Size Management by European Private Firms to Minimize Disclosure and Audit Costs* Darren Bernard Ph.D. Student University of Washington David Burgstahler Julius A. Roller Professor of Accounting University of Washington Devrimi Kaya Assistant Professor University of Erlangen-Nürnberg October 13, 2014 Abstract Mandated public disclosure of financial statement information potentially subjects the firm to proprietary costs. In Europe, disclosure requirements increase at “bright-line” firm size thresholds, creating incentives to manage size to remain below the thresholds. We examine evidence of size management among small private firms, a setting where proprietary costs of disclosure should be relatively important. Audit requirements for these firms are also linked to size thresholds. In situations where the disclosure and audit thresholds coincide, we find substantial evidence that firms manage size to remain below the threshold, which suggests that combined costs of mandated disclosure and net audit costs exceed the costs associated with size management. In settings where the disclosure and audit thresholds are separate, we find 1) no significant evidence of size management to remain below the disclosure threshold, but 2) significant evidence of size management to remain below the audit threshold. This evidence suggests the costs of mandated disclosure are typically smaller than the costs of size management while net audit costs are typically larger than the costs of size management. Because net audit costs are relatively low for small private firms, the empirical evidence provides little support for the proposition that mandatory disclosure of financial statement information imposes substantial proprietary costs. * We thank participants at the 2013 UBCOW Conference, the 2013 and 2014 EUFIN Conferences, the 2014 Potsdam Auditing and UTS Accounting Research Workshops, an anonymous reviewer for the 2014 EAA Conference, and Nicole Cade, Francesca Cesaroni, Jill Collis, Belén Fernández-Feijóo, Luzi Hail, Katerina Hellström, Klaus Henselmann, David Huguet, Bill Kinney, Robert J. Kirsch, Clive Lennox, Sarah McVay, Lasse Niemi, and Brady Williams for helpful comments on earlier versions of this paper. David Burgstahler gratefully acknowledges the generous financial support of the Dr. Theo and Friedl Schöller Foundation. 1. Introduction A growing body of literature examines the proprietary costs of firm disclosure (Ellis, Fee, and Thomas [2012]; Bens, Berger, and Monahan [2011]; Dedman and Lennox [2009]; Verrecchia and Weber [2006]; Botosan and Stanford [2005]; Harris [1998]; Hayes and Lundholm [1996]). The premise of most papers in this area is that managers choose to withhold information that could competitively disadvantage the firm – for example, when product market rivals could use disclosed information to redirect investment or financing policy or enter profitable product markets. While prior papers examine a variety of quantitative and qualitative disclosures, there is limited evidence on the economic significance of proprietary costs that stem specifically from the disclosure of financial statement information (Beyer et al. [2010]).1 Whether the disclosure of financial statement information imposes economically significant proprietary costs is an open – and important – empirical question. On the one hand, as European regulators have noted (e.g., DTI [1995]), financial statement disclosures are often predictive and reveal information about the firm’s financial health and product market performance (such as details about margin levels, liquidity constraints, sales trends, and other items) that might be useful to competitors. On the other hand, there are also factors that might reduce the usefulness of financial statement information to competitors. For example, accounting information is typically retrospective, conservative, subject to some amount of managerial discretion, and presented in aggregated totals on financial statements. This paper provides evidence on the actions of European firms to avoid proprietary costs of mandated financial statement disclosure. Virtually all European countries require limited liability private firms to publicly disclose certain financial statement information, where firm 1 Examples of disclosures examined previously in the literature include the redaction of information from SEC material contract filings (Verrecchia and Weber [2006]) and compliance with SEC Reg. S-K, which requires US public firms to disclose information about customers that make up more than 10% of consolidated revenues (Ellis, Fee, and Thomas [2012]). 1 size determines the extent of mandated disclosure. Disclosure requirements for the smallest firms are typically minimal, but larger firms that exceed “bright-line” size thresholds face expanded disclosure requirements.2 Thus, to the extent expanded financial statement disclosures impose proprietary costs, firms have an incentive to avoid exceeding these size thresholds and thereby avoid additional disclosure requirements. Our sample of small private firms in Europe provides a relatively powerful setting to assess the economic significance of proprietary costs of financial statement disclosure.3 First, the net incentives to avoid disclosure are likely to be stronger for private firms than for public firms. Important benefits of disclosure of financial information to owners and capital market participants offset costs of disclosure to competitors for public firms (see Beyer et al. [2010] for a review). In contrast, for private firms there are few offsetting benefits of public disclosure. For example, private firms can often satisfy the information demands of owners and other stakeholders, such as creditors and suppliers, using only confidential channels (Asker, FarreMensa, and Ljungqvist [2014]). Further, financial statement information is likely to be incrementally more informative for private firms than for public firms because private firms typically have far fewer other public disclosures than publicly-owned firms. These characteristics suggest the net incentives to avoid public disclosure of financial statement information are stronger for private firms than for public firms.4 2 Generally, firms are classified as small, medium, or large based on three measures of firm size: total assets, sales, and number of employees. We discuss size classification at greater length in Section 2. 3 The focus of the empirical analysis is on small but not tiny firms. As explained in Section 2, we examine size management behavior around size thresholds that are typically about 50 employees, 3 to 4 million euro in total assets, and 6 to 8 million euro in annual sales, although the thresholds vary by country and year. 4 One reason to study private firms is simply that they account for a large portion of economic activity both in the US and in Europe. For example, Asker, Farre-Mensa, and Ljungqvist [2014] estimate that in 2010, private firms accounted for more than 68% of private sector employment and almost 49% of pre-tax profits in the US. Brav [2009] estimates that private firms own roughly two-thirds of corporate assets and represent 97.5% of all incorporated entities in the UK. 2 Second, we expect proprietary costs of disclosure to be relatively more important for smaller firms. For large companies, financial statement information is typically aggregated across multiple product and geographic markets, limiting the usefulness of the information to competitors. For smaller companies that are more concentrated in a single market, rivals are likely to glean more useful competitive information from financial disclosures.5 Third, the European setting allows us to hold constant other disclosure-related costs, including agency costs and the direct costs of financial statement preparation, because most countries require firms to prepare financial statements irrespective of their public disclosure requirements.6 For example, the United Kingdom (UK) and Germany require all firms, regardless of size, to prepare full accounts for shareholders. This requirement ensures that managers have no incentive to manage firm size downward to remain below size thresholds to either (1) avoid disclosure of unfavorable information to capital providers (see, e.g., Berger [2011]) or (2) avoid additional financial statement preparation costs. Thus, in our setting actions to avoid disclosure requirements are less likely to be attributable to the confounding effects of other disclosure-related costs. Fourth, the diversity of the type and extent of additional disclosure required when firms move above the small-medium disclosure threshold allows us to examine the proprietary costs imposed by a variety of disclosure requirements. In many European countries, firms below the threshold are required to disclose only a subset of the financial statements required for firms above the threshold. For instance, in a number of countries, income statement disclosure is required for firms above the threshold but not for those below. Additionally, firms below the threshold are typically permitted to disclose more aggregated information, such as disclosing 5 Similar reasoning motivates prior studies to focus on proprietary information provided by public firm segment disclosures (Bens, Berger, and Monahan [2011]; Botosan and Stanford [2005]; Harris [1998]). 6 Even when full accounts are not required for non-tax reasons, in much of Continental Europe firms prepare detailed financial statements as the basis of their tax filings (Burgstahler, Hail, and Leuz [2006]). 3 only gross profit without separately disclosing sales and cost of goods sold or disclosing liability totals without additional detail about liability components. Finally, audit requirements for private firms in Europe are typically based on the same size classification variables and implementation rules (described in Section 2 below) as the disclosure requirements. In cases where the disclosure and audit threshold values coincide, actions to remain below the threshold reflect the joint effect of incentives to avoid expanded disclosure and to avoid mandatory audits. In these cases, we cannot separately observe the individual effect of either requirement. However, there are also cases where the disclosure and audit thresholds do not coincide. These cases allow us to separate the effects of mandated disclosure versus audit requirements and thereby draw inferences about the relative importance of disclosure costs versus audit costs to small private firms. Results are presented in two sections. In the first section, we present evidence of size management for those countries where disclosure and audit thresholds coincide for most or all of the sample period, with a focus on four of the largest countries with the largest sample sizes. Significance tests strongly support the notion that firms manage size to remain below coinciding disclosure and audit thresholds. In a number of cases, the percentage of firm years managed at the threshold is between 10-20%, consistent with the hypothesis that the combined costs of a mandatory audit and proprietary disclosure costs are greater than the cost of managing size for a significant proportion of firms. Further, as expected, the results show substantial variation across countries in the type and extent of size management activity.7 For instance, whereas UK firms heavily manage total assets, Spanish firms manage all three size variables – total assets, sales, and number of employees. 7 Analogously, prior literature finds substantial differences in the extent of earnings management activity across European countries (e.g., Burgstahler, Hail, and Leuz [2006]; Joos and Lang [1994]). An important benefit to examining a large number of European countries is that this approach provides evidence of robustness, ensuring that our inferences are not driven by an idiosyncratic institutional factor in any specific country. 4 In the second section, we expand the analysis and include cases where disclosure thresholds do not coincide with audit thresholds. In these cases, we find no significant evidence that firms manage size to remain below the separate disclosure threshold and thereby avoid additional disclosure requirements. In contrast, we find strong and consistent evidence that firms manage size to remain below the separate audit threshold. This combination of evidence suggests that the magnitude of disclosure costs is substantially smaller than the magnitude of net audit costs, and that the size management observed in cases where the thresholds coincide is more likely to be due to audit costs than disclosure costs. Our study makes several contributions. First, we extend the literature by examining evidence of proprietary costs stemming from various types of expanded disclosure requirements for small private firms, which have relatively strong net incentives to avoid public disclosure. There is a notable lack of evidence that firms are willing to manage size by small amounts solely to avoid expanded disclosures, even when the incremental required disclosure involves additional financial statements, such as the cash flow statement or the income statement. The lack of evidence of size management at disclosure thresholds is even more striking given the strong and consistent evidence of size management at audit thresholds, as net audit costs are likely to be relatively low for the small private firms in our setting. More generally, the evidence (1) calls into question the economic significance of proprietary costs stemming from financial statement disclosures, and (2) underscores Berger’s [2011] concern that tests of proprietary costs in the literature may also capture agency and other disclosure-related costs. Second, our results may be of interest to European policymakers. Though the results cast doubt on regulator concerns about the competitive costs imposed on private firms by disclosure requirements (DTI [1995]), the evidence does suggest that firms manage size to avoid mandatory 5 audit requirements, consistent with broader concerns about the costs of regulatory requirements imposed on small firms in Europe (European Commission [2010]). Third, we contribute to the accounting and economics literature that studies the management of economic variables around regulatory thresholds and salient benchmarks. For example, Gao, Wu, and Zimmerman [2009] find evidence that small public companies in the US took actions to reduce their public float and thereby postpone compliance with Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act. Our evidence reinforces the notion that firms opportunistically manage size variables around regulatory thresholds in a setting where the thresholds determine the extent of audit requirements. 