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Labour Mobility and Conditional Conservative Accounting

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Labour Mobility and Conditional Conservative Accounting. / Chircop, Justin; Hass, Lars Helge.
In: Accounting and Finance, 23.07.2025.

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@article{f242e91d39a841b898e7ce234104d2a8,
title = "Labour Mobility and Conditional Conservative Accounting",
abstract = "Firms having low employee labour mobility face demands by employees to signal employment stability. We argue that one way of addressing such demands is by adopting conditional conservative accounting to convey financial prudence and reduce the perceived future unemployment risk. However, conditional conservative accounting also imposes costs on firms, potentially limiting its use. Using a sample of US firms, we examine how labour mobility influences conditional conservative accounting. Our findings show that firms with lower labour mobility exhibit more conditional conservative accounting than firms with more mobile employees. This relationship is especially pronounced when employees face higher unemployment risk, such as when firms are financially constrained or compete in highly competitive product markets.",
author = "Justin Chircop and Hass, {Lars Helge}",
year = "2025",
month = jul,
day = "23",
language = "English",
journal = "Accounting and Finance",
issn = "0810-5391",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Labour Mobility and Conditional Conservative Accounting

AU - Chircop, Justin

AU - Hass, Lars Helge

PY - 2025/7/23

Y1 - 2025/7/23

N2 - Firms having low employee labour mobility face demands by employees to signal employment stability. We argue that one way of addressing such demands is by adopting conditional conservative accounting to convey financial prudence and reduce the perceived future unemployment risk. However, conditional conservative accounting also imposes costs on firms, potentially limiting its use. Using a sample of US firms, we examine how labour mobility influences conditional conservative accounting. Our findings show that firms with lower labour mobility exhibit more conditional conservative accounting than firms with more mobile employees. This relationship is especially pronounced when employees face higher unemployment risk, such as when firms are financially constrained or compete in highly competitive product markets.

AB - Firms having low employee labour mobility face demands by employees to signal employment stability. We argue that one way of addressing such demands is by adopting conditional conservative accounting to convey financial prudence and reduce the perceived future unemployment risk. However, conditional conservative accounting also imposes costs on firms, potentially limiting its use. Using a sample of US firms, we examine how labour mobility influences conditional conservative accounting. Our findings show that firms with lower labour mobility exhibit more conditional conservative accounting than firms with more mobile employees. This relationship is especially pronounced when employees face higher unemployment risk, such as when firms are financially constrained or compete in highly competitive product markets.

M3 - Journal article

JO - Accounting and Finance

JF - Accounting and Finance

SN - 0810-5391

ER -