program in 2009. Before the IFRS convergence
program in Indonesia, the International Accounting
Standards and the United States Generally
Accounting Principles were the basis for the
preparation of Indonesia's financial accounting
standards.
On December 23, 2008, the Indonesian Institute
of Accountants (IAI) declared Indonesia's plan for
convergence of IFRS in setting financial accounting
standards. IAI revealed that compliance with IFRS
increased the comparability and transparency of
financial statements. Besides, relevance and
reliability are the essential qualities of financial
information within the conceptual framework of
IFRS. So it needs to be questioned whether the IFRS
convergence process, which is not cheap, results in an
increase in the quality of accounting in Indonesia.
Accounting quality is measured by earnings
management and value relevance, such as the study
conducted by (Barth, Landsman, and Lang,
2008)(Barth, 2008). Liu et al. (2011), which shows an
increase in accounting quality is shown by decreasing
the level of earnings management and increasing the
relevance of the value of earnings and book value of
equity. To find out whether IFRS affects accounting
quality in Indonesia, this study attempts to examine
differences in the level of earnings management in
Indonesia before and after IFRS adoption.
According to Scott (2015), earnings management
is earnings management actions to choose accounting
policies from a certain standard to maximize welfare
or company market value/. Earnings by managers in
a company due to agency problems, namely conflicts
of interest between principals/shareholders and
management. Management has more information
about the company so that it allows management to
practice accounting with a profit-oriented orientation
to achieve a certain performance.
This research is useful to increase knowledge
about the presence or absence of earnings
management changes due to the effect of IFRS.
Besides, this research is useful as a material
consideration for regulators in assessing the benefits
of IFRS adoption related to earnings management.
Earnings management due to agency problems,
namely conflicts of interest between
owners/shareholders and managers/management.
Management has more information about the
company so that it allows management to practice
accounting with a profit-oriented orientation to
achieve a specific performance.
Doukakis (2014) have found that there was no
impact of IFRS adoption to both changes real and
accrual-based earnings management in Europe as
measured by jones models and looking at the
abnormal level of production costs, cash flow from
operations and discretionary costs. (Callao and Jarne,
2010) found that there was an improvement in
earnings management in the period after IFRS
adoption. (Murtini and Lusiana (2016) found no
