1984
DOI: 10.2307/2490709
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The Association Between Municipal Market Measures and Selected Financial Reporting Practices: Additional Evidence

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Cited by 68 publications
(28 citation statements)
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“…Indeed, prior literature documents how creditors react to financial information. For instance, bond ratings are lowered in response to declining financial condition (Wallace 1981;Copeland and Ingram 1982) and cost of debt is lower for municipalities with higher financial disclosure levels (Wilson and Howard 1984;Gore 2004;Gore, Sachs, and Trzcinka 2004;Baber and Gore 2009). It follows then that creditors serve as an important monitor of the municipality's finances.…”
Section: Hypothesesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indeed, prior literature documents how creditors react to financial information. For instance, bond ratings are lowered in response to declining financial condition (Wallace 1981;Copeland and Ingram 1982) and cost of debt is lower for municipalities with higher financial disclosure levels (Wilson and Howard 1984;Gore 2004;Gore, Sachs, and Trzcinka 2004;Baber and Gore 2009). It follows then that creditors serve as an important monitor of the municipality's finances.…”
Section: Hypothesesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The frequently used empirical gauges of fiscal stress are the current year general fund surplus (or deficit) and the year-end general fund balance (Reck, Wilson, Gotlob, & Lawrence, 2001;Wilson, 1983;Wilson & Howard, 1984 …”
Section: Fiscal Stress Of Governmentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Based on the literature review, the governments that are under higher fiscal pressure tend to fund their pension plans at lower levels, which would worsen the financial status of public pension systems (Chaney, Copley, & Stone, 2002;Coggburn & Kearney, 2010;Eaton & Nofsinger, 2004;McCue, 1994). Followed the previous practices (Reck, Wilson, Gotlob, & Lawrence, 2001;Wilson, 1983;Wilson & Howard, 1984), the indicator selected in this study for the fiscal stress is the excess/deficiency of revenue over/under expenditure (total account at city level year end) per 1,000 populations. The gauge is standardized by population in order to control the impact of city size differences.…”
Section: Financial Factorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Consequently, accounting-related variables used in prior bond studies have been selected on an ad hoc basis. Thus, we have selected test variables that are comparable to those used in earlier studies (e.g., Wallace, 1981;Wilson, 1983;Wilson and Howard, 1984;Raman and Wilson, 1994;Ingram and Wilson, 1999;Reck et al, 2004). These factors are also indicative of those that bond analysts are known to examine in assessing municipal default risk.…”
Section: Model Developmentmentioning
confidence: 99%