
VOL
LOSS
DIROWN
INSTOWN

(2)
INST
2SLS
0.745*** 0.841***
(0.035) (0.021)
0.005** 0.000
(0.003) (0.003)
0.011
0.006
(0.008) (0.007)
0.000
0.002
(0.001) (0.001)
0.011
0.034**
(0.011) (0.015)
0.005** 0.002
(0.002) (0.003)
0.049** 0.090***
(0.019) (0.031)
0.007
0.012
(0.006) (0.008)
0.012*
(0.007)
0.175***
(0.054)

BIG5OWN

(5)
BSIZE

(6)
CEO

(7)
CONC

0.745***
(0.041)
0.004
(0.003)
0.009
(0.007)
0.000
(0.001)
0.020
(0.014)
0.005**
(0.002)
0.080***
(0.029)
0.003
(0.007)

0.739***
(0.035)
0.005*
(0.003)
0.011
(0.008)
0.000
(0.001)
0.013
(0.012)
0.004
(0.003)
0.058***
(0.022)
0.003
(0.006)

0.744***
(0.035)
0.005*
(0.003)
0.010
(0.008)
0.000
(0.001)
0.013
(0.012)
0.003
(0.003)
0.061***
(0.023)
0.004
(0.006)

0.744***
(0.035)
0.005*
(0.003)
0.010
(0.008)
0.000
(0.001)
0.012
(0.012)
0.003
(0.003)
0.061***
(0.022)
0.004
(0.006)

0.736***
(0.035)
0.006**
(0.003)
0.008
(0.007)
0.000
(0.001)
0.010
(0.011)

0.055**
(0.021)
0.002
(0.006)

0.006
(0.004)

BSIZE

0.000
(0.002)

CEO

0.002
(0.004)

CONC

Observations
R2
Industry and year
dummies

(4)
AUDQ

0.007
(0.011)

AUDQ

Constant

(3)
BIG5

0.048***
(0.019)
908
0.659
Yes

0.021
(0.018)
907
0.665

0.005**
(0.002)
0.065*** 0.055** 0.057** 0.060*** 0.049***
(0.025)
(0.023) (0.022) (0.022)
(0.018)
655
921
927
927
909
0.687
0.645
0.644
0.644
0.654
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

Note: Robust standard errors adjusted for clustering at the firm level are reported in
parentheses beneath the coefficients of the explanatory variables. Statistical significance is
denoted by ***, **, and * at 1, 5, and 10 percent, respectively.
Source: Authors calculations.

54

Kamran and Attaullah Shah

Table 9: Results for DAC regressed on ownership and control variables


(Dechow et al. model)
(1)
DIR

Variable
ROA
AGE
GROWTH
MB
LEVG
FSIZE
VOL
LOSS
DIROWN
INSTOWN

(2)
INST
2SLS
0.440*** 0.705***
(0.079) (0.059)
0.012* 0.006
(0.007) (0.009)
0.031*** 0.018
(0.011) (0.018)
0.002 0.001
(0.003) (0.004)
0.060*
0.056
(0.034) (0.043)
0.008
0.010
(0.009) (0.007)
0.032 0.116
(0.051) (0.086)
0.014
0.017
(0.021) (0.022)
0.033**
(0.016)
0.437***
(0.151)

BIG5OWN

(3)
BIG5

(4)
AUDQ

(5)
BSIZE

(6)
CEO

(7)
CONC

0.400***
(0.093)
0.006
(0.009)
0.032***
(0.012)
0.004
(0.003)
0.100**
(0.048)
0.010
(0.013)
0.034
(0.070)
0.031
(0.026)

0.416***
(0.080)
0.009
(0.007)
0.031***
(0.011)
0.003
(0.003)
0.060*
(0.032)
0.008
(0.010)
0.016
(0.054)
0.021
(0.020)

0.426***
(0.083)
0.010
(0.007)
0.031**
(0.012)
0.003
(0.003)
0.061**
(0.030)
0.010
(0.008)
0.011
(0.055)
0.019
(0.020)

