@Article{ AUTHOR = {Demers, Elizabeth Demers and Wang, Chong Wang}, TITLE = {Career concerns and earnings management}, JOURNAL = {Journal of Business Accounting and Finance Perspectives}, VOLUME = {2}, YEAR = {2020}, NUMBER = {1}, PAGES = {0--0}, URL = {https://jbafp.archive.jams.pub/article/2/1/20}, ISSN = {2603-7475}, ABSTRACT = {Motivated by the disconnect between survey evidence documenting that executives prioritize implicit contracting (i.e., labor market-based career concerns) when making earnings management decisions (Graham et al., 2005) and the extant literature’s focus on explicit contracting to explain earnings manipulation, we analytically examine the role of managerial career concerns in earnings management. Building on Holmstrom (1982, 1999), we present a career concerns-based earnings management model that incorporates the unique reversing nature of earnings management. A key insight derived from the model is that whether the predictions of a traditional career concerns model prevail, which is to say that managers engage in more income-increasing behavior in their early years, critically depends upon the reversal characteristics of the earnings management vehicle chosen.}, DOI = {10.35995/jbafp2010002} }