2. Institutional Background 2.1 DISCLOSURE AND AUDIT ENVIRONMENT OF EUROPEAN PRIVATE FIRMS The European Commission and the national governments of Europe strongly influence the disclosure and audit environment of European private firms. Although national governments are ultimately responsible for setting and enforcing accounting and disclosure requirements, directives from the European Commission establish a broad framework within which national governments exercise discretion. Over time, as Europe has moved towards greater integration on issues of economic and monetary policy, so too have national governments converged on issues of accounting and disclosure policy. The implementations of the Fourth and Seventh EU Accounting Directives (“Fourth Directive” and “Seventh Directive,” respectively) and the EU Corporate Disclosure Directives (1968 and 2003) have driven much of this harmonization. European countries generally require smaller firms to comply with fewer of the accounting and disclosure requirements in EU Directives. Each country implements rules to classify firms into size categories (small, medium, or large), which determine two key requirements facing limited liability private firms in Europe. First, size classification dictates 6 public disclosure requirements.8 While all limited liability firms are required to disclose some financial information so suppliers, customers, and the broader public can obtain information about firms whose owners enjoy limited liability, the disclosure requirements increase substantially with a firm’s size classification. For instance, small firms in the UK and Germany are required to disclose (at a minimum) an abbreviated balance sheet, but are not required to disclose an income statement or the average number of employees. In contrast, medium and large firms must disclose an income statement with accompanying notes disclosures, in addition to other information.9 Table 1 summarizes the main disclosure requirements for firms below versus above the small-medium threshold in each of the sample countries, and Appendix 1 provides further details.10 Second, in most European countries, limited liability private firms classified as medium or large are required to have an external audit every year, whereas firms classified as small are typically exempt from audit requirements. Appendix 2 provides detailed information on audit requirements in each of the sample countries. Individual countries implement their own size thresholds based on guidance from the European Commission. Generally, firms are classified as small, medium, or large based on three 8 As of January 1, 2007, all filed financial statements must be available in electronic format from national central registers for free or a small nominal fee. Prior to 2007, some countries relied on a different disclosure channel for limited liability firms. For instance, until 2007 German firms disclosed company information at local company registers, which local courts managed. The local courts informed the public of filings via an announcement in the Federal Gazette (Bundesanzeiger). 9 Section 411 I of the UK Companies Act and Section 288 I of the German Commercial Code. 10 We limit our focus to the small-medium threshold for several reasons. First, the incremental increase in required disclosure at the small-medium threshold is generally substantially greater than at the medium-large threshold. Indeed, the disclosure requirements for medium-sized firms shown in Table 1 and Appendix 1 are identical to the requirements for large firms in 6 of the 12 sample countries (Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Italy, and Sweden). In the 6 remaining countries, there are some differences in disclosure requirements for medium versus large firms, but the incremental required disclosure generally involves relatively minor changes in the level of aggregation for specific financial statement accounts. Second, as discussed above, the operations of smaller firms are generally more concentrated, which makes it more likely that their competitors can attribute disclosed information to specific product or geographic markets. Third, the much larger number of firms at the small-medium threshold compared to the medium-large threshold makes it more likely that our tests have sufficient power to detect size management. Finally, audit requirements are typically imposed at the small-medium threshold, which is an important aspect of the research design, as explained further below. 7 variables: year-end total assets, annual sales, and average number of employees during the firm’s fiscal year. Firms are usually assigned to a larger size category when the values of two (or more) of the three size variables exceed pre-defined bright-line thresholds over two successive years.11 For example, a small firm moves up to become a medium firm as soon as at least two of three size variables exceed the threshold separating the small and medium size classifications for two consecutive years. Conversely, a medium firm does not move down to the small size class until at least two of three size variables remain below the small-medium size threshold for two consecutive years. Table 2 lists the small-medium size thresholds in effect during our sample time period (January 1, 2003 through December 31, 2011) for the twelve sample countries. Two important institutional details are apparent. First, in most countries, all limited liability firms were subject to disclosure and audit requirements imposed at size thresholds since the start of the sample period or before.12 The audit size thresholds in the Scandinavian countries are the exceptions. It was not until late in the sample period (2011 in Sweden, 2008 in Finland, and 2006 in Denmark) that an audit exemption for some limited liability firms was introduced in these countries. Further, once the exemption was introduced, it was only for extremely small firms (e.g., the employee threshold in Finland and Sweden was set at 3 employees). Because firms must remain extremely small to avoid an audit in the Scandinavian countries, firms are likely to have unusually weak incentives to avoid mandatory audits in these unique settings, consistent with survey evidence on these regulation changes (see Niemi [2004]). Therefore, we do not present evidence on size management at the audit thresholds in the Scandinavian countries. 11 The UK and Ireland provide minor exceptions to the usual size classification rule for audit requirements (but not disclosure requirements). Until 2013 in Ireland, firms that exceeded three of three size variables were assigned to the larger size category. Until 2012 in the UK, firms that exceeded either the sales or asset threshold were assigned to the larger size category. 12 In fact, disclosure and audit requirements have been in effect in most of the sample countries since the 1990s or before. For simplicity, we only show the threshold levels in effect during our sample period in Table 2. 8 Second, threshold levels are updated to account for inflation and changes in other economic factors, though some countries (such as Germany) update their thresholds more frequently than others (such as France or Spain). For countries that have updated their threshold levels, the assets and sales thresholds have generally increased at a rate that has significantly outpaced inflation, effectively expanding the set of firms that fall in the small size category (and therefore expanding the set of firms that are exempt from audit or additional disclosure requirements). This is consistent with the concerns of both the European Commission and national governments about imposing proprietary disclosure costs and audit costs on small and medium-sized enterprises (DTI [1995]). There has not been a corresponding relaxation over time in the employee threshold – the small-medium threshold for the employee size variable is 50 in most countries and has remained unchanged in almost all countries since the beginning of our sample period. 2.2 MANAGEMENT OF SIZE CLASSIFICATION VARIABLES Size classification depends jointly on the values of three size variables – total assets, sales, and number of employees. Managing one or more of these size variables downward imposes costs that include the costs of operating at a suboptimal size as well as costs of maintaining the size variables below thresholds. These costs are likely to be lowest when the unmanaged size variables are only a small amount above the thresholds, so we expect most evidence of size management to reflect managers’ actions to reduce size variables by only a few percent. We briefly review some of the tactics used to manage each of the three variables as highlighted in the academic and practitioner literatures in Europe.13 13 A comprehensive way to manage size to remain below size thresholds is to restructure the firm into two or more separate firms. Size management through restructuring will affect the distributions of all three size variables in ways that are difficult to detect empirically, as splitting the firm transforms values near or above thresholds into values substantially below thresholds. However, in the tests that follow, we benchmark evidence of size management at disclosure thresholds using evidence of size management at audit thresholds, and there is no reason to expect that firms are more likely to restructure instead of manage size variables individually to avoid disclosure 9 2.2.1. Total Assets Firms can manage total assets downward using a variety of techniques that keep assets off the balance sheet. Examples include leasing rather than buying, outsourcing asset-intensive business processes, and financial transactions such as factoring. Of course, any size management action that involves an outside entity entails both monetary and time costs from contracting. Firms can also use accounting discretion to manage assets. For instance, under the German Commercial Code firms have several options to either expense or capitalize costs, e.g., firms can expense the costs of an internally generated intangible asset from the development phase (Section 248 II) or expense loan discounts (Section 250 III). Accrual management is another possibility. Due to the close alignment of tax reporting with financial reporting in Continental Europe (Burgstahler, Hail, and Leuz [2006]), asset write-offs might be used to simultaneously manage assets downward and reduce tax liabilities. Another advantage to using accounting discretion is that it requires less advance planning – managers can make opportunistic accounting decisions after the fiscal year end while preparing the financial statements. The disadvantages are that such actions are not permanent (accruals, for example, can reverse in the following year) and can attract the attention of tax authorities. 2.2.2. Sales Firms have several options to manage sales downward. In some circumstances reported sales can be reduced through accounting choices, e.g., by recording sales at net amounts after deducting some costs. In some cases firms can separate sales revenue and revenue from ancillary services such as delivery or warranty service, where the ancillary revenue might be allocated to a separate (though possibly affiliated) firm. Another possibility that does not rely on accounting discretion is to simply defer sales to a subsequent period (e.g., by underestimating the stage of versus audit requirements. For a more extensive discussion of restructuring and other methods firms can use to manage each size variable, see Kaya [2010, pp. 128-156]. 10 completion of long-term contracts to delay revenue recognition), though delaying revenue recognition only defers the issue of maintaining sales below the size threshold. Managers might also fail to report cash sales; however, given the high book-tax alignment in most of Europe, doing so would risk drawing the scrutiny of tax authorities (Burgstahler, Hail, and Leuz [2006]). 2.2.3. Number of Employees Employee count can be managed by using temporary employees, by outsourcing, or by contracting with outside entities to supply labor. For example, in most European countries, services are readily available for straightforward financial functions such as payroll, billing, and processing of receivables and payables. However, these nonstandard employment relations are often costly and require substantial planning to establish. For example, in Germany, firms typically pay two to three times more for a temporary worker from an outside entity than for an internal employee (Holtbrügge [2007]). 3. Hypotheses and Related Literature 3.1 SIZE MANAGEMENT TO AVOID DISCLOSURE COSTS Prior theoretical and empirical papers consider the incentives for firms to withhold information for competitive reasons. The premise of these papers is that disclosures that provide competitors with useful information can impose proprietary costs. Accordingly, the literature has focused on the determinants of competitive costs of disclosure, including the firm and industry characteristics associated with high proprietary costs. Most papers examine disclosures other than financial reporting outputs. For example, a number of papers examine the quality of compliance with nonfinancial disclosures in public firms’ mandatory filings. Ellis, Fee, and Thomas [2012] examine firm compliance with SEC Reg. S-K, which requires public companies to disclose information about major customers; Verrecchia and Weber [2006] study the redaction of information from SEC material contract 11 filings; and Guo, Lev, and Zhou [2004] examine the extent of product-related information in a sample of biotech firm prospectuses. Previous papers also examine the relation between proprietary costs and voluntary financial disclosures. For instance, Wang [2007] studies the propensity of managers to provide “private” earnings guidance, and Bamber and Cheon [1998] examine managers’ decisions to provide qualitative instead of quantitative forecasts. While the universal conclusion of these papers is that firms with higher proprietary costs make less informative disclosures, it is generally not clear what costs, if any, firms incur to make less informative disclosures (see, e.g., Verrecchia and Weber [2006]). Further, there is substantial inconsistency in the assumptions about the firm and industry characteristics associated with high proprietary costs. For instance, Harris [1998] and Botosan and Stanford [2005] examine proprietary costs of disclosure in the context of multi-segment reporting under SFAS No. 14 and SFAS No. 131. Both papers report evidence consistent with the assumption that managers choose segment disclosures opportunistically to hide information about product lines in less competitive (and, presumably, more profitable) industries. On the other hand, Verrecchia and Weber [2006] find that nondisclosure (that is, redaction from SEC material contract filings) is more common in more competitive industries and among firms experiencing losses. Dedman and Lennox [2009] examine medium-sized UK private firms’ use of an exemption to avoid disclosure of sales and cost of goods sold. They argue that measures of industry competition face too many theoretical and empirical problems to be useful predictors of firms’ proprietary costs and find little evidence that industry measures of competition are related to disclosure decisions.14 14 Interestingly, Dedman and Lennox [2009] also find that while most medium-sized firms choose to disclose as little as possible to meet disclosure requirements, nearly half of the firms in their sample choose to not incur what appears to be a very small nominal cost (£100 – £250) to avoid more detailed disclosure. 