0.424***
(0.082)
0.010
(0.007)
0.031***
(0.011)
0.003
(0.003)
0.061*
(0.032)
0.010
(0.009)
0.011
(0.054)
0.019
(0.020)

0.446***
(0.076)
0.009
(0.006)
0.034**
(0.015)
0.003
(0.003)
0.062*
(0.034)

0.055
(0.059)
0.009
(0.018)

0.014
(0.033)

AUDQ

0.011
(0.012)

BSIZE

0.000
(0.006)

CEO

0.004
(0.009)

CONC

0.002
(0.005)
0.144** 0.063
(0.069)
(0.047)
927
909
0.146
0.150
Yes
Yes

Constant
Observations
R2
Industry and year
dummies

0.141* 0.020
(0.074) (0.049)
908
907
0.156
Yes

0.165
(0.107)
655
0.158
Yes

0.139*
(0.072)
921
0.145
Yes

0.147
(0.091)
927
0.146
Yes

Note: Robust standard errors adjusted for clustering at the firm level are reported in
parentheses beneath the coefficients of the explanatory variables. Statistical significance is
denoted by ***, **, and * at 1, 5, and 10 percent, respectively.
Source: Authors calculations.

55

Impact of Corporate Governance and Ownership on Earnings Management

Table 10: Results for DAC regressed on ownership and control


variables (Jones model)
(1)
DIR
Variable
ROA
AGE
GROWTH
MB
LEVG
FSIZE
VOL
LOSS
DIROWN
INSTOWN

0.580***
(0.103)
0.001
(0.006)
0.011
(0.012)
0.005*
(0.003)
0.086**
(0.037)
0.012
(0.012)
0.019
(0.050)
0.012
(0.026)
0.026
(0.018)

(2)
INST
2SLS
0.733***
(0.056)
0.021**
(0.009)
0.004
(0.013)
0.001
(0.004)
0.052
(0.043)
0.014**
(0.007)
0.073
(0.081)
0.003
(0.021)

(5)
BSIZE

(6)
CEO

(7)
CONC

0.324***
(0.075)
0.004
(0.008)
0.011
(0.012)
0.003
(0.003)
0.079*
(0.044)
0.015
(0.015)
0.002
(0.063)
0.033
(0.027)

0.579***
(0.105)
0.001
(0.006)
0.010
(0.012)
0.006*
(0.003)
0.081**
(0.034)
0.011
(0.012)
0.027
(0.050)
0.014
(0.023)

0.572***
(0.106)
0.001
(0.006)
0.012
(0.012)
0.006*
(0.003)
0.078**
(0.032)
0.010
(0.009)
0.021
(0.054)
0.014
(0.023)

0.577***
(0.104)
0.000
(0.006)
0.011
(0.012)
0.006*
(0.003)
0.082**
(0.034)
0.011
(0.011)
0.028
(0.051)
0.014
(0.024)

0.587***
(0.099)
0.002
(0.006)
0.012
(0.014)
0.005*
(0.003)
0.090**
(0.037)

0.013
(0.063)
0.004
(0.018)

0.010
(0.026)

AUDQ

0.005
(0.014)

BSIZE

0.006
(0.007)

CEO

0.008
(0.009)

CONC

Observations
R2
Industry and year
dummies

(4)
AUDQ

0.510***
(0.156)

BIG5OWN

Constant

(3)
BIG5

0.196** 0.052
(0.093)
(0.046)
1,184
1,181
0.153
Yes

0.006
(0.007)
0.203* 0.184** 0.215* 0.190** 0.068
(0.121) (0.085)
(0.111) (0.082)
(0.052)
826
1,202
1,210
1,210
1,188
0.100
0.146
0.148
0.147
0.146
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

Note: Robust standard errors adjusted for clustering at the firm level are reported in
parentheses beneath the coefficients of the explanatory variables. Statistical significance is
denoted by ***, **, and * at 1, 5, and 10 percent, respectively.
Source: Authors calculations.

