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Recent Journal Publications by COB Faculty

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Academic Journal
Accounting

“The Long-Term Effects of Occupational Fraud on Perpetrators: Initial Evidence”

The [in] ability to find employment on the backend was shocking… Healing family relationships, which takes time… It just never goes away. Here I am [many] years removed. I still remember everything about it, my bunk, my number. I reflect on it every single day of my life. Not a day goes by that I don’t think about the events. It is a huge part of my life. Prison was so uneventful and boring. I had hopes it would all fade away. It didn’t.[Interview response from a former fraud perpetrator]
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Academic Journal
Accounting

“The New Washington State Capital Gains Tax”

In this article, the authors examine Washington’s new 7 percent capital gains tax, analyzing the tax from constitutional, practical, and policy perspectives.
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Academic Journal
Accounting

“The Regulatory Observer Effect: Large Sample Evidence from SEC Investigations”

Drawing on financial reporting, institutional, and social psychology theories, we consider whether awareness of SEC scrutiny affects the extent to which managers exercise financial reporting discretion. Because there is a higher probability that the SEC will detect misconduct and impose penalties on firms under investigation, we predict that managers will change their behavior during periods of increased scrutiny. We test our predictions using novel data on all Division of Enforcement (DoE) investigations completed during the 2000-2016 period. The evidence we present offers three insights. First, our results suggest that managers perceive the SEC will be more concerned, and potentially more punitive, with firms that employ discretion through accruals rather than real activities. Second, the actions taken by managers appear to reflect improvements in accounting misstatement risk, reductions in accounting irregularities, and increases in conservatism. Third, firms investigated by the SEC, but not ultimately subject to an enforcement action, exhibit decreased R&D and capital expenditures and increased likelihoods of CEO turnover, comment letter receipt, earnings restatements, and class-action lawsuits. The implications of our study should be of interest to academics, investors, and regulators in understanding how heightened regulatory monitoring over financial reporting can affect both accounting practices and operating decisions.
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