12 We focus on proprietary costs that stem specifically from financial statement disclosures for two main reasons. First, financial reporting outputs capture measures of firm performance and financial position that are potentially of interest to rivals. For example, a competitor could use sales, gross profit, and operating profit disclosures to infer the success of the recent introduction of a new or revamped product line, advertising campaign, or capacity expansion. A rival could use knowledge of a competitor’s recent price changes together with financial statement disclosures to better understand market size and price elasticities in specific market segments. Competitors could use income statement, balance sheet and notes disclosures to benchmark their own sales growth, production efficiency, SG&A costs, collection and payment periods, inventory levels, or PP&E levels (Lang and Sul [forthcoming]). Competitors could even use expanded balance sheet and cash flow statement disclosures to identify and prey on weaker rivals, consistent with evidence from the capital structure literature that suggests that firms undercut highly levered and cash-constrained rivals in competitive product markets (see, e.g., Chevalier [1995]). Second, financial statement disclosures are likely to be especially informative for small private firms, as there are few, if any, alternative low-cost sources of information for these firms. Further, small private firms typically have concentrated ownership and can effectively rely on confidential channels for dissemination of financial statement information to key counterparties. Combined with the fact that public disclosure provides private company owners with no equity market benefits, these characteristics of the setting make it likely that mandated public disclosure imposes relatively high proprietary costs for firms in our sample. In sum, we examine evidence of size management to avoid substantial expansions in financial statement disclosure among firms that are likely to incur relatively high proprietary 13 costs of disclosure.15 Firms are likely to manage size only if the proprietary costs of disclosure are greater than the operational and financial costs of size management activities. Because the costs of size management increase with the amount of size management, most instances of size management are likely to be those that reduce size variables from levels just above the size threshold to levels just below. Thus, we expect to find evidence of size management to avoid disclosure unless the proprietary costs of disclosure are even smaller than the costs of small amounts of size management. Our first hypothesis, in alternative form: H1: European private firms manage size to avoid competitive costs of disclosure. 3.2 SIZE MANAGEMENT TO AVOID AUDIT COSTS The net cost of an audit is the gross cost of the audit (the sum of direct audit fees and other indirect costs, such as the time and effort to provide information to the auditors) less any offsetting benefits of the audit. Direct audit fees are typically relatively low for small private firms. For example, audit fee estimates for most small UK firms range from £1,000 to £10,000 during our sample period, depending on the firm’s audit history, industry, and other factors (Kausar, Shroff, and White [2014]; Collis [2010]; Collis [2008]). Audit fees are likely to be even smaller in countries with less stringent audit requirements. For example, in some countries the external auditor does not need to be certified (e.g., the Netherlands – see Appendix 2), which is likely to translate into lower audit fees. In other countries (e.g., Italy – see the discussion in Section 5.1 and Appendix 2) an internal board of statutory auditors can conduct the audit, which is likely to lead to even smaller costs. The indirect costs of an audit are hard to quantify for small private firms, but are they likely to be minimal inasmuch as European countries often require 15 In this way, our paper can be viewed as an extension of Dedman and Lennox [2009]. While Dedman and Lennox [2009] examine proprietary costs imposed by the disclosure of separate sales and cost of goods sold information in the UK, we examine a broader range of disclosure requirements in multiple countries. 14 firms to prepare full accounts for shareholders, which means that firms incur the costs to keep reasonably accurate books and records regardless of external audit or public disclosure requirements. The offsetting benefits of an audit can be described in terms of reductions of monitoring and contracting costs. The separation of ownership and control creates a demand for monitoring (Jensen and Meckling [1976]), and audits can substitute for other costly forms of monitoring by owners and company directors (Collis [2010]; Güntert [2000]). Further, audits can improve managerial decision making by providing assurance that the financial statement figures used for planning and control purposes are reliable. Audits can also reduce debt contracting costs, which are often substantial for private firms (Brav [2009]). Using a sample of small US firms, Blackwell, Noland, and Winters [1998] show that firms that choose to be audited pay significantly lower interest rates than similar unaudited firms. In their sample, the interest savings from audits cover between 28% and 50% of typical audit fees. Minnis [2011] finds that audited firms enjoy significantly lower interest rates than unaudited firms (roughly 70 basis points, on average), with larger effects on rates for smaller firms. Minnis [2011] also finds evidence of a “substitution effect” for internal firm capabilities – that is, the greater rate reductions from audits for small firms suggest that lenders price in an expertise effect from auditor involvement on financial reporting quality. Lennox and Pittman [2011] highlight the endogeneity of lower interest rates associated with voluntary audits. Drawing on Melumad and Thoman’s [1990] analytical model of audit choice, they argue that the decision to hire an auditor acts as a mechanism that permits a separating equilibrium between low- and high-risk borrowers. They focus on firms that were no longer required to have an audit due to a change in audit thresholds in the UK in 2004 and find that credit ratings increase for firms that choose to continue to be audited, whereas credit ratings 15 fall for firms that discontinue their audits. Kausar, Shroff, and White [2014] use the same setting to show that voluntary audits allow high-quality firms to signal their type by choosing to be audited, which affects the investment and long-term debt levels of firms that transition from mandatory to voluntary audit regimes. Together, these findings suggest that managers’ decisions regarding audits can act as valuable signals to outside parties; however, the value of these signals are likely to be substantially lower in a mandatory audit regime. In sum, the gross cost of an audit may be partially or completely offset by reductions in agency costs and other benefits. Previous evidence suggests the benefits of an audit are likely to be relatively high for small private firms, which often rely heavily on debt and may lack alternative control systems. When the benefits completely offset the costs, the firm chooses to have an audit independent of regulation. However, even when the benefits do not completely offset the costs, the net cost of an audit may be so small that firms are unwilling to incur the costs of size management to avoid an audit. Thus, the extent to which private European firms manage size to avoid audit requirements is an open empirical question. Our second hypothesis, in alternative form: H2: European private firms manage size to avoid mandatory audits. Together, results for H1 and H2 provide evidence about the relative magnitude of proprietary costs of disclosure versus net audit costs. Evidence of size management to avoid disclosure but not to avoid audits would suggest that disclosure costs exceed net audit costs. Alternatively, evidence of size management to avoid audits but not to avoid disclosure would suggest that disclosure costs are less than net audit costs. 16 4. Sample Selection, Empirical Methodology, and Descriptive Statistics 4.1 DATA AND SAMPLE SELECTION We obtain financial statement and employee data from Amadeus, the leading data source for European private firms (e.g., Tendeloo and Vanstraelen [2008]; Burgstahler, Hail, and Leuz [2006]; Coppens and Peek [2005]). The Amadeus database, supplied by Bureau van Dijk, contains information about a wide range of public and private European firms. Amadeus dramatically expanded its coverage of private firms in the early 2000s, so we focus on a nineyear period beginning in 2003, when data availability increases substantially in a number of countries. We select observations from twelve countries, which represent some of the largest European economies with the largest number of observations available on Amadeus: Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain, Sweden, and the UK.16 The decision to examine a large number of countries stems from our expectation that the net cost of managing each size variable (and therefore which variables are managed and to what extent) varies across countries, as a large body of literature documents the effects of certain institutional factors on accounting-related decisions, such as earnings management (Burgstahler, Hail, and Leuz [2006]; Maijoor and Vanstraelen [2006]; Leuz, Nanda, and Wysocki [2003]; La Porta et al. [1998]; Joos and Lang [1994]).17 Thus, examining evidence of size management to avoid mandatory disclosure and audit requirements across a large number of countries reduces the probability that our main conclusions are affected by any country-specific institutional detail. 16 For the remaining European countries not included in our sample, there are only a limited number of observations available on Amadeus, and expanding the sample to include these countries would impose substantial costs to accurately identify specific disclosure and audit requirements. 17 As discussed further below, we also believe that regulators’ decisions in setting the relative levels of the total assets, sales, and employee count thresholds could affect which size variable or variables firms manage. 17 Consistent with the application of national size classification criteria, we restrict our sample to the (unconsolidated) financial statement accounts of firms not in a consolidated group. We also restrict the sample to private firms, as publicly-traded firms are all subject to public disclosure requirements, and to firms not in finance, insurance, or public administration (NAICS codes beginning with 52 and 92), as firms in these industries are often subject to other disclosure and audit requirements under national laws (e.g., Lennox and Pittman [2011]). Finally, we include only firms with limited liability, as firms without limited liability are not subject to disclosure or audit requirements, and firms not reporting under IFRS, as private firms that voluntarily adopt IFRS are likely to have different disclosure incentives compared to firms that do not. Table 3 summarizes the sample selection procedure (Panel A) and details the total observation count by year and country (Panel B).18 The population of firms we examine comprises roughly 37 million firm-year observations, though we focus on a small subset of these observations (that is, observations in the immediate vicinity of the disclosure or audit thresholds), as we expect to observe size management only when the costs of size management are small relative to the benefits. We provide two measures of the number of observations close enough to the thresholds to be potentially affected by size management in Table 3 Panel C. First, we tabulate the number of observations within ten percent of the total assets disclosure threshold for each country. Second, to approximate the number of firms in the sample that could 18 Table 3 Panel B shows that our sample size generally increases over time. There are several reasons for this increase. First, data coverage on Amadeus expanded over the 2000s. Second, some countries implemented stronger enforcement systems to improve disclosure compliance during the sample period, leading to a substantial year-overyear increase in observations. For example, in 2006 Germany created new rules that target firms that fail to file mandatory financial statement information. Third, Bureau van Dijk deletes observations in Amadeus from previous years when firms fail to file financial statements for four years. For example, observations for a firm that filed financial statements until 2004 when it went bankrupt would not be included in our dataset, as it would not have filed financial statements for four years when Bureau van Dijk updated the Amadeus dataset in 2012 and 2013, when we retrieved our data. Overall, this has the effect of reducing the sample size in the earliest years of the sample, but not in the most recent years. We have no reason to believe these systematic changes in database coverage affect the inferences from our results. 