56

Kamran and Attaullah Shah

Similarly, the variable GROWTH has a positive coefficient and is


statistically significant. This confirms the argument above that younger
and growing firms are more likely to manage their earnings. LEVG is
positively associated with earnings management in almost all the models
and is statistically significant in most cases. This indicates that firms with
higher debt financing are more likely to be involved in earnings
management, which helps them reduce the volatility of their reported net
incomes and, in turn, renew their loans.
The other control variables are either insignificant or have
different coefficient signs in different models. For example, firm size
(FSIZE) has a negative coefficient in the Kasznik model (Table 8), but a
positive and insignificant coefficient in the Dechow (Table 9) and Jones
models (Table 10). None of the other control variables have statistically
significant coefficients.
4.3. Robustness Checks
To determine the robustness of the results, we start by calculating
the average DAC for all four models and then check if the managerial and
institutional ownership variables still yield results that are consistent with
the baseline results. Next, we test for the nonmonotonic influence of
managerial ownership on DAC and also whether the global financial crisis
of 2008 had any major impact on the regression results (see Table 11).
Teshima and Shuto (2008) provide theoretical and empirical
evidence in support of the nonmonotonic influence of managerial
ownership on DAC. They show that, at lower and higher levels of
managerial ownership, the alignment of interest between managers and
shareholders is more pronounced, resulting in lower scope for earnings
management. At an intermediate level of managerial ownership, the
entrenchment effect (see Section 2) is more dominant, which results in
greater earnings management. The authors add quadratic and cubic
terms of the managerial ownership percentage to the DAC regressions.
To test for this possibility, we use the average of the accruals
calculated using the four models: not reporting the results for each model
individually saves space. The average accruals are then regressed on the
director ownership percentage, its squared term, and cubic term. These
terms are added gradually to different regressions, the results of which
are reported in columns (1), (2), and (3) in Table 11.4
4

This methodology is borrowed from Teshima and Shuto (2008).

Impact of Corporate Governance and Ownership on Earnings Management

57

Table 11: Robustness checks using average accruals


(1)
Variable
ROA
AGE
GROWTH
MB
LEVG
FSIZE
VOL
LOSS
DIROWN

Average
accruals

(2)

(3)

DIROWN2 DIROWN3

(4)

(5)

INST

Crisis

0.454***

0.456***

0.456***

0.614***

0.454***

(0.062)

(0.062)

(0.062)

(0.044)

(0.060)

0.010**

0.010*

0.009*

0.004

0.010**

(0.005)

(0.005)

(0.005)

(0.007)

(0.005)

0.027***

0.027***

0.027***

0.017

0.026***

(0.009)

(0.009)

(0.009)

(0.013)

(0.008)

0.002

0.002

0.002

0.001

0.002

(0.002)

(0.002)

(0.002)

(0.003)

(0.002)

0.057**

0.057**

0.058**

0.028

0.056**

(0.025)

(0.024)

(0.024)

(0.032)

(0.026)

0.004

0.004

0.005

0.007

0.005

(0.007)

(0.007)

(0.006)

(0.005)

(0.006)

0.007

0.008

0.010

0.081

0.010

(0.035)

(0.035)

(0.036)

(0.064)

(0.034)

0.008

0.008

0.008

0.012

0.007

(0.015)

(0.015)

(0.015)

(0.017)

(0.014)

0.027**

0.059

0.131

0.027**

(0.013)

(0.043)

(0.120)

(0.013)

0.042

0.261

(0.050)

(0.329)

DIR2
DIR3

0.168
(0.234)

CRD

0.006
(0.008)

INSTOWN

0.342***
(0.112)

Constant

0.111**

0.116**

0.123**

0.013

0.117**

(0.052)

(0.052)

(0.049)

(0.037)

(0.058)

Observations

908

908

908

907

908

R2

0.192

0.193

0.193

0.030

0.189

Industry and year


dummies

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes (no year


dummy)

Source: Authors calculations.

