CEO Characteristics, Ownership, and Earnings Management in Indonesian Public Listed Companies with Two-Tier Boards

The issue of how board characteristics and ownership concentration affect managerial behavior remains unresolved, especially in a two-tier governance system. This study investigated the impact of ownership concentration, CEO age, and gender on real earnings management (REM) in Indonesia. It determin...

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Published in:ASIA-PACIFIC MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING JOURNAL
Main Authors: Warganegara, Doni Sagitarian; Mohamed, Norhayati; Bujang, Imbarine
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: ASIA-PACIFIC MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING ASSOC 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001400255500008
author Warganegara
Doni Sagitarian; Mohamed
Norhayati; Bujang
Imbarine
spellingShingle Warganegara
Doni Sagitarian; Mohamed
Norhayati; Bujang
Imbarine
CEO Characteristics, Ownership, and Earnings Management in Indonesian Public Listed Companies with Two-Tier Boards
Business & Economics
author_facet Warganegara
Doni Sagitarian; Mohamed
Norhayati; Bujang
Imbarine
author_sort Warganegara
spelling Warganegara, Doni Sagitarian; Mohamed, Norhayati; Bujang, Imbarine
CEO Characteristics, Ownership, and Earnings Management in Indonesian Public Listed Companies with Two-Tier Boards
ASIA-PACIFIC MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING JOURNAL
English
Article
The issue of how board characteristics and ownership concentration affect managerial behavior remains unresolved, especially in a two-tier governance system. This study investigated the impact of ownership concentration, CEO age, and gender on real earnings management (REM) in Indonesia. It determined how these factors affect managerial opportunism within REM, an underexplored area in Indonesian corporate governance. This study employed the Roychowdhury model and data from 191 Indonesian listed companies (2015-2019), analysing 955 observations with static panel analysis via OLS, random, and fixed effects. The findings indicated a positive, significant, but moderate association between ownership concentration and abnormal production costs, an indicator of REM activity. Additionally, the negative relationship between CEO age and abnormal discretionary expenses suggests that older CEOs are less likely to employ aggressive REM strategies. This study demonstrated that ownership concentration, CEO age, and CEO gender did not significantly impact grey earnings management in a two-tier board system. These results highlight the need for governance reforms to improve transparency, accountability, and ethical standards in Indonesia's financial reporting. They highlight aligning management practices with shareholder interests to reduce managerial opportunistic behaviour.
ASIA-PACIFIC MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING ASSOC
1675-3194

2024
19
2

Business & Economics

WOS:001400255500008
https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001400255500008
title CEO Characteristics, Ownership, and Earnings Management in Indonesian Public Listed Companies with Two-Tier Boards
title_short CEO Characteristics, Ownership, and Earnings Management in Indonesian Public Listed Companies with Two-Tier Boards
title_full CEO Characteristics, Ownership, and Earnings Management in Indonesian Public Listed Companies with Two-Tier Boards
title_fullStr CEO Characteristics, Ownership, and Earnings Management in Indonesian Public Listed Companies with Two-Tier Boards
title_full_unstemmed CEO Characteristics, Ownership, and Earnings Management in Indonesian Public Listed Companies with Two-Tier Boards
title_sort CEO Characteristics, Ownership, and Earnings Management in Indonesian Public Listed Companies with Two-Tier Boards
container_title ASIA-PACIFIC MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING JOURNAL
language English
format Article
description The issue of how board characteristics and ownership concentration affect managerial behavior remains unresolved, especially in a two-tier governance system. This study investigated the impact of ownership concentration, CEO age, and gender on real earnings management (REM) in Indonesia. It determined how these factors affect managerial opportunism within REM, an underexplored area in Indonesian corporate governance. This study employed the Roychowdhury model and data from 191 Indonesian listed companies (2015-2019), analysing 955 observations with static panel analysis via OLS, random, and fixed effects. The findings indicated a positive, significant, but moderate association between ownership concentration and abnormal production costs, an indicator of REM activity. Additionally, the negative relationship between CEO age and abnormal discretionary expenses suggests that older CEOs are less likely to employ aggressive REM strategies. This study demonstrated that ownership concentration, CEO age, and CEO gender did not significantly impact grey earnings management in a two-tier board system. These results highlight the need for governance reforms to improve transparency, accountability, and ethical standards in Indonesia's financial reporting. They highlight aligning management practices with shareholder interests to reduce managerial opportunistic behaviour.
publisher ASIA-PACIFIC MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING ASSOC
issn 1675-3194

publishDate 2024
container_volume 19
container_issue 2
doi_str_mv
topic Business & Economics
topic_facet Business & Economics
accesstype
id WOS:001400255500008
url https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001400255500008
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