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Article
Value Relevance of Human Capital Based Disclosures: Moderating Effects of Labor Productivity, Investor Sentiment, Analyst Coverage and Audit Quality
Advances in Accounting
  • Ananda Samudhram, Monash University
  • Errol Stewart, Georgia Southern University
  • Jayasinghe Wickramanayake, Monash University
  • Jothee Sinnakkannu, Monash University
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
12-1-2014
DOI
10.1016/j.adiac.2014.09.012
Disciplines
Abstract

Voluntarily disclosed employee costs in annual reports of listed firms are value relevant, according to US based studies. However, investors appear to fail to take full advantage of the signaling opportunities presented by these disclosures. This study suggests that labor productivity, audit quality, analyst coverage and high technology categorization moderate the value relevance of voluntarily disclosed employee costs in Malaysia, contributing a novel set of moderating variables to the human capital accounting and value relevance literature, and extending the extant literature to an emerging economy. The results are consistent with the findings from US based settings, after incorporating these moderating factors. Pertinent policy recommendations, based on these findings, are suggested.

Citation Information
Ananda Samudhram, Errol Stewart, Jayasinghe Wickramanayake and Jothee Sinnakkannu. "Value Relevance of Human Capital Based Disclosures: Moderating Effects of Labor Productivity, Investor Sentiment, Analyst Coverage and Audit Quality" Advances in Accounting Vol. 30 Iss. 2 (2014) p. 338 - 353 ISSN: 0882-6110
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/errol-stewart/3/