Purpose- The study aims to trace out the factors contributing to earnings management practices in the commercial banks of Bangladesh.
Methodology- The study used secondary data sources from the published audited annual reports of 32(Thirty-Two) commercial banks of
Bangladesh from the year 2005-2018 of 425 observations. The study conducted preliminary diagnoses like normality, unit root, and Granger
causality test to identify the data's nature and response. Moreover, the study performed the heteroscedasticity test, autocorrelation test,
and fixed and random effect of the model to confirm the output's accuracy. Based on the above statistical diagnosis, the study has selected
Robust Least Square (RLS) regression model to show the practice of discretionary choices in the banking sector of Bangladesh. Following
Kanagaretnam et al.’s (2003), this study also derived discretionary and non-discretionary accruals from loan loss provisions.
Findings- This study considered several factors like bank size (SIZEit), loan to deposit ratio (L/DEPit), non-performing loan to previous year’s
total loan ratio (NPLRit-1), changes in non-performing loan to current total loan ratio (∆NPL/TLit), and changes in total asset to total loan ratio
(∆TA/TLit) to show the effects on banks’ earnings management. It is found that SIZEit, NPLRit-1, ∆NPL/TLit and ∆TA/TLit have a positive and
significant (p<0.01; p<0.05) effect on Bank‘s discretionary choice. However, L/DEPit positively affects earnings management but is statistically
insignificant.
Conclusion- Despite being a legal tool, earnings management is often involved with the controversy of being an unethical practice. However,
there has been a lot of research on tracing earnings management in corporate firms based on discretionary and non-discretionary accruals.
The study contributes to the existing literature and tries to explain the role of discretionary accruals in banks performance mostly in the
submerged economy. Along with identifying significant variables, the study has tried to explain the implication of these findings suggesting
some crucial steps that may help reduce the practice of earnings management as earnings management distorts the banks' financial position
or any firm and misleads the investors.
Primary Language | English |
---|---|
Subjects | Finance, Business Administration |
Journal Section | Articles |
Authors | |
Publication Date | March 30, 2022 |
Published in Issue | Year 2022 Volume: 9 Issue: 1 |
Journal of Economics, Finance and Accounting (JEFA) is a scientific, academic, double blind peer-reviewed, quarterly and open-access online journal. The journal publishes four issues a year. The issuing months are March, June, September and December. The publication languages of the Journal are English and Turkish. JEFA aims to provide a research source for all practitioners, policy makers, professionals and researchers working in the area of economics, finance, accounting and auditing. The editor in chief of JEFA invites all manuscripts that cover theoretical and/or applied researches on topics related to the interest areas of the Journal. JEFA publishes academic research studies only. JEFA charges no submission or publication fee.
Ethics Policy - JEFA applies the standards of Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE). JEFA is committed to the academic community ensuring ethics and quality of manuscripts in publications. Plagiarism is strictly forbidden and the manuscripts found to be plagiarized will not be accepted or if published will be removed from the publication. Authors must certify that their manuscripts are their original work. Plagiarism, duplicate, data fabrication and redundant publications are forbidden. The manuscripts are subject to plagiarism check by iThenticate or similar. All manuscript submissions must provide a similarity report (up to 15% excluding quotes, bibliography, abstract and method).
Open Access - All research articles published in PressAcademia Journals are fully open access; immediately freely available to read, download and share. Articles are published under the terms of a Creative Commons license which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Open access is a property of individual works, not necessarily journals or publishers. Community standards, rather than copyright law, will continue to provide the mechanism for enforcement of proper attribution and responsible use of the published work, as they do now.