Ad: BlueJ Better Tax Answers. -Accomplish hours of research in seconds -Instantly draft high-quality communications -Verify answers using a library of trusted tax content. Learn more

Research in Accounting for Income Taxes

John R. Graham (Duke University, Fuqua School of Business), Jana Smith Raedy (University of North Carolina, Kenan-Flagler Business School) & Douglas A. Shackelford (University of North Carolina, Kenan-Flagler Business School) have posted Research in Accounting for Income Taxes on SSRN.  Here is the abstract:

This paper provides a comprehensive review of Accounting for Income Taxes (AFIT). The first half of the paper provides background and a primer on AFIT. The second half reviews existing studies in detail and makes suggestions for future research. We emphasize the research questions that have been addressed (most of it related to whether the tax accounts are used to manage earnings, and whether the tax accounts are priced in capital markets) and also highlight the areas that to date have not received much research attention. We draw six broad conclusions regarding AFIT research: (1) a comprehensive theoretical framework for interpreting and guiding empirical AFIT studies does not exist; (2) an apparent inconsistency exists between empirical findings that suggest the tax information in the financial statements is useful and the practitioner view that the data are of poor quality; (3) future research should study the disaggregated components of book-tax differences to better explain the underlying causes; (4) we need to better understand whether some empirical findings imply market inefficiency or whether they are driven by market imperfections; (5) the extant empirical research does not take full advantage of panel data econometric techniques and hence it is likely that some of the existing results are overstated; and (6) research opportunities may present themselves as the U.S. moves toward IFRS.


About the Author

Ad: BlueJ Better Tax Answers. Blue J's generative AI tax research solution is transforming how tax experts work. Learn more.
Ad: TaxAnalysis Award of Distinction. Honoring those that have made outstanding contributions to the field of taxation.
Information and rates on advertising on TaxProf Blog

Discover more from TaxProf Blog

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading