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Coercive, normative, and mimetic isomorphisms as drivers of corporate tax disclosure: The case of the tax reconciliation

Florence Depoers (Department of Research on Organizations and Strategies, Universite Paris-Nanterre, Nanterre, France)
Tiphaine Jérôme (Ecole hôtelière de Lausanne, HES-SO//University of Applied Sciences Western Switzerland, Lausanne, Switzerland) (Department of Engineering, Grenoble Institute of Technology, Université Grenoble Alpes, Grenoble, France)

Journal of Applied Accounting Research

ISSN: 0967-5426

Article publication date: 15 January 2020

Issue publication date: 5 February 2020

916

Abstract

Purpose

International Accounting Standard (IAS) 12 requires the disclosure of a tax reconciliation (TR). The purpose of the TR is to explain the differences between the corporate effective tax expense and the corporate theoretical tax expense. In this paper, the authors investigate which institutional pressures influence the level of disclosure of the TR.

Design/methodology/approach

The study draws on an empirical archival approach in which the level of disclosure is first measured and then associated with institutional pressures. The sample comprises 120 companies listed on the Paris stock exchange, i.e. a highly institutionalized setting.

Findings

The findings show a wide variation in the level of disclosure of the TR across the sample and that all three types of isomorphism (coercive, normative and mimetic) are associated with disclosure.

Research limitations/implications

The paper deals exclusively with TR given its importance to a wide range of users. Additional tax information available in annual reports, most of the time at an expert level, may be the subject of further research.

Practical implications

The results have important implications for standard setters, regulators, and practitioners as the research outlines the institutional pressures at work in corporate reporting policies and pushes forward the debate on fiscal transparency.

Originality/value

This paper documents the influence of institutional pressures on the level of the TR disclosure at a country level. It contributes to the literature on corporate tax disclosure which mainly focuses on differences across countries. An innovative ad hoc index is used to measure information completeness.

Keywords

Citation

Depoers, F. and Jérôme, T. (2020), "Coercive, normative, and mimetic isomorphisms as drivers of corporate tax disclosure: The case of the tax reconciliation", Journal of Applied Accounting Research, Vol. 21 No. 1, pp. 90-105. https://doi.org/10.1108/JAAR-04-2018-0048

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

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