Firm Accounting Practices, Accounting Reform and Corruption in Asia

Policy and Society, Vol. 24, No. 3 pp. 53-78, 2005

28 Pages Posted: 1 Aug 2006

See all articles by Xun Wu

Xun Wu

Division of Social Science and Division of Environment, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

Abstract

Despite rapid economic growth and assiduous efforts in anti-corruption campaigns, many Asian economies continue to be plagued with rampant corruption problems; and in a number of countries, the progress towards corruption reduction has stagnated over the last decade as measured by corruption perception indices. This paper focuses on the corporate sector as the main source of corruption problems in Asia, with particular emphasis on the impact that firm accounting practices have on the level of bribery. Using a unique cross-country firm-level dataset, we examine some distinct characteristics of bribery in corporate Asia, and empirically test the relationship between firm accounting practices and bribery. Our findings suggest that that better accounting practices can help reduce both the incidence of bribery activities and the amount of bribe payments, but conforming to high quality accounting standard alone will not necessary enhance the quality of accounting practices and thus will not automatically bring down the incidence of bribery.

Suggested Citation

Wu, Xun, Firm Accounting Practices, Accounting Reform and Corruption in Asia. Policy and Society, Vol. 24, No. 3 pp. 53-78, 2005, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=921524

Xun Wu (Contact Author)

Division of Social Science and Division of Environment, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology ( email )

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