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The effect of debt maturity structure on earnings management strategies

Sondes Draief (Institut Superieur de Comptabilite et d'Administration des Entreprises, Universite de la Manouba, Manouba, Tunisia) (Laboratoire « Gouvernance d'Entreprise, Finance Appliquée et Audit », Le Bardo, Tunisia)
Adel Chouaya (Laboratoire « Gouvernance d'Entreprise, Finance Appliquée et Audit », Le Bardo, Tunisia) (Universite de Tunis Institut Superieur de Gestion de Tunis, Le Bardo, Tunisia)

Managerial Finance

ISSN: 0307-4358

Article publication date: 28 April 2022

Issue publication date: 7 June 2022

769

Abstract

Purpose

The aim of this study is to investigate whether debt maturity matters for the choice of earnings management strategy (i.e. accruals earnings management and real earnings management).

Design/methodology/approach

The sample involves 486 American listed firms extracted from fortune 1,000 over the period 2006–2014. Panel data regression models are employed to empirically test the impact of short-term debt and long-term debt on manager's choice of earnings management form. The generalized least square technique is applied to estimate the parameters of the regression models.

Findings

The results show that managers are more likely to manage earnings through real activities and reduce their use of accruals earnings management once short debt is increasing because the latter induces heavy lender's scrutiny. The managers move hence to real earnings management due to a lower possibility of being discovered. Moreover, the results reveal a simultaneous use of accruals earnings management and real earnings management for firms with high long-term debt. This finding highlights that long-term debt does not produce regular lender's enforcement allowing managers to use both earnings management techniques to reach earnings targets.

Research limitations/implications

This research has two limitations. Like many other studies, the measure of discretionary accruals is subject to measurement errors. Moreover, the sample exclusively involves large firms extracted from Fortune 1,000. Therefore, the attained results may be not available for small and medium firms.

Practical implications

The findings have implications for both researchers and lenders. For researchers, the present work points out that the decision about the debt maturity structure is crucial for all managers because they establish their earnings management policy accordingly. For lenders, the findings imply that increasing scrutiny effectively constrains accounting manipulations but does not eliminate earnings management activities altogether. The managers move to another earnings management strategy (i.e. real earnings management). This evidence may support the lenders and the creditors in their decision-making processes.

Originality/value

This paper adds to the accounting literature by providing new and interesting evidence on the role of debt maturity on the trade-off between the earnings management tools. Prior studies provided mixed finding for the issue of earnings management in levered firms. The findings of this study should be viewed as a first step to understand the mixed results on this issue. While most papers focus on one earnings management form when they examine the earnings management in levered firms, the authors highlight the impact of debt on both accruals and real earnings management simultaneously.

Keywords

Citation

Draief, S. and Chouaya, A. (2022), "The effect of debt maturity structure on earnings management strategies", Managerial Finance, Vol. 48 No. 7, pp. 985-1006. https://doi.org/10.1108/MF-07-2021-0314

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited

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