4.7 Article

Breaking it Down: Economic Consequences of Disaggregated Cost Disclosures

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MANAGEMENT SCIENCE
卷 -, 期 -, 页码 -

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INFORMS
DOI: 10.1287/mnsc.2023.4780

关键词

competition; cost innovation; cost structure; disaggregated cost disclosure; process innovation; performance dispersion; proprietary costs; voluntary disclosure

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This study examines the impact of a rule change in Korea that allows firms to withhold the disaggregation of cost of sales (CoS). The findings show that firms' profitability increases by 1.6 percentage points after withholding CoS disaggregation. The study also provides evidence suggesting that firms withhold disaggregated CoS to protect cost innovations from rivals.
Motivated by the Financial Accounting Standards Board's project on the disaggregation of income statement expenses, we study a Korean rule change that allowed firms to withhold a previously mandated disaggregation of cost of sales (CoS). We find that after withholding, firms' profitability increases by 1.6 percentage points. Our industry-focused results suggest that withholding affects profitability by reducing the transfer of competitive information to peer firms. We then document a range of evidence consistent with the idea that firms withhold disaggregated CoS to protect cost innovations from rivals. First, we construct a novel measure of firms' cost-innovative potential and show that it predicts withholding and subsequent profitability gains under the voluntary disclosure regime. Second, we document efficiency gains following the withholding of disaggregated CoS. Third, our survey experiment of 1,257 U.S. public firm managers shows that they would reduce investments in process/cost innovations if they were required to disaggregate CoS. Our study highlights to standard setters and academics that CoS disaggregation entails operational consequences for firms.

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