18 reasonably be expected to manage size downward to avoid disclosure or audit costs, we tabulate the number of observations within four percent above the total assets disclosure threshold for each country. For example, of the approximately 4.7 million firm-year observations from Spain that meet the sample selection criteria, only roughly 94,000 (18,000) are within ten percent of (four percent above) the total assets disclosure threshold. 4.2 EMPIRICAL METHODOLOGY If firms take actions to manage size in the vicinity of the thresholds, these actions will be reflected in the distributions of the size variables (total assets, sales, and number of employees).19 Specifically, we hypothesize that firms take actions to transform pre-managed size variables a small amount above the threshold into post-managed values below the threshold.20 As a result, size management will lead to an abnormally high number of firm-year observations immediately below a size threshold in the observable post-managed distribution and an abnormally low number immediately above the threshold. We use distributional tests popularized in the earnings management literature (see, e.g., Burgstahler and Dichev [1997]) to test our predictions. Distributional tests offer two key advantages over alternative approaches. First and foremost, distributional tests do not require a model of the “normal” values of variables subject to management. This is important as such models are often noisy (see, e.g., Dechow, Sloan, and Sweeney [1995] and Dechow et al. [2012] 19 Because the firms managing size at some thresholds avoid mandatory audit requirements, it is conceivable that firms are simply misreporting their size rather than actually making different economic decisions because of the size thresholds. We believe this is unlikely for several reasons. First, as discussed above, there is high tax-financial reporting alignment in Continental Europe (see Table 3 in Burgstahler, Hail, and Leuz [2006]). Since financial statements are the basis of tax filings, financial statements are effectively under the scrutiny of tax authorities. Second, national laws impose significant penalties on managers and directors for misleading or false financial reporting. For instance, under the 2006 Companies Act in the UK, directors must acknowledge their responsibilities for ensuring their companies keep appropriate records and prepare financial statements “which give a true and fair view of the state of affairs of the company.” Under German law (Section 331 of the German Commercial Code), false reporting can result in financial penalties or imprisonment for up to three years. These institutional characteristics suggest that size management in the form of false reporting is costly to firms and their managers. 20 For expositional convenience, we describe firms managing size to remain below disclosure and audit thresholds. Technically, however, firms avoid size re-classification by managing size to remain at or below thresholds. 19 for a discussion of abnormal accrual models), and these models also require a large set of data from surrounding years. Second, as explained below, distributional evidence can be used to assess the frequency of size management.21 Consistent with prior literature, our tests assume only that the distributions of the variables are smooth in the absence of size management. To this end, we select bin sizes to be roughly two percent of the variable threshold – large enough to maintain the assumption of smoothness in the absence of management, but small enough so that it is plausible that firms could manage the variables by the amount of the interval width at reasonably low cost.22 For example, it is plausible that to avoid an audit a firm could reduce its headcount from 51 to 50 (i.e., about 2%) at reasonably low cost, but it is much less plausible that the firm would incur the costs necessary to reduce headcount from 60 employees to 50 employees. The significance of each discontinuity is assessed using the standardized difference statistic defined in Burgstahler and Dichev [1997], incorporating the minor refinements presented in Burgstahler and Chuk [2014]. The hypothesis that size variables are managed downward to remain below size thresholds predicts a positive standardized difference for the interval immediately below the threshold (“left standardized difference”) and a negative standardized difference for the interval immediately above the threshold (“right standardized difference”).23 For expositional convenience, we present and discuss results for left standardized 21 Durtschi and Easton [2005] and Durtschi and Easton [2009] question the conclusions of distributional tests in the earnings management literature. In short, they argue that scaling and sample selection issues can bias the results of distributional tests. Neither of these criticisms bears on our results: we do not scale our variables by another variable, and we obtain significant results for all three variables that we test, including total assets, which firms must disclose regardless of size (i.e., there are very few missing observations for assets). Also, see Burgstahler and Chuk [forthcoming] for a rebuttal to the Durtschi and Easton claim that discontinuities are explained by scaling and selection. 22 Our results are not sensitive to other reasonable choices of bin size. 23 Note that the predictions about standardized differences for size variables that are managed down to remain below thresholds have the opposite signs compared to earnings variables that are managed up to exceed thresholds. 20 differences, noting that inferences are generally unchanged if we instead focus on right standardized differences. 4.3 DESCRIPTIVE STATISTICS Table 4 presents descriptive statistics for the three size variables by country. The descriptive statistics highlight the large proportion of private firms in European economies that are small. Comparing the percentile values of variables for which we have relatively complete data (e.g., total assets for firms in the UK or sales for Italian firms) to the thresholds in Table 2, the vast majority of firm-year observations on Amadeus are below the small-medium threshold – for example, the 90th percentile for these variables is typically below the small-medium threshold. The large proportions of small firms in the sample are also reflected in the data coverage statistics in the far right column of Table 4. Small firm disclosure requirements include at least an abbreviated balance sheet (and therefore, total assets) for every country, but in many countries small firms are not required to report sales or employee count. Consistent with these requirements, the data coverage statistics for these countries show a relatively large proportion of missing sales and employee count observations.24 Missing data for sales and employee count impose a limitation on our tests, as nondisclosure among firms below the small-medium size threshold could reduce (though could not increase) the observed effects of size management. For example, under the simplifying assumptions that firms do not voluntarily disclose more than is required and that size classification is determined based solely on the value of a single size variable for a single year, 24 Note, however, that the low coverage rates for sales and employees in Table 4 tend to exaggerate the importance of missing data, since the vast majority of the missing sales and employee count observations are likely far below the small-medium size thresholds. For example, untabulated results show that roughly 90% of the observations of UK firms with missing employee data have total assets less than £1,000,000, which is far below the disclosure and audit thresholds based on asset size during our sample period. The missing sales and employee observations that correspond to these small asset-size observations would likely have also been far below the respective sales and employee thresholds for the vast majority of observations, and thus would not have had any effect on tests of size management in the vicinity of the thresholds. 21 the sales and employee size data would be missing below thresholds that impose sales and employee count disclosure. This censoring of sales and employee observations below the disclosure thresholds would eliminate the excess observations below the threshold that are expected under the size management hypothesis. However, the simplifying assumptions do not hold exactly – firms sometimes voluntarily disclose and the actual size classification criteria are complex, based on the values of two of three size variables for two consecutive years. As a result, it is impossible to know exactly the extent to which observations below the size thresholds for the sales and employees variables have actually been censored; Table 4 shows that sales and employee count data are often available for values below the disclosure thresholds. Despite the limitations imposed by non-disclosure, we believe it is useful to examine evidence based on sales and employee count. First and foremost, we interpret findings for sales and employee count as supplementary to results for assets, which are not subject to the nondisclosure limitation. The results reported in Section 5 show that the results for sales and employees support the same main conclusions as the results for assets. More specifically, the findings in cases where there are substantial numbers of missing observations (for sales and employee count in some countries) are consistent with findings in cases where there are few missing observations (for sales and employee count in other countries, and for the assets variable in all countries). One factor that contributes to this consistency is that size management to avoid disclosure is potentially detectable even in countries where small firms are not required to disclose sales or employee count. Although firms that manage size to remain below the disclosure threshold that imposes sales and employee count disclosure would obviously not appear in the bin(s) left of the threshold in the observable sales and employee count distributions, size management would nonetheless decrease the number of observations in the bin(s) above the threshold, where the 22 observations would have been had the firms not managed size. Thus, for the sales and employee count variables, size management has an observable effect on the number of observations in the bins immediately above the threshold even when the effect on the number of observations in the bins below the threshold is unobservable. Second, the results reported below are not consistent with simple censoring of the sales and employee variables below the individual size thresholds. By itself, simple censoring would lead to negative left standardized differences, as there would be far fewer observations below the threshold than above. However, the results reported in Section 5 show no significantly negative left standardized differences. Instead, there are a number of significantly positive left standardized differences for the sales and employee variables, consistent with size management and inconsistent with simple censoring due to non-disclosure. 5. Empirical Results 5.1 SIZE MANAGEMENT AT COINCIDING DISCLOSURE AND AUDIT THRESHOLDS We begin with evidence of size management among firms in four of the largest sample countries where the small-medium disclosure and audit thresholds coincide. Figure 1 presents the distributions in the vicinity of the small-medium threshold and the corresponding standardized differences for Germany, Italy, Spain, and the UK for the full sample period (i.e., for firm-years with reporting dates ending between January 1, 2003 and December 31, 2011) for total assets (Panels A–D), sales (Panels E–H), and number of employees (Panels I–L). The small-medium employee threshold is 50 employees for all four countries for the entire sample period, so the distributions of number of employees are unscaled. In contrast, as shown in Table 2, the asset and sales thresholds vary by country and time period for these four countries. Consequently, 23 distributions of assets and sales are presented as a percentage of the country and period-specific small-medium size threshold.25 Throughout the paper, we examine a large number of standardized differences. Therefore, to limit the number of significant test statistics expected under the null hypothesis (the level of significance adopted multiplied by the number of test statistics examined), we adopt a relatively stringent 1% significance criterion. Standardized difference tests of significance are shown at the bottom of each panel in Figure 1. The thrust of the evidence in Figure 1 is that size management is common – a total of six of the twelve left standardized differences in Figure 1 are significant at the .01 level, including three of four standardized differences for assets, two of four for employees, and one of four for sales. The evidence varies by country and threshold variable. For the UK, we find statistically significant evidence of size management around the asset threshold but no significant evidence that firms manage sales or employee count. For Germany, we find statistically significant evidence of asset management, no evidence of sales management, and extremely strong evidence of employee management.26 For Spain, we find evidence of size management around all three threshold variables – total assets, sales, and number of employees.27 25 To illustrate, suppose a UK firm reports assets of £2,500,000 for its fiscal year end in 2005. Its asset value is roughly 10.7% below the small-medium threshold of £2,800,000 for that time period (see Table 2). Thus, this observation would fall in the bin representing assets between 88% and 90% of the threshold in Figure 1 Panel D. In a later period when the threshold has risen to £3,260,000, an observation at £2,500,000 in assets would be about 23.4% below the threshold and would fall in the bin between 76% and 78% of the threshold. 