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Wiley InterScience

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Firm-level Disclosures and the Relative Roles of Culture and Legal Origin
Ole-Kristian Hope 1
  1 University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada okhope@rotman.utoronto.ca
Copyright Blackwell Publishing Ltd. 2003

Abstract

AbstractReferences

In this paper, I investigate the relative roles of legal origin and national culture in explaining firm-level disclosure levels internationally. Using a significantly larger and more representative sample than prior research, I document, using univariate and multivariate analyses, that both legal origin and culture (as operationalized by Hofstede and Schwartz) are important in explaining firm disclosure. Neither legal origin nor culture dominates with respect to overall explanatory power for variations in disclosure levels. Consequently, it is premature to write off culture as an important factor in the financial reporting environment. Furthermore, I find that legal origin is an important conditioning variable for the role of culture. Finally, although legal origin is a key determinant of disclosure levels, I hypothesize and find that its importance decreases with the richness of a firm's information environment.


DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/1467-646X.00097 About DOI

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