Does Country-by-Country Reporting Affect Internal Control Quality?

Münster, Till; Watrin, Christoph


Zusammenfassung

We examine whether the U.S. non-public country-by-country reporting (CbCR) mandate affects multinationals’ internal control quality. We argue that CbCR requires firms to change their information processing structures because the demanded information is not readily available, thus encouraging adjustments to internal controls but simultaneously increasing the risk of weakness exposure. We find that firms affected by CbCR have a significantly lower likelihood of having material weaknesses in their internal controls than control firms. The effect is limited to tax-related weaknesses but robust to falsification tests, sample balancing, and addressing the rarity of internal control weaknesses throughout the sample. We also show that our results are not driven by remediations of material weaknesses before the CbCR adoption. Finally, we observe that the response prevails in tax-aggressive firms and firms with low tax accrual quality. Our results are consistent with CbCR stimulating firms to improve their information-processing structures, resulting in better internal controls.

Schlüsselwörter
tax transparency; country-by-country reporting; internal controls; financial reporting quality



Publikationstyp
Forschungsartikel in Sammelband (Konferenz)

Begutachtet
Ja

Publikationsstatus
accepted / in press (not yet published)

Jahr
2022

Konferenz
9th Annual MannheimTaxation Conference

Konferenzort
Mannheim

Buchtitel
9th Annual MannheimTaxation Conference

Herausgeber
Münster, Till; Watrin, Christoph

Erste Seite
1

Letzte Seite
57

Sprache
Englisch