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Present Bias Amplifies the Household Balance-Sheet Channels of Macroeconomic Policy

Quarterly Journal of Economics 2025 140(1), 691-743 open access
Abstract We study the effect of monetary and fiscal policy in a heterogeneous-agent model where households have present-biased time preferences and naive beliefs. The model features a liquid asset and illiquid home equity, which households can use as collateral for borrowing. Because present bias substantially increases households’ marginal propensity to consume (MPC), present bias increases the effect of fiscal policy. Present bias also amplifies the effect of monetary policy, but at the same time, slows down the speed of monetary transmission. Interest rate cuts incentivize households to conduct cash-out refinances, which become targeted liquidity injections to high-MPC households. Present bias also introduces a motive for households to procrastinate refinancing their mortgages, which slows down the speed with which this monetary channel operates.

Audit committee financial expertise, equity compensation and employee whistleblowing

Accounting, Organizations and Society 2025 115, 101609 open access
Motivated by the importance of effective oversight in mitigating the risks of employee external whistleblowing, this study investigates the effect of audit committee financial expertise and equity compensation on employee external whistleblowing. Drawing on theories of motivated reasoning and overconfidence, I propose that while audit committee financial expertise could enhance oversight, higher equity compensation can trigger cognitive biases that lead audit committee members to overestimate their monitoring effectiveness and discount or overlook the risks in internal reports of wrongdoing, increasing employee external whistleblowing. Using a sample of U.S. listed firms involved in misconduct, I find that greater audit committee financial expertise is associated with lower levels of employee external whistleblowing when audit committee equity compensation is low, but with higher levels of employee external whistleblowing when equity compensation is high. These findings suggest that audit committee equity compensation may undermine the benefits of financial expertise, offering new insights into the unintended consequences of governance and compensation practices.

On the interrelation of action accountability and job autonomy: Evidence from the nursing industry

Accounting, Organizations and Society 2025 115, 101610 open access
While prior work in management accounting has mainly focused on results controls, this study investigates how action accountability as an action control and job autonomy are jointly used by supervisors in a setting in which results controls at the individual employee level are of little relevance. We analyze our research question by collecting survey data among nurses from Swiss public hospitals. We predict and find that when task complexity is high, job autonomy and action accountability are used as substitutes by the supervisor. When task complexity is low, job autonomy and action accountability have a less substitutive relation than when task complexity is high. In supplemental analyses, we also find that action accountability and job autonomy act as substitutes with respect to employee loyalty and effort when task complexity is high and less so when it is low, consistent with supervisors’ control choices. We also collect additional archival and experimental data to provide supplemental evidence for our underlying theory. Our study enhances the understanding of the use and effects of action controls in settings in which results controls at the individual employee level are of little relevance.

Accounting and post-colonial resistance: Affective ambivalence in the international development assemblage

Accounting, Organizations and Society 2025 115, 101607 open access
This paper is concerned with the understanding of resistance in accounting research. Using the case of a Southern Non-Governmental Organization (NGO) and its relationships with donors within the international development assemblage, I discuss how the organization, in experiencing mixed feelings towards its donors' managerial discourses and accounting practices, engages in a process of resistance. Such resistance operates amidst a processual interplay of attraction and repulsion towards the colonial opposite. Using Homi Bhabha's Postcolonial Theory (PCT) and its emphasis on the affective dimension in colonial encounters, I find that the NGO's actions are nestled within hybridity and ambivalence, which drive the NGO towards balancing opposing forces to move forward in the assemblage. I contribute to accounting literature by offering an affective understanding of the ambivalence produced by postcolonial relations mediated by accounting, and by reconceptualizing resistance in accounting research as a flux of affects with political implications in shifting relationships.

How negative accounting news events, voluntary ESG assurance, and assurance provider influence consumer purchasing intentions

Accounting, Organizations and Society 2025 115, 101599 open access
Consumers are increasingly conscientious of societal and environmental impacts of their purchases, prompting companies to make environmental, social, and governance (ESG) claims and engage in voluntary ESG assurance. However, prior literature lacks insight into whether consumers consider negative accounting news events (e.g., error/irregularity restatements) and their effects on purchasing intentions. Using real world consumers of sustainable goods, we investigate how varying levels of negative accounting news events (i.e., error or irregularity restatements), the presence of ESG product-quality assurance (e.g., cage free egg certification), and the type of assurance provider (e.g., an accounting firm that also audits the financial statements, an accounting firm that does not audit the financial statements, government agency) influence purchasing intentions and organizational legitimacy perceptions. We find that consumers surrogate negative accounting news events as indicators of ESG claim reliability, negatively impacting purchasing intentions, especially for more severe events (e.g., irregularity). However, ESG product-quality assurance partially mitigates these negative effects. Moreover, we find that when an error restatement occurs, the mitigating effect is less pronounced when the same firm provides both financial statement and ESG product-quality assurance compared to a governmental agency or non-financial statement auditor. Finally, when irregularities occur, though product-quality assurance partially mitigates the detrimental effects, there is no difference between assurance providers, likely because management's willingness to deceive auditors decreases the perceived reliability of assurance in general. Our results suggest boards should obtain ESG product-quality assurance and carefully select their assurance providers.

When living laws collide: FASB/IASB conceptual framework development as a contested discursive space

Accounting, Organizations and Society 2025 115, 101612 open access
As part of their professionalisation project, independent private standard setters have developed conceptual frameworks to guide their standard setting. Adopting the perspective of legal pluralism, we regard these soft law documents as creating a new living law for the community of standard setters. In this paper, we study how the FASB and the IASB have created this new living law through the discourse on the (re)development of conceptual frameworks. More specifically, we analyse the discourse on the objective of financial reporting from the 1970s to the 2010s. Our material stems from the Boards' due process and includes their proposals, along with about 1300 comment letters submitted by constituents. We find that the FASB and the IASB have used conceptual frameworks to establish their identity as independent experts, distinguishing themselves from the accounting profession with its traditional living law of stewardship, and instead introducing the new living law of decision usefulness. This step met resistance as constituents did not readily accept the standard setters' independence and sought to constrain their future activities. We also find that constituents’ views were influenced by the anticipated role of the conceptual frameworks for standard setters and preparers. Overall, our study shows how standard setters strategically align conceptual frameworks with the due process, while constituents simultaneously use the due process and conceptual frameworks as tools to discipline the standard setters. Our findings extend our understanding of private standard setters, conceptual frameworks, and different legal forms.