4.3 Article

The monitoring role of the media: Evidence from earnings management

Journal

JOURNAL OF BUSINESS FINANCE & ACCOUNTING
Volume 48, Issue 3-4, Pages 533-563

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jbfa.12490

Keywords

earnings management; media coverage; monitoring

Funding

  1. CityU startup [9380115]

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This study finds that media coverage has a negative impact on firm earnings management, reducing opportunistic behaviors of managers, especially when monitoring from auditors is weak and other information intermediaries are active. The results suggest a monitoring role of the media in firm financial reporting practices.
In response to the recent debate on the media, this paper examines the effect of media coverage on firm earnings management. Even if prior studies (Dyck et al., 2010; Miller, 2006) have documented the media's role in detecting and deterring accounting fraud (or extreme earnings management), it is unclearex antewhether the media amplifies or curbs less egregious earnings management. Our results show that media coverage is negatively associated with both accrual-based and real earnings management, suggesting that the media serves as an external monitor that curbs managers' opportunistic earnings management behaviors. Further analyses show that the effect of media coverage on earnings management is more pronounced when monitoring from auditors is weak and when the other information intermediaries are active. Overall, the findings suggest a monitoring role of the media in firm financial reporting practices.

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