2023
DOI: 10.1142/s1094406023500117
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The Effect of Time Orientation in Languages on the Recognition of Goodwill Impairment Losses

Ahmad Alshehabi,
Hussein Halabi,
Godfred Afrifa

Abstract: Synopsis The research problem In this study, we investigated the relationship between future-time reference (FTR) in languages and goodwill impairment. Motivation Previous studies on goodwill have focused mainly on firms’ economic and reporting incentives in single-country settings using economic theories. There have been recent calls for more research on goodwill accounting across countries (d’Arcy and Tarca, 2018), and greater use of behavioral theories in goodwill accounting studies (Amel-Zadeh et al., … Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Previous studies have investigated the determinants of timely goodwill impairment such as auditor characteristics (Albersmann & Quick, 2020), corporate narrative disclosure quality (Iatridis et al, 2022), law enforcement (Glaum et al, 2018), and differences between languages in terms of the obligatory marking of future events (Alshehabi et al, 2023). Another area of research more germane to this paper examines how the value relevance of goodwill impairments is influenced by various firm-and country-level factors, including audit committee characteristics (Lapointe-Antunes et al, 2009), analyst following and firm size (Bens et al, 2011), legal protection (Knauer & Wohrmann, 2016), and institutional quality (Alshehabi et al, 2021).…”
Section: Institutional Background and Related Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Previous studies have investigated the determinants of timely goodwill impairment such as auditor characteristics (Albersmann & Quick, 2020), corporate narrative disclosure quality (Iatridis et al, 2022), law enforcement (Glaum et al, 2018), and differences between languages in terms of the obligatory marking of future events (Alshehabi et al, 2023). Another area of research more germane to this paper examines how the value relevance of goodwill impairments is influenced by various firm-and country-level factors, including audit committee characteristics (Lapointe-Antunes et al, 2009), analyst following and firm size (Bens et al, 2011), legal protection (Knauer & Wohrmann, 2016), and institutional quality (Alshehabi et al, 2021).…”
Section: Institutional Background and Related Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%