26 Panel E of Figure 1 (German sales) is subject to a unique data limitation. Neither small nor medium German firms are required to report sales, yet in many cases in which firms have not disclosed sales in their filed statements, Amadeus nevertheless shows sales data. In a suspiciously high proportion of these cases, the Amadeus sales data are round numbers, suggesting that Amadeus reports approximate sales figures obtained from other sources – in particular, estimates from national credit bureau offices, such as Creditreform Germany. Since Amadeus does not include a variable indicating for which observations the database relies on this supplemental information, there is no reliable way to identify and remove these approximations from the distributions. As an ad hoc solution to this known data issue, for Panel E (and Panel E alone), we remove observations with values for sales that are round multiples of €100,000. The resulting distribution is far smoother than that obtained without this selection choice. While this solution is necessary to avoid false inferences due to a rounding artifact, it also has the unfortunate effect of removing any true sales values that happen to round to €100,000 and also removes larger sales observations in slightly greater proportions than smaller sales observations. Thus, although the resulting sales distribution in 24 The significant discontinuities in distributions of employees for Germany and Spain are subject to an important caveat. German and Spanish laws provide for works councils to represent employees at the firm level, and the required number of works council members is tied to the number of employees, which creates another incentive to manage number of employees.28 In Germany, the works council must be expanded from three to five representatives starting with the 51st employee. Thus, to the extent adding two more representatives on the works council is costly to small business owners, some of the discontinuity at 50 employees in Germany may be due to employers avoiding works council costs, and not strictly costs due to audit or disclosure requirements.29 In Spain, the works council must be established with the 50th employee, which makes it more difficult to detect a discontinuity at 50 employees. That is, the discontinuity at 50 employees on the Spanish employees graph (Figure 1 Panel K) exists despite the incentive for employers to manage the number of employees down to 49 employees to avoid works council representation for employees. In contrast to the results for the other three countries, there is no evidence of size management for Italian firms. The lack of results for Italy is not entirely surprising, as Italy has Germany does not show evidence of size management, the lack of evidence could be due, at least in part, to the effects of our selection procedure to deal with this data limitation. 27 Two issues related to taxes also affect the Spanish sales distribution in Figure 1. Spanish firms must file VAT returns and pay VAT taxes monthly instead of quarterly if their sales in the previous period exceeded €6,010,121. Additionally, firms with sales exceeding €6,000,000 are monitored by the Spanish Large Taxpayers’ Unit, which conducts frequent tax audits of firms under its purview (Almunia and Lopez-Rodriguez [2014]). The incentives to avoid these thresholds manifest themselves in the slight bumps on Figure 1 Panel G between 100 and 110 and 120 and 130 percent of the threshold. When we align the bins relative to either of these two tax thresholds at €6,010,121 or €6,000,000 rather than relative to the disclosure and audit thresholds, we obtain highly significant standardized differences. 28 In theory, a works council exists to protect the rights of workers as a trade union does, but with additional powers. For instance, in Germany works councils have the rights of information (that is, to be informed about firm performance, work place health and safety issues, etc.), consultation (e.g., to be involved in issues regarding the suspension of staff), and co-determination (e.g., to participate in decisions regarding the employment of workers and setting a framework for firm compensation practices) (Carley, Welz, and Baradel [2005]; Koller [2010]). 29 While incentives to avoid the expansion of the works council may explain part of the discontinuity at the 50 employee threshold, we consider it unlikely that this is the sole explanation: Although there is a significant discontinuity at 20 employees (the level at which the works council must be expanded from one to three employees), it is only half the magnitude of the discontinuity at the 50 employee threshold. 25 arguably the weakest audit requirements of any of the sample countries.30 Unlike in other European countries, in Italy a private firm can delegate a financial audit to its board of statutory auditors (Collegio Sindacale). Appointed by shareholders, this internal body is tasked with monitoring the board of directors and verifying the company’s compliance with certain laws and statutes (Ferrarini and Giudici [2005]; Melis [2000]). Even when responsible for conducting a financial audit, members of the board of statutory auditors need not follow legal requirements concerning independence and often act as tax advisors (Mariani, Tettamanzi, and Corno [2010]). Thus, the ability to delegate an audit to the board of statutory auditors (as opposed to hiring external auditors) is likely to make the audit requirement less costly, which attenuates the incentive for firms to manage size to avoid the audit requirement. For each variable and country where the standardized difference is significant, Table 5 presents estimates in two forms (range and percentage) of the number of firm-years in which size management occurred. The range estimate is an estimate of the number of firm-years in which size management occurred expressed in absolute terms, while the percentage estimate is expressed as a proportion of the total number of firm-years immediately left of the threshold. Though we present both range and percentage estimates, we emphasize that the percentage estimates better describe the economic significance of the results, as the percentages represent the extent of size management among firms for which the costs of size management are reasonably low. Both the range and percentage estimates assume a linear relation among the expected frequencies in the vicinity of the threshold. More specifically, the estimates assume that the 30 It is also possible that the lack of results in Italy could be due to a lack of enforcement of disclosure and audit requirements. Enforcement is a necessary condition for either audit or disclosure requirements to be costly to a firm, and Italy scores among the worst of European countries on measures of the pervasiveness of corruption, efficiency of the legal system, and the quality of legal enforcement (Burgstahler, Hail, and Leuz [2006]; La Porta et al. [1998]). However, if disclosure requirements are unenforced, then the data availability for Italy (as shown in Tables 3 and 4) should be relatively poor. Instead, we find the data availability for Italy is relatively good. 26 expected frequencies for the two bins above and the two bins below the threshold can be estimated based on the observed frequencies in the bins third closest to the threshold.31 For each range estimate, one side of the range is calculated by summing the deviations from the expected linear relationship in the two bins immediately left of the threshold (“how many more observations are in these bins than would be expected in the absence of size management incentives”). The other side of the range is calculated by summing the deviations from the expected linear relationship in the two bins immediately right of the threshold (“how many fewer observations are in these bins than would otherwise be expected”). When we average the two sides of each range estimate and sum the resulting averages across variables and countries, we estimate the frequency of size management at 4,375 firm-years. However, this estimate likely understates the overall number of firm-years in these four countries affected by size management as Amadeus’ data coverage is limited for the first several years of our sample period (see Table 3 Panel B). Whereas the range estimate incorporates estimates of the number of observations managed to values below the threshold and the number managed from above the threshold, the percentage of firm-years managed is based solely on the estimate of the number managed to values below the threshold. The percentage estimate of firm-years managed is the difference between the actual number of observations in the bin immediately left of the threshold and the expected number based on the expected linear relationship between the bins third closest to the threshold, expressed as a percentage of the actual number of observations in the bin immediately 31 The assumptions underlying these estimates are that (1) the bins third closest to the threshold (on either side) in the observable distributions are not affected by size management, and (2) that in the absence of size management incentives, the numbers of observations in the two bins immediately below and two bins immediately above the threshold would be equal to the linear interpolation of the numbers in the bins third closest to the threshold. The range estimates include the effects on the two bins on each side of the threshold (rather than just a single bin on each side) because visual inspection suggests that although the majority of the estimated number of observations appear to be managed to and from one bin on either side of the threshold, size management sometimes also affects the second bin on either side. 27 left of the threshold. For the assets variable, the estimated percentages of firm-years managed are 20.8% for the UK, 12.0% for Germany, and 2.6% for Spain. For the sales and employee variables, the estimates range from 5.7% to 42.6%, where the largest estimated percentage is for the employee variable among German firms. Table 6 Panel A summarizes the results of standardized difference tests for all the sample countries where thresholds coincide for at least some portion of the sample period. In addition to the four countries discussed in Figure 1, Table 6 Panel A includes standardized difference test statistics for coinciding thresholds in Austria, Belgium, Ireland, and the Netherlands. For these four additional countries, we test only six of the twelve size variable distributions, because in the remaining six cases either (1) the average number of observations in the bins used for the standardized difference statistic is less than 100 (i.e., the test would have low power), or (2) there is evidence that the Amadeus data relies on rounded estimates from national credit bureaus that invalidate the assumption of a smooth distribution even in the absence of size management. We find significant evidence of size management at the total assets threshold in Austria, but no significant evidence at the remaining size thresholds. 5.2 SIZE MANAGEMENT AT SEPARATE DISCLOSURE AND AUDIT THRESHOLDS Because the disclosure and audit size thresholds coincide for the countries and time periods discussed above, the evidence of size management thus far could be attributable either to size management to avoid disclosure costs or to size management to avoid audit costs. In this section, we attempt to separate the effects of these two incentives by examining evidence of size management for cases where disclosure and audit thresholds do not coincide.32 32 In principle, an alternative approach to disentangle size management incentives at coinciding thresholds would be to examine size management for the subsample of firms that have already chosen to have an audit for other reasons and thus have no incentive to manage size to avoid audit costs. Unfortunately, data limitations prevent us from pursuing this approach because Amadeus includes only the audit status of a given firm in the most recent year for which Amadeus has data, but not for any earlier years. 28 5.2.1. Evidence of Size Management at Separate Disclosure Thresholds Table 6 Panel B presents the standardized differences from tests of size management at disclosure thresholds that do not coincide with audit thresholds. Figure 2 provides corresponding graphical evidence of size management of total assets for four of these countries: France, Sweden, Denmark, and Ireland. We plot and discuss asset distributions for these four countries because (1) the four countries represent a variety of incremental disclosure requirements, as discussed further below, and (2) they have relatively large sample sizes due to high levels of data coverage. Figure 2 Panel A presents evidence of French firms’ management of total assets to avoid expanded balance sheet, income statement, notes, and director’s report disclosure. We find no evidence that firms manage size to avoid these disclosures (standardized difference = -0.24). Because firms classified as small in France are required to disclose sales, we also have essentially complete data coverage for the sales variable. Although we do not plot the distribution of sales, Table 6 Panel B shows that the standardized difference at the sales threshold in France is 1.78, again providing no significant evidence that firms are willing to incur costs to avoid competitive costs arising from these additional disclosures. In Figure 2 Panel B we plot evidence of size management of assets by Swedish firms to avoid expanded balance sheet, income statement, cash flow statement, notes, and director’s report disclosure. In Sweden, small firms can choose to, among other things, withhold cash flow statement disclosure and abbreviate income statement information to avoid disclosing detail on components of gross profit under the cost of expenditure format of income statement reporting (see Appendix 1). Here again we find no significant evidence that firms manage assets to avoid these disclosures (standardized difference = 0.43). There is high data coverage for the sales and employee count variables in Sweden, yet there is no significant evidence of size management in 29 Table 6 Panel B for either sales (standardized difference = -0.03) or number of employees (standardized difference = 0.88).33 Figure 2 Panel C provides evidence of size management of assets by Danish firms. Like French and Swedish firms, Danish firms that exceed the small-medium disclosure threshold are required to present expanded balance sheet, notes, and director’s report disclosure. Unlike French and Swedish firms, however, Danish firms classified as small have the option to report abbreviated income statement information without separately disclosing sales and cost of goods sold. Instead, small firms in Denmark can begin income statements with gross profit, while medium-sized firms must begin their income statements with sales. Consistent with Dedman and Lennox [2009], who examine a similar exemption available to medium-sized UK firms prior to 2009, we find that large numbers of small Danish firms choose to not disclose sales information (see the data coverage statistics in Table 4). However, as shown in Figure 2 Panel C, we find no significant evidence that firms manage size to avoid sales and cost of goods sold disclosure, in addition to expanded balance sheet, notes, and director’s report disclosures (standardized difference = 0.50).34 Finally, Figure 2 Panel D presents evidence of management of total assets among Irish firms. Whereas small firms in Ireland are only required to disclose an abbreviated balance sheet and limited notes, medium firms are required to disclose an abbreviated income statement, an expanded balance sheet, additional notes information, and a director’s report. This expansion of disclosure at the small-medium threshold is virtually identical to that in Germany and the UK, 33 The implication that cash flow statement disclosure does not impose substantial proprietary costs of disclosure is reinforced by the similar lack of results in Table 6 Panel B for Finland, where cash flow statement disclosure is required for firms above the small-medium size thresholds but not for those below. 