The results show that director ownership maintains its positive


sign and statistical significance. However, there is no evidence of a

58

Kamran and Attaullah Shah

nonmonotonic relationship between director ownership and DAC. These


findings lead us to conclude that the entrenchment hypothesis holds in
Pakistan as opposed to the alignment-of-interest hypothesis.
Similarly, the results reported in column (4) of Table 11 show that
institutional ownership is negatively related to DACas was the case in
Tables 7 to 10. The results for the other explanatory variables are also
consistent with those given in Tables 7 to 10. Finally, column (5) reports the
results of the regression where average DAC is the dependent variable and
director ownership is the main independent variable with other control
variables and a crisis-year dummy denoted by CRD. The dummy variable
takes the value of 1 for the years 2007 and 2008, and is 0 otherwise.
The purpose of this regression is to find out whether the global
financial crisis has had any impact on our findings. CRD has a positive
coefficient and is statistically insignificant. Moreover, director ownership
and the other variables maintain their signs and statistical significance.
These results suggest that the crisis has had no impact on DAC.
5. Conclusion and Policy Implications
The aim of this study was to investigate the impact of corporate
governance and ownership structure on earnings management for a
sample of companies listed on the KSE from 2003 to 2010. Discretionary
accruals were used as a proxy for earnings management and estimated
using four well-known models: Jones (1991), Dechow et al. (1995),
Kasznik (1999), and Kothari et al. (2005). The variable DAC was regressed
on several corporate governance and ownership structure variables,
along with a sufficiently large set of control variables.
The results indicate that discretionary accruals increase
monotonically with the percentage ownership of directors, their spouses,
children, and other family members. This supports the view that
managers who are more entrenched in a firm can easily influence
corporate decisions and manipulate accounting figures in a way that best
serves their own interests. This finding is consistent with prior research
evidence on the role of dominant directors in expropriating external
minority shareholders in Pakistan.
Further, our results indicate that institutional investors play a
significant role in preventing managers from engaging in earnings
management. We find no evidence that CEO duality, the size of the

Impact of Corporate Governance and Ownership on Earnings Management

59

auditing firm, the number of members on the board of directors, and


ownership concentration influence discretionary accruals. Among the
control variables, firms that are more profitable, are growing, or have
higher leverage actively manage their earnings while older firms do not.
Although we have used four different models to ensure our
results are not biased, it is possible that accrual models using financial
statement data might not accurately divide accruals into discretionary
and nondiscretionary components (Siregar & Utama, 2008). The studys
second limitation is that its findings can be generalized for nonfinancial
firms only in Pakistan, given that the countrys corporate governance
environment is different from those elsewhere. Finally, in the absence of
organized data on corporate governance and ownership structure, certain
variables (such as family ownership and board independence) could not
be included.
This research could be extended in several ways. Although we
have used institutional ownership as a measure of the stock held by all
institutions, future studies could separate intuitional ownership into
financial and nonfinancial institutional ownership. Further, financial
institutional ownership could be broken down into ownership by banks,
insurance companies, mutual funds, and pension funds, etc., to determine
how each group of institutions plays a unique role.
Future studies could also use board independence, board
meetings, auditor tenure, and family ownership to measure their impact
on discretionary accruals. Finally, developing a corporate governance
index that takes into account the different clauses of the PCCG would
help evaluate the effectiveness of the code in constraining earnings
management practices.
In view of our findings, we recommend that the SECP develop a
framework that eliminates managers dominance over the selection of
board members and other corporate decisions that might hurt the
interests of minority shareholders. The SECP should also ensure free and
fair availability of all financial and nonfinancial data in companies
annual reports. Finally, it should ensure that all firms annual reports
include comprehensive profiles of their board members and CEO so that
shareholders can distinguish between executive and nonexecutive board
members and highlight their academic and professional experience.

60

Kamran and Attaullah Shah

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