Last chance for a big bath

managing deferred taxes under IAS 12 in Brazilian listed firms

Autores/as

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/1808-057x201806340

Palabras clave:

earnings management, big bath, deferred taxes, IAS 12, CPC 32

Resumen

This study investigates whether Brazilian loss-making firms manage deferred income tax as a form of big bath strategy. “Big bath” is a strategy in which a firm manages earnings by intentionally recording large non-recurring losses. We found original evidence supporting the hypothesis of big bath through the managing of deferred taxes under CPC 32/IAS 12. Deferred tax expenses can be used as a tool for reducing earnings because of the subjectivity and timing involved. To analyze the excess of deferred taxes, we propose a particular research strategy that is based on the increased homogeneity of accounting standards and tax regulation in Brazilian listed firms. This analysis provides new evidence of big bath adjustments that was never described before in the literature. We analyze 226 Brazilian listed firms for the 2011-2015 period. We designed a linear model to estimate deferred tax excess that is based on the conditional independence between treatment and effect under accounting standard CPC32/IAS 12. For our baseline analysis, we used least squares with controlling covariates. We also used two-stage least squares to control for omitted variables bias. This paper finds evidence that Brazilian firms can manage deferred income tax as a form of big bath. Results indicate that loss-making firms disclose significantly higher excesses of net deferred tax expenses, and that these excesses increase with losses.

Descargas

Los datos de descarga aún no están disponibles.

Publicado

2019-04-02

Número

Sección

Artículos Originales

Cómo citar

Rathke, A. A. T., Rezende, A. J., Antônio, R. M., & Moraes, M. B. C. (2019). Last chance for a big bath: managing deferred taxes under IAS 12 in Brazilian listed firms. Revista Contabilidade & Finanças, 30(80), 268-281. https://doi.org/10.1590/1808-057x201806340