34 The expanded disclosure requirements in Denmark are nearly identical to those in Belgium. The high number of missing values for sales for Belgium firm observations is consistent with the idea that small Belgian firms, like Danish firms, prefer to not disclose sales and cost of goods sold information. Though the disclosure and audit thresholds coincide for our sample period in Belgium, we note that there is little evidence of size management to avoid disclosure and audit costs for Belgium (see Table 6 Panel A). From this perspective, the evidence from the Belgian setting is consistent with the findings for Denmark. 30 where there is substantial evidence of size management at coinciding disclosure and audit thresholds. However, in contrast to Germany and the UK, the standardized difference (2.02) at the total assets disclosure threshold is not significant at the .01 level, thus providing little or no evidence that small firms manage size to avoid disclosing income statements in their entirety. Taken collectively, evidence of size management at separate disclosure thresholds provides no significant support for the hypothesis (H1) that firms incur costs solely to avoid proprietary costs of additional disclosure. None of the ten standardized differences in Table 6 Panel B are significant. Thus, evidence of size management at separate disclosure thresholds provides no support for the conjecture that extensive evidence of size management at coinciding disclosure and audit thresholds is driven primarily by incentives to avoid disclosure requirements. 5.2.2. Evidence of Size Management at Separate Audit Thresholds Table 6 Panel C presents the standardized differences from tests of size management at audit thresholds that do not coincide with disclosure thresholds. Each of these four thresholds corresponds to a disclosure threshold we examine in Table 6 Panel B. That is, since the audit thresholds and disclosure thresholds are based on the same size variables, we can examine evidence of size management at different levels of the same underlying size variable distributions that we examine in Section 5.2.1.35 In Figure 3, we present corresponding graphical evidence of size management for each of these separate audit thresholds. 35 As discussed in Section 2 and Table 2, during most of our sample period all limited liability firms were subject to an audit requirement in the Scandinavian countries. Even after small firms were exempted later in the sample period, the size thresholds were set extremely low relative to those in other European countries. For example, the thresholds for number of employees in Denmark, Finland, and Sweden were 12, 3, and 3, respectively. Because maintaining size below these extremely low thresholds to avoid the audit requirement is likely to be very costly, and because there are only a limited number of observations during the period when firms could have been exempted from the audit requirement, we would not expect significant evidence of size management to avoid an audit. Therefore, tests of significance are not shown in Panel C for these countries. 31 Overall, the evidence in Table 6 Panel C and Figure 3 strongly supports the hypothesis (H2) that European firms manage size to avoid mandatory audits. Each of the four standardized differences is significant at the .01 level. The most significant evidence of size management to avoid audit requirements is for sales of UK firms in the early 2000s, a setting that provides a particularly powerful test of the audit hypothesis. Table 2 shows that regulators typically set the sales threshold to be approximately twice that of the assets threshold, but in the case of UK firms’ sales in 2003 and early 2004, the sales threshold was much lower, at just 71% of the assets threshold. As a result, it is likely that during this period a much higher proportion of UK firms had an incentive to manage sales to avoid mandatory audit requirements (that is, the sales threshold was most likely to be “binding”). The distribution shown in Panel A of Figure 3 and the standardized difference in Panel C of Table 6 provide strong evidence of management of sales by UK firms during this period. 5.2.3. Summary of Findings We find clear evidence of size management to remain below separate audit thresholds, but no significant evidence of size management to remain below separate disclosure thresholds. There are two important implications of these findings. First, the evidence of size management to remain below coinciding disclosure and audit thresholds in Section 5.1 is more likely to be attributable to audit costs than to disclosure costs. Second, these results suggest that proprietary costs of disclosure are typically lower than net audit costs. Because net audit costs are likely to be relatively low for the small private firms in our sample, the findings provide essentially no support for the proposition that mandated disclosure of financial statement information imposes economically significant proprietary costs. 32 6. Conclusion This paper provides evidence of size management to minimize disclosure costs and audit costs among small private firms in Europe. Proprietary costs of disclosure should be relatively important for small firms, for which financial statements likely reveal information about activities concentrated in a single market, and for private firms, for which competitors have limited access to other (non-financial statement) information sources. The empirical tests focus on size management by firms where premanaged size variables likely exceed bright-line thresholds by only a few percent and the corresponding cost of size management should be relatively low. In this setting where incentives to manage size should be relatively strong, we find no significant evidence that firms incur costs solely to avoid expanded financial statement disclosure requirements. At the same time, we find substantial evidence that firms incur similar costs to avoid a required audit, even though the net cost imposed by an audit is likely to be relatively low. Together, these findings suggest that proprietary costs of disclosure are typically less than net audit costs. Thus, in a setting where proprietary costs should be relatively important, we find essentially no support for the proposition that mandated disclosure of financial statement information imposes economically significant proprietary costs. The results of our study have several important implications. First, the findings reinforce Berger’s [2011] call for researchers to control for agency and other costs of disclosure in tests of proprietary disclosure costs. We find no significant evidence that firms manage size to avoid proprietary costs due to financial statement disclosure, even in cases where the expanded disclosures are identical to or more substantial than those studied in prior literature (e.g., Dedman and Lennox [2009]). These findings suggest that managers may prefer less disclosure at the margin but are unwilling to incur the costs of size management to avoid expanded disclosure. However, we caution that we do not provide evidence on every possible expansion of financial 33 statement disclosure, e.g., there is no setting in Europe that allows us to study whether firms manage size to entirely avoid balance sheet disclosure. Second, the results are likely to be of interest to national regulators. Evidence that firms manage size to avoid mandatory audit requirements is consistent with (1) concerns among European policymakers about the costs of certain regulatory requirements imposed on small firms (European Commission [2010]) and (2) evidence in other areas that certain “bright-line” size thresholds give firms an incentive to “stay small” (Gao, Wu, and Zimmerman [2009]). The results also show that the magnitude and method of size management varies substantially by country. National regulators have historically set the sales and assets thresholds at a ratio of roughly 2:1, and have left unchanged for more than a decade the small-medium employee threshold. These regulation decisions may partially determine which thresholds are binding in each jurisdiction, and thus dictate which variables are managed. More broadly, then, the analysis suggests that uniform regulation could have different economic consequences across European countries – an implication that should be considered as European regulators contemplate harmonizing size thresholds across Europe (European Commission [2011]). 34 Appendix 1: Disclosure Requirements for European Private Firms This table summarizes the disclosure requirements for private European limited liability firms below and above the smallmedium disclosure threshold. Below disclosure threshold: Above disclosure threshold: Balance Sheet Abbreviated format Firms can aggregate subcategories of items on the balance sheet. For instance, an abbreviated balance sheet does not provide information on components of intangible assets (e.g., selfdeveloped intangible assets, goodwill) or inventories (e.g., raw materials, work in progress), and does not separately disclose current and long-term liabilities. Expanded abbreviated format Firms are required to report subcategories of some balance sheet items (e.g., trade receivables, trade payables). Income Statement No disclosure requirement Abbreviated format Firms can aggregate certain items (e.g., sales, increase or decrease in finished goods, own work capitalized, cost of materials) to gross profit. Other disclosures Abbreviated notes Expanded abbreviated notes; director's report Balance Sheet Abbreviated format Firms can aggregate subcategories of items on the balance sheet. For instance, an abbreviated balance sheet does not provide information on components of inventories (e.g., raw materials, work in progress). Full format No option to aggregate items Income Statement Abbreviated format Firms can aggregate certain items (e.g., sales, cost of materials) to gross profit. Information on items such as increase or decrease in finished goods and own work capitalized can be omitted. Full format No option to aggregate items Other disclosures Abbreviated notes Full notes; director's report Balance Sheet Abbreviated format Firms can aggregate subcategories of items on the balance sheet. For instance, an abbreviated balance sheet does not provide information on components of intangible assets (e.g., selfdeveloped intangible assets, goodwill) or inventories (e.g., raw materials, work in progress), and does not separately disclose current and long-term liabilities. Full format No option to aggregate items Income Statement Abbreviated format Firms can aggregate certain items (e.g., sales, cost of sales, other operating income) to gross profit. Full format No option to aggregate items Other disclosures Abbreviated notes Full notes; director's report Balance Sheet Abbreviated format Firms can aggregate subcategories of items on the balance sheet. For instance, an abbreviated balance sheet does not provide information on components of intangible assets (e.g., selfdeveloped intangible assets, goodwill) or inventories (e.g., raw materials, work in progress), and does not separately disclose current and long-term liabilities. Full format No option to aggregate items Income Statement Full format No option to aggregate items Full format No option to aggregate items Other disclosures Expanded abbreviated notes Full notes; cash flow statement; director's report Austria Belgium Denmark Finland 35 France Balance Sheet Abbreviated format Firms can aggregate subcategories of items on the balance sheet. For instance, an abbreviated balance sheet does not provide information on components of intangible assets (e.g., selfdeveloped intangible assets, goodwill) or inventories (e.g., raw materials, work in progress), and does not separately disclose current and long-term liabilities. Full format No option to aggregate items Income Statement Abbreviated format Firms can withhold information about few items (e.g., income from long term transactions or cost of materials). Full format No option to aggregate items Other disclosures Abbreviated notes Full notes; director's report Abbreviated format Firms can aggregate subcategories of items on the balance sheet. For instance, an abbreviated balance sheet does not provide information on components of intangible assets (e.g., selfdeveloped intangible assets, goodwill) or inventories (e.g., raw materials, work in progress), and does not separately disclose current and long-term liabilities. Expanded abbreviated format Firms are required to report subcategories of some balance sheet items (e.g., trade receivables, trade payables). Income Statement No disclosure requirement Abbreviated format Firms can aggregate certain items (e.g., sales, increase or decrease in finished goods, own work capitalized, other operating income, cost of materials) to gross profit. Other disclosures Abbreviated notes Expanded abbreviated notes; director's report Balance Sheet Abbreviated format Firms can aggregate subcategories of items on the balance sheet. For instance, an abbreviated balance sheet does not provide information on components of intangible assets (e.g., selfdeveloped intangible assets, goodwill) or inventories (e.g., raw materials, work in progress), and does not separately disclose current and long-term liabilities. Full format No option to aggregate items Income Statement No disclosure requirement Abbreviated format Firms can aggregate certain items (e.g., sales, cost of sales, other operating income) to gross profit. Other disclosures Abbreviated notes Expanded abbreviated notes; director's report Balance Sheet