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Fair Value Accounting Usefulness and Implementation Obstacles: Views from Bankers in Jordan

Accounting in Asia

ISBN: 978-1-78052-444-3, eISBN: 978-1-78052-445-0

Publication date: 15 December 2011

Abstract

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to survey views of bankers in Jordan about the usefulness of fair value accounting and major obstacles facing its implementation in practice.

Methodology/Approach – A structured questionnaire was administered to individuals holding high positions in Jordanian banks. The questionnaire covered the respondents' views about the appropriateness of using fair value accounting, the usefulness of fair value figures in terms of their relevance for decision making and the obstacles facing the application of fair value accounting in practice.

Findings – Results of the survey showed that while there was general approval of the use of fair values in financial reporting, there were some reservations about their relevance in terms of predictive value and, more importantly, feedback value. Major obstacles facing the usefulness of fair values in financial reporting included, according to respondents, (1) the possibility of fraud in fair value reporting, (2) the ambiguity of accounting standards on fair value application and (3) the reliability of figures measured using fair value accounting, as opposed to those measured using historical cost accounting.

Social implications – The paper discusses the positive and negative aspects of application of fair value financial reporting in accounting. It discusses how fair value financial reporting may be useful for decision making of users of financial statements and what obstacles may limit this usefulness. The paper also discusses the implications of the findings for Jordan and other emerging economies, including suggested ways to reduce the possible negative effects of fair value accounting.

Originality/Value of paper – Fair value accounting practice is relatively new to Jordan, and the Jordanian context, as a less-developed country with a low-efficiency stock market, is significantly different to the environments in which fair value accounting practices were established. The effects of applying fair value accounting in Jordanian financial reporting practices are under-researched, so this study yields views on the reliability and relevance of fair value measures and the ease of their application in practice that could be specific to the Jordanian environment and differ significantly from results from developed countries. The findings generally support this argument.

Keywords

Citation

Siam, W. and Abdullatif, M. (2011), "Fair Value Accounting Usefulness and Implementation Obstacles: Views from Bankers in Jordan", Susela Devi, S. and Hooper, K. (Ed.) Accounting in Asia (Research in Accounting in Emerging Economies, Vol. 11), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 83-107. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1479-3563(2011)0000011009

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2011, Emerald Group Publishing Limited