Modern slavery and financial reporting quality worldwide: the impact of institutional and legal environment

Article


Mamatzakis, E. and Boahen, E. 2025. Modern slavery and financial reporting quality worldwide: the impact of institutional and legal environment. Journal of Accounting Literature. p. In press. https://doi.org/10.1108/JAL-02-2024-0033
AuthorsMamatzakis, E. and Boahen, E.
Abstract

Purpose
In this paper, the authors opt for an identification strategy to examine the moderating impact of the institutional environment on the association between modern slavery and financial reporting quality, as measured by classification shifting and real earnings management around the world.

Design/methodology/approach
Using panel data between 2010 and 2018, the authors perform various analyses and robustness tests on a sample consisting of 134, 205 firm-year observations in 63 countries.

Findings
The results, which are robust, show a positive association between modern slavery and expense misclassification and real activities earnings management, confirming that the institutional environment facilitates prolonged and endless concealment of unethical and illegal business practices. In addition, we find that the quality of the legal environment moderates illegal modern slavery practices, unethical expense misclassification and real activities earnings management. The negative impact is more pronounced in a strong legal environment than in a weak legal environment. Our results are robust after controlling for the impact of auditing, including financial auditors, social auditing, corporate social responsibilities, environmental, social and governance score and corporate governance.

Research limitations/implications
The study’s findings are limited to a lack of modern slavery data prior to 2010. In addition, some of the variables examined are studied at the firm level, while other variables are at the state or county level. Finally, the study establishes an association between the variables of interest, and this does not necessarily imply causation.

Social implications
The findings have several important social, practical, policy, practitioner and regulatory implications for all types of countries and businesses. First, senior and corporate management committed to socially responsible reporting should intensify their momentum to deal with modern slavery risks and practices in their supply chains. Second, auditors and external monitoring agencies should strengthen their social and financial audits to uncover hidden modern slavery crimes and illicit financial benefits. Third, regulators and governments around the world should mandate laws and severe sanctions against illegal and illegitimate modern slavery practices. Fourth, the internal governance mechanism should be strengthened and modern slavery reporting, sustainability reports and social audits should be enforced and made compulsory in the governance section of the annual report.

Originality/value
The study provides novel evidence of the impact of modern slavery practices on financial reporting quality in an institutional environment. Our study contributes to the ongoing policy debate by showing how institutional and legal environments influence firms’ behaviour regarding modern slavery and financial reporting. The findings reveal the importance of robust regulatory frameworks and ethical auditing practices in curbing modern slavery and promoting transparency. As firms continue to navigate these challenges, strengthening institutional and ethical standards could play a key role in reducing illegal and unethical practices, ultimately contributing to better financial transparency and accountability on a global scale.

JournalJournal of Accounting Literature
Journal citationp. In press
ISSN0737-4607
Year2025
PublisherEmerald
Accepted author manuscript
License
File Access Level
Anyone
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1108/JAL-02-2024-0033
Publication dates
Online19 Feb 2025
Publication process dates
Accepted22 Dec 2024
Deposited20 Feb 2025
Copyright holder© 2024 The Authors
Additional information

This author accepted manuscript is deposited under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC) licence. This means that anyone may distribute, adapt, and build upon the work for non-commercial purposes, subject to full attribution. If you wish to use this manuscript for commercial purposes, please contact permissions@emerald.com.

Permalink -

https://repository.uel.ac.uk/item/8z0yy

Download files


Accepted author manuscript
Accepted Manuscript - 22nd December Modern Slavery Anonymous(1).pdf
License: CC BY-NC 4.0
File access level: Anyone

  • 7
    total views
  • 1
    total downloads
  • 7
    views this month
  • 1
    downloads this month

Export as

Related outputs

How culture and legal environment affect classification shifting? Global evidence
Boahen, E. and Mamatzakis, E. C. 2025. How culture and legal environment affect classification shifting? Global evidence. International Journal of Finance and Economics. 30 (1), pp. 750-780. https://doi.org/10.1002/ijfe.2933
The moderating role of firms’ litigation environment on the association between gender diversity and financial reporting quality
Boahen, E. and Mamatzakis, E. C. 2024. The moderating role of firms’ litigation environment on the association between gender diversity and financial reporting quality. International Journal of Managerial Finance. p. In Press. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJMF-10-2023-0533
The impact of interaction between religion and legal environment on expense misclassification and real activities: international evidence
Boahen, E. and Mamatzakis, E. C. 2024. The impact of interaction between religion and legal environment on expense misclassification and real activities: international evidence. Asian Review of Accounting. p. In Press. https://doi.org/10.1108/ARA-01-2024-0021
Developing Employability Skills through Practice-Based Learning
Boahen, E., Roy-Mukherjee, S., Ambe, E. and Tuffour, J. 2023. Developing Employability Skills through Practice-Based Learning. in: Lawton, A., Morgan, A., Massey, D. and Castelyn, D. (ed.) International Handbook on Clinical Tax Education London, UK University of London Press for the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies. pp. 220-239
What are the effects of culture and institutions on classification shifting in India?
Boahen, E. O. and Mamatzakis, E. C. 2021. What are the effects of culture and institutions on classification shifting in India? Journal of International Accounting, Auditing and Taxation. 44 (Art. 100402). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.intaccaudtax.2021.100402
The impact of religion on classification shifting in the presence of corporate governance and BIG 4 audit
Boahen, E. O. and Mamatzakis, E. C. 2019. The impact of religion on classification shifting in the presence of corporate governance and BIG 4 audit. Accounting Forum. 44 (2), pp. 103-131. https://doi.org/10.1080/01559982.2019.1573404