Abbreviated format Firms can aggregate subcategories of items on the balance sheet. For instance, an abbreviated balance sheet does not provide information on components of intangible assets (e.g., selfdeveloped intangible assets, goodwill) or inventories (e.g., raw materials, work in progress), and does not separately disclose current and long-term liabilities. Full format No option to aggregate items Income Statement Abbreviated format Firms can aggregate certain items (e.g., increase or decrease in finished goods, increase or decrease of contract work capitalized). Full format No option to aggregate items Other disclosures Abbreviated notes Full notes; director's report Germany Balance Sheet Ireland Italy 36 Netherlands Abbreviated format Firms can aggregate subcategories of items on the balance sheet. For instance, an abbreviated balance sheet does not provide information on components of intangible assets (e.g., self-developed intangible assets, goodwill) or inventories (e.g., raw materials, work in progress), and does not separately disclose current and long-term liabilities. Expanded abbreviated format Firms are required to report subcategories of some balance sheet items (e.g., trade receivables, trade payables). Income Statement No disclosure requirement Abbreviated format Firms can aggregate certain items (e.g., sales, increase or decrease in finished goods, own work capitalized, other operating income, cost of materials) to gross profit. Other disclosures Abbreviated notes Expanded abbreviated notes; director's report Balance Sheet Abbreviated format Before 2008, firms could aggregate subcategories of items on the balance sheet. For instance, an abbreviated balance sheet did not provide information on components of intangible assets (e.g., selfdeveloped intangible assets, goodwill). Since 2008, firms are required to report subcategories of some items (e.g., trade receivables, trade payables). Full format No option to aggregate items Income Statement Abbreviated format Firms can withhold information about few subcategories of items (e.g., other operating expenses). Abbreviated format Firms can withhold information about few subcategories of items (e.g., other operating expenses). Other disclosures Abbreviated notes; abbreviated statement of equity changes Expanded abbreviated notes; cash flow statement; director's report; statement of equity changes Balance Sheet Abbreviated format Firms can aggregate subcategories of items on the balance sheet. For instance, an abbreviated balance sheet does not provide information on components of intangible assets (e.g., self-developed intangible assets, goodwill) or inventories (e.g., raw materials, work in progress), and does not separately disclose current and long-term liabilities. Full format No option to aggregate items Income Statement Abbreviated format Firms can aggregate certain items (e.g., increase or decrease in finished goods, own work capitalized, other operating income, cost of materials) to gross profit. Full format No option to aggregate items Other disclosures Abbreviated notes Full notes; cash flow statement; director's report Abbreviated format Firms can aggregate subcategories of items on the balance sheet. For instance, an abbreviated balance sheet does not provide information on components of intangible assets (e.g., self-developed intangible assets, goodwill) or inventories (e.g., raw materials, work in progress), and does not separately disclose current and long-term liabilities. Full format No option to aggregate items Income Statement No disclosure requirement Abbreviated format Before 2009, medium-sized firms could aggregate certain items (e.g., sales, cost of sales, other operating income) to gross profit. Since 2009, firms are required to report sales information. Other disclosures Abbreviated notes Expanded abbreviated notes; director's report Balance Sheet Spain Sweden United Kingdom Balance Sheet 37 Appendix 2: Audit Requirements for European Private Firms This table summarizes the audit requirements for private European limited liability firms below and above the small-medium audit threshold. Below audit threshold: Above audit threshold: Austria No mandatory audit Mandatory audit by certified auditors or certified accountants; while non-audit services (e.g., tax consulting, legal services) are allowed, bookkeeping services are prohibited. Belgium No mandatory audit Mandatory audit by certified auditors; while non-audit services (e.g., tax consulting, legal services) are allowed, bookkeeping services are prohibited. Denmark Before 2006, all limited liability firms regardless of size had to be audited; since 2006, firms below the threshold are exempt from mandatory audit requirements. Mandatory audit by certified auditors or certified accountants; non-audit services are allowed (e.g., tax consulting, legal services). In certain circumstances, auditors can also provide bookkeeping services to audit clients. Finland Before 2008, all limited liability firms regardless of size had to be audited; since 2008, firms below the threshold are exempt from mandatory audit requirements. Mandatory audit by certified auditors or non-certified auditors; auditors may provide non-audit services (e.g., tax consulting, legal services) subject to independence requirements. Bookkeeping services are not allowed. France No mandatory audit Mandatory audit by certified auditors. Non-audit services are generally not allowed. Germany No mandatory audit Mandatory audit by certified auditors or certified accountants; while non-audit services (e.g., tax consulting, legal services) are allowed, bookkeeping services are prohibited. No mandatory audit Mandatory audit by chartered accountants or certified accountants; non-audit services are allowed (e.g., tax consulting, legal services). In certain circumstances, auditors can also provide bookkeeping services to audit clients. No mandatory audit Mandatory audit by firms' internal board of auditors (Collegio Sindacale) or certified auditors; internal board of auditors may provide administrative audit and non-audit services (e.g., tax consulting, legal services). Netherlands No mandatory audit Mandatory audit by certified auditors or certified accountants; non-audit services are allowed (e.g., tax consulting, legal services). In certain circumstances, auditors can also provide bookkeeping services to audit clients. Spain No mandatory audit Mandatory audit by certified auditors or certified accountants; while non-audit services (e.g., tax consulting, legal services) are allowed, bookkeeping services are prohibited. 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WANG, I. “Private Earnings Guidance and Its Implications for Disclosure Regulation.” The Accounting Review 82 (2007): 1299–1332. 40 Figure 1: Total Asset, Sales, and Employee Distributions at Coinciding Thresholds This figure presents distributions of total assets (Panels A-D), sales (Panels E-H), and employee count (Panels I-L) for private limited liability firms in Germany (“DE”), Italy (“IT”), Spain (“ES”), and the UK in time periods when the disclosure and audit thresholds coincide. Superimposed vertical lines are drawn to demarcate the size threshold between small and medium classification. The standardized difference (SD) statistics are the left standardized difference test statistics as defined in Burgstahler and Chuk [2014]. Standardized difference statistics significant at the 1% level (one-tailed) are noted with a † superscript. Bin size is 2% of the threshold value in all panels. C: Distribution of Total Assets for ES Private Firms Reporting dates Jan 1 2003 through Dec 31 2011 Reporting dates Jan 1 2003 through Dec 31 2011 2000 5000 Frequency 10000 15000 Frequency 4000 6000 8000 20000 10000 25000 A: Distribution of Total Assets for DE Private Firms 60 70 80 90 100 110 Percentage of Threshold 120 130 140 60 SD sta s c = 8.16† 70 80 90 100 110 Percentage of Threshold 120 130 140 SD sta s c = 3.29† Reporting dates Jan 1 2003 through Dec 31 2011 5000 5000 Frequency 10000 15000 Frequency 10000 15000 20000 20000 D: Distribution of Total Assets for UK Private Firms Reporting dates Jan 1 2003 through Dec 31 2011 25000 B: Distribution of Total Assets for IT Private Firms 60 70 80 90 100 110 Percentage of Threshold 120 130 140 60 SD statistic = 0.28 70 80 90 100 110 Percentage of Threshold 120 130 140 SD sta s c = 21.93† 41 Figure 1 (cont): Total Asset, Sales, and Employee Distributions at Coinciding Thresholds Panel F (German sales) is adjusted for rounded data estimates from Creditreform Germany (see footnote 26). G: Distribution of Sales for ES Private Firms Reporting dates Jan 1 2003 through Dec 31 2011 Reporting dates Jan 1 2003 through Dec 31 2011 0 500 Frequency 5000 Frequency 1000 1500 2000 2500 10000 E: Distribution of Sales for DE Private Firms 60 70 80 90 100 110 Percentage of Threshold 120 130 140 60 SD statistic = 1.49 70 80 90 100 110 Percentage of Threshold 120 130 140 SD sta s c = 8.69† H: Distribution of Sales for UK Private Firms Reporting dates Jan 1 2003 through Dec 31 2011 Reporting dates Mar 30 2004 through Dec 31 2011 1000 Frequency 5000 Frequency 2000 10000 3000 F: Distribution of Sales for IT Private Firms 60 70 SD statistic = 2.27 80 90 100 110 Percentage of Threshold 120 130 140 60 70 80 90 100 110 Percentage of Threshold 120 130 140 SD statistic = 1.69 42 Figure 1 (cont): Total Asset, Sales, and Employee Distributions at Coinciding Thresholds Reporting dates Jan 1 2003 through Dec 31 2011 8000 Frequency 4000 6000 0 500 2000 Frequency 1000 1500 2000 10000 K: Distribution of Employee Count for ES Private Firms Reporting dates Jan 1 2003 through Dec 31 2011 2500 I: Distribution of Employee Count for DE Private Firms 30 35 40 45 50 Employees 55 60 65 70 30 SD sta s c = 25.48† 35 40 45 50 Employees 55 60 65 70 SD sta s c = 3.76† L: Distribution of Employee Count for UK Private Firms Reporting dates Jan 1 2003 through Dec 31 2011 Reporting dates Jan 1 2003 through Dec 31 2011 0 0 1000 1000 Frequency 2000 3000 Frequency 2000 4000 5000 3000 J: Distribution of Employee Count for IT Private Firms 30 35 SD statistic = ‐0.85 40 45 50 Employees 55 60 65 70 30 35 40 45 50 Employees 55 60 65 70 SD statistic = 1.35 43 Figure 2: Selected Disclosure Thresholds That Do Not Coincide with Audit Thresholds This figure presents distributions of total assets for private limited liability firms around disclosure thresholds in countries (France, “FR”; Sweden, “SE”; Denmark, “DK”; and Ireland, “IE”) and time periods when the disclosure thresholds do not coincide with the audit thresholds. Superimposed vertical lines are drawn to demarcate the small-medium size disclosure threshold. The standardized difference (SD) statistics are the left standardized difference test statistics as defined in Burgstahler and Chuk [2014]. Standardized difference statistics significant at the 1% level (one-tailed) are noted with a † superscript. Bin size is 2% of the threshold value. Panel C: Distribution of Total Assets for DK Private Firms Reporting dates Jan 1 2003 through Dec 31 2011 Reporting dates Jan 1 2003 through Dec 31 2011 10000 400 Frequency 800 Frequency 20000 30000 1200 40000 Panel A: Distribution of Total Assets for FR Private Firms 60 70 80 90 100 110 120 Percentage of Disclosure Threshold 130 140 60 SD statistic = ‐0.24 70 80 90 100 110 120 Percentage of Disclosure Threshold 130 Panel D: Distribution of Total Assets for IE Private Firms Reporting dates Jan 1 2003 through Dec 31 2011 Reporting dates Feb 24 2007 through Dec 31 2011 0 0 1000 500 Frequency 2000 3000 Frequency 1000 4000 1500 Panel B: Distribution of Total Assets for SE Private Firms 5000 140 SD statistic = 0.50 60 70 SD statistic = 0.43 80 90 100 110 120 Percentage of Disclosure Threshold 130 140 60 70 80 90 100 110 120 Percentage of Disclosure Threshold 130 140 SD statistic = 2.02 44 Figure 3: Selected Audit Thresholds That Do Not Coincide with Disclosure Thresholds This figure presents distributions of sales and total assets for private limited liability firms around audit thresholds in countries (UK; Ireland, “IE”; France, “FR”) and time periods when the audit thresholds do not coincide with the disclosure thresholds. Superimposed vertical lines are drawn to demarcate the small-medium size audit threshold. The standardized difference (SD) statistics are the left standardized difference test statistics as defined in Burgstahler and Chuk [2014]. Standardized difference statistics significant at the 1% level (onetailed) are noted with a † superscript. Bin size is 2% of the threshold value. Panel C: Distribution of Total Assets for FR Private Firms Reporting dates Jan 01 2003 through Mar 29 2004 Reporting dates Jan 1 2003 through Dec 31 2011 0 200 5000 Frequency 10000 Frequency 400 600 15000 800 20000 Panel A: Distribution of Sales for UK Private Firms 60 70 80 90 100 110 Percentage of Audit Threshold 120 130 140 60 SD sta s c = 10.37† 70 80 90 100 110 Percentage of Audit Threshold 120 130 140 SD sta s c = 5.75† Panel D: Distribution of Sales for FR Private Firms Reporting dates Feb 24 2007 through Dec 31 2011 Reporting dates Jan 01 2003 through Dec 31 2011 0 200 5000 Frequency 400 600 Frequency 10000 800 1000 15000 Panel B: Distribution of Total Assets for IE Private Firms 60 70 SD sta s c = 2.58† 80 90 100 110 Percentage of Audit Threshold 120 130 140 60 70 80 90 100 110 Percentage of Audit Threshold 120 130 140 SD sta s c = 3.34† 45 Table 1: Disclosure Requirements for European Private Firms This table summarizes the disclosure requirements for private European limited liability firms below and above the smallmedium disclosure threshold. Abbreviated format disclosures, expanded abbreviated format disclosures, and full format disclosures are differentiated by the level of detail each presents. Countries noted with a * have other disclosure requirements beyond those summarized below; see Appendix 1 for a more complete description of disclosure requirements by country. Austria Balance Sheet Income Statement Other disclosures Below disclosure threshold: Abbreviated format No disclosure requirement Abbreviated notes Above disclosure threshold: Expanded abbreviated format Abbreviated format Expanded abbreviated notes; director's report Belgium Balance Sheet Income Statement Other disclosures Abbreviated format Abbreviated format Abbreviated notes Full format Full format Notes; director's report Denmark Balance Sheet Income Statement Other disclosures Abbreviated format Abbreviated format Abbreviated notes Full format Full format Notes; director's report Finland* Balance Sheet Income Statement Other disclosures Abbreviated format Full format Expanded abbreviated notes Full format Full format Notes; director's report France Balance Sheet Income Statement Other disclosures Abbreviated format Abbreviated format Abbreviated notes Full format Full format Notes; director's report Germany Balance Sheet Income Statement Other disclosures Abbreviated format No disclosure requirement Abbreviated notes Expanded abbreviated format Abbreviated format Expanded abbreviated notes; director's report Ireland Balance Sheet Income Statement Other disclosures Abbreviated format No disclosure requirement Abbreviated notes Full format Abbreviated format Expanded abbreviated notes; director's report Italy Balance Sheet Income Statement Other disclosures Abbreviated format Abbreviated format Abbreviated notes Full format Full format Notes; director's report Netherlands Balance Sheet Income Statement Other disclosures Abbreviated format No disclosure requirement Abbreviated notes Expanded abbreviated format Abbreviated format Expanded abbreviated notes; director's report Spain* Balance Sheet Income Statement Other disclosures Abbreviated format Abbreviated format Abbreviated notes Full format Abbreviated format Expanded abbreviated notes; director's report Sweden* Balance Sheet Income Statement Other disclosures Abbreviated format Abbreviated format Abbreviated notes Full format Full format Notes; director's report United Kingdom Balance Sheet Income Statement Other disclosures Abbreviated format No disclosure requirement Abbreviated notes Full format Abbreviated format Expanded abbreviated notes; director's report 46 Table 2: Size Classification Thresholds by Country and Time Period This table summarizes the small-medium size thresholds for the twelve sample countries by time period. We hand collect threshold information from national laws. The dates listed below are for firms’ reporting end dates. The number of employees refers to the average number of persons employed by the company during the fiscal year. Audit threshold amounts that do not coincide with disclosure thresholds are bolded and italicized. Total assets and sales amounts are stated in euro for all countries except Denmark, Sweden, and the UK, where total assets and sales amounts are stated in Danish krone, Swedish krona, and British pounds, respectively. Total assets and sales disclosure and audit thresholds effective in the early 2000s are translated from pre-euro currency for Spain and Ireland. Our subsequent tests of size management do not include the audit thresholds for Denmark, Finland, and Sweden (highlighted in gray), as small firms did not become exempt from audit requirements in these countries until late in our sample period. Austria Panel A: Disclosure Thresholds Since: Total assets Sales Jan 1, 2003 3,125,000 6,250,000 Dec 31, 2005 3,650,000 7,300,000 Dec 31, 2008 4,840,000 9,680,000 Employees 50 50 50 Belgium Jan 1, 2003 Dec 31, 2004 3,125,000 3,650,000 6,250,000 7,300,000 50 50 Denmark Jan 1, 2003 Mar 31, 2005 Aug 31, 2009 20,000,000 29,000,000 36,000,000 40,000,000 58,000,000 72,000,000 50 50 50 Finland Jan 1, 2003 Dec 31, 2005 3,125,000 3,650,000 6,250,000 7,300,000 50 50 France Jan 1, 2003 Dec 31, 2010 267,000 1,000,000 534,000 2,000,000 10 20 Germany Jan 1, 2003 Dec 31, 2004 Dec 31, 2009 3,438,000 4,015,000 4,840,000 6,875,000 8,030,000 9,680,000 50 50 50 Jan 1, 2003 1,904,607 3,809,214 50 Italy Jan 1, 2003 Dec 12, 2006 Nov 21, 2009 3,125,000 3,650,000 4,400,000 6,250,000 7,300,000 8,800,000 50 50 50 Netherlands Jan 1, 2003 Dec 31, 2004 Dec 31, 2006 3,500,000 3,650,000 4,400,000 7,000,000 7,300,000 8,800,000 50 50 50 Spain Jan 1, 2003 Dec 31, 2008 2,373,998 2,850,000 4,747,996 5,700,000 50 50 Sweden Jan 1, 2003 Oct 31, 2011 29,000,000 40,000,000 58,000,000 80,000,000 50 50 United Kingdom Jan 1, 2003 Jan 30, 2004 Apr 5, 2009 1,400,000 2,800,000 3,260,000 2,800,000 5,600,000 6,500,000 50 50 50 Jun 30, 2008 Jan 1, 2003 Jan 1, 2003 Dec 31, 2004 Dec 31, 2009 Ireland Jan 1, 2003 Mar 30, 2004 Apr 5, 2009 6,250,000 7,300,000 3,000,000 8,000,000 50 50 50 7,000,000 7,300,000 8,800,000 2,373,998 2,850,000 50 50 50 4,747,996 5,700,000 1,500,000 50 50 3,000,000 1,400,000 2,800,000 3,260,000 50 50 50 6,250,000 7,300,000 8,800,000 3,500,000 3,650,000 4,400,000 50 50 50 317,434 1,500,000 7,300,000 3,125,000 3,650,000 4,400,000 50 6,875,000 8,030,000 9,680,000 1,904,607 1,904,607 3,650,000 3 3,100,000 3,438,000 4,015,000 4,840,000 Employees 50 50 50 50 50 12 12 200,000 1,550,000 Jan 1, 2003 Dec 31, 2008 Oct 31, 2011 Sales 6,250,000 7,300,000 9,680,000 100,000 Jan 1, 2003 Jun 30, 2005 Feb 24, 2007 Jan 1, 2003 Dec 12, 2006 Nov 21, 2009 Jan 1, 2003 Dec 31, 2004 Dec 31, 2006 Panel B: Audit Thresholds Since: Total assets Jan 1, 2003 3,125,000 Dec 31, 2005 3,650,000 Dec 31, 2008 4,840,000 Jan 1, 2003 3,125,000 Dec 31, 2004 3,650,000 Dec 31, 2006 1,500,000 Dec 31, 2011 4,000,000 3 1,000,000 5,600,000 6,500,000 50 50 50 47 Table 3: Sample Selection Procedure This table summarizes the steps of the sample selection process (Panel A), the breakdown of observations by year (Panel B), and the number of observations close to the total assets disclosure threshold (Panel C). Panel A: Sample Selection Austria Belgium Denmark Finland France Germany Ireland Italy Netherlands Spain Sweden United Kingdom Total Single account firm-year observations within the sample period 679,782 2,794,715 824,553 957,658 6,947,687 5,780,829 843,775 5,939,260 4,051,965 5,380,630 2,066,215 10,362,042 46,629,111 Less: public firms and firms in finance, insurance, and public administration (15,695) (49,969) (70,829) (42,495) (300,991) (110,806) (38,905) (73,671) (396,795) (53,966) (51,679) (232,556) (1,438,357) Less: non-limited liability firms and firms using IFRS (51,963) (1,292,241) (172,286) (15,016) (2,321,330) (971,865) (267,213) (1,552,027) (28,207) (649,985) (7) (630,775) (7,952,915) Total observations 612,124 1,452,505 581,438 900,147 4,325,366 4,698,158 537,657 4,313,562 3,626,963 4,676,679 2,014,529 9,498,711 37,237,839 Austria Belgium Denmark Finland France Germany Ireland Italy Netherlands Spain Sweden United Kingdom Total 2003 1,881 107,912 0 63,051 310,917 32,748 41,890 129,456 192,866 376,078 153,854 587,720 1,998,373 2004 29,412 118,298 0 67,504 345,703 58,389 45,909 294,888 216,029 399,731 164,730 717,635 2,458,228 2005 39,148 129,733 0 71,461 384,488 370,164 50,177 321,210 302,731 435,786 177,742 807,934 3,090,574 2006 67,939 143,165 0 73,805 431,891 603,779 56,243 358,411 395,006 487,564 196,609 909,190 3,723,602 2007 83,077 158,587 39,268 98,320 484,782 642,159 61,974 562,936 439,051 469,976 217,624 1,028,119 4,285,873 2008 90,844 176,165 117,616 118,015 544,515 715,305 67,621 619,885 483,484 591,794 241,915 1,180,881 4,948,040 2009 92,841 194,004 133,471 127,403 587,404 775,167 71,992 676,325 521,013 671,054 268,196 1,315,204 5,434,074 2010 97,258 206,794 142,259 139,574 619,963 766,845 72,226 687,635 540,460 664,677 282,999 1,440,233 5,660,923 109,724 217,847 148,824 141,014 615,703 733,602 69,625 662,816 536,323 580,019 310,860 1,511,795 5,638,152 612,124 1,452,505 581,438 900,147 4,325,366 4,698,158 537,657 4,313,562 3,626,963 4,676,679 2,014,529 9,498,711 37,237,839 Panel B: Observations by Year 2011 Total observations Panel C: Observations Close to Total Assets Disclosure Threshold Austria Belgium Denmark Finland France Germany Ireland Italy Netherlands Spain Sweden United Kingdom Total 10% above or below 11,061 5,847 4,667 6,127 235,942 48,613 11,359 98,814 49,386 93,935 19,232 86,952 671,935 4% above 2,057 1,074 872 1,177 46,119 8,861 2,185 18,618 9,189 17,654 3,738 14,522 126,066 48 Table 4: Descriptive Statistics This table presents descriptive statistics for the entire distribution on the size variables by country for the full sample period. Sales and total assets are presented in thousands of local currency. %available refers to the percent of observations with nonmissing values for that variable. Austria (n=612,124) Total assets Sales Employees Median 404 2,000 5 10% 36 300 1 25% 108 760 2 75% 1,503 7,000 15 90% 5,464 26,147 40 Mean 6,256 16,488 25 %available 99.0% 20.2% 38.0% Belgium (n=1,452,505) Total assets Sales Employees 159 165 2 24 24 1 60 69 1 401 434 5 898 1,264 10 1,067 2,203 6 100.0% 22.6% 35.5% Denmark (n=581,438) Total assets Sales Employees 1,456 409 1 134 0 0 414 49 0 4,503 1,620 3 12,353 4,885 7 10,271 6,376 3 100.0% 14.8% 30.2% Finland (n=900,147) Total assets Sales Employees 122 162 3 12 7 1 37 43 1 390 540 8 1,228 1,677 20 1,538 1,751 13 99.9% 95.1% 45.4% France (n=4,325,366) Total assets Sales Employees 188 255 3 35 29 1 80 100 2 435 613 6 942 1,365 11 490 636 6 100.0% 99.8% 39.7% Germany (n=4,698,158) Total assets Sales Employees 167 580 20 23 80 2 43 238 5 643 1,947 76 2,346 9,556 185 3,494 9,056 89 100.0% 20.7% 7.3% Ireland (n=537,657) Total assets Sales Employees 185 219 6 8 10 2 42 42 2 713 1,831 26 2,296 12,962 63 1,389 8,663 27 100.0% 4.9% 4.8% Italy (n=4,313,562) Total assets Sales Employees 500 286 5 54 0 1 165 49 2 1,417 1,011 12 3,449 2,759 23 1,575 1,239 12 100.0% 99.7% 34.0% Netherlands (n=3,626,963) Total assets Sales Employees 373 528 1 31 14 1 118 78 1 1,049 9,340 4 2,753 44,759 14 6,183 37,765 7 99.9% 2.0% 61.0% Spain (n=4,676,679) Total assets Sales Employees 318 275 4 42 28 1 112 96 2 919 761 8 2,580 1,982 17 1,981 1,172 9 100.0% 90.8% 75.3% Sweden (n=2,014,529) Total assets Sales Employees 1,637 1,683 2 233 3 0 581 406 1 5,036 5,752 4 15,873 18,518 11 29,526 19,792 8 99.6% 98.3% 96.3% United Kingdom (n=9,498,711) Total assets Sales Employees 64 115 24 2 6 2 13 30 4 333 806 83 1,411 7,203 215 6,285 8,712 152 100.0% 17.9% 4.9% 49 Table 5: Estimates of Frequency of Size Management This table presents estimates of the frequency of size management in Germany, Italy, Spain, and the United Kingdom in time periods when the disclosure and audit thresholds coincide. Estimates of firm-years managed are presented only for thresholds where the left standardized difference is significant at the .01 level (see Figure 1 or Table 6); entries where the left standardized difference is not significant at the .01 level are noted with a -. Bin size is 2% of the threshold value. The estimates of firm-years managed (range and percentage) assume that size management results in observations moving from only the two intervals above the threshold to only the two intervals below the threshold. Expected frequencies for the two bins above and two bins below the threshold are calculated assuming a linear relationship between the third bin below and third bin above the threshold. For the range estimate, one side of the range is calculated by summing the deviations from this expected linear relationship in the two bins immediately below the threshold. The other side of the range is calculated by summing the deviations from the expected linear relationship in the two bins immediately above the threshold. The percentage estimate of firm-years managed is equal to the difference between the actual number of observations in the bin immediately below the threshold and the expected number based on the expected linear relationship between the third bin below and third bin above the threshold, expressed as a percentage of the actual number of observations in the bin immediately below the threshold. Panel A: Germany Range estimate of firm-years managed at threshold Percentage estimate of firm-years managed at threshold Total assets 199 - 814 12.0% Sales - Employees 178 - 975 42.6% Panel B: Italy Range estimate of firm-years managed at threshold Percentage estimate of firm-years managed at threshold Total assets - Sales - Employees - Panel C: Spain Range estimate of firm-years managed at threshold Percentage estimate of firm-years managed at threshold Total assets 120 - 250 2.6% Sales 476 - 642 12.4% Employees 388 - 567 5.7% Panel D: United Kingdom Range estimate of firm-years managed at threshold Percentage estimate of firm-years managed at threshold Total assets 1330 - 2811 20.8% Sales - Employees - 50 Table 6: Summary of Standardized Differences by Threshold This table presents standardized difference statistics for each size variable for the sample countries. Panel A presents statistics for countries where the disclosure and audit thresholds coincide. Panels B and C present statistics at disclosure (Panel B) or audit (Panel C) thresholds for countries where the thresholds do not coincide. For Ireland and the United Kingdom (highlighted in gray) there are some time periods where the thresholds coincide and some periods where they do not (see also Table 2), so these countries have statistics both in Panel A and in Panels B and C. The blank entries for Ireland reflect the fact that the disclosure and audit thresholds were separate for the entire sample period for sales, whereas the disclosure and audit thresholds were coinciding for the entire sample period for employees. The blank entries for the United Kingdom reflect the fact that the disclosure and audit thresholds were coinciding for the entire sample period for employees. The statistics are left standardized difference test statistics as defined in Burgstahler and Chuk [2014]. Bin width is 2% of the total assets and sales threshold values and 1 employee for employee thresholds. Standardized difference statistics significant at the 1% level (one-tailed) are noted with a † superscript. Entries are noted with a - where standardized differences are not meaningful due to either (1) low power, operationalized as an average number of observations in the bins used for the standardized difference statistic less than 100, or (2) evidence that the Amadeus data relies on estimates from national credit bureaus that invalidate the assumption of a smooth distribution even in the absence of size management. For France, tests of size management at the employees disclosure and audit thresholds at 20 and 50 employees are strongly biased by employment law thresholds imposed at adjacent levels of employee count, so the employees thresholds for France are also noted with a -. Total assets Austria Belgium 2.56† Denmark Finland France Sweden United Kingdom Germany Ireland Italy Netherlands Spain 0.97 8.16† 0.28 0.29 1.42 3.29† 21.93† 2.27 - 8.69† 1.69 -0.85 - 3.76† 1.35 Panel A: Coinciding Thresholds Sales - -0.73 1.49 Employees - -0.24 25.48† Panel B: Separate Disclosure Thresholds 0.50 0.35 -0.24 2.02 0.43 - Sales - -1.27 1.78 - -0.03 1.05 Employees - - - Panel C: Separate Audit Thresholds Total assets - 0.88 Total assets 5.75† 2.58† - Sales 3.34† - 10.37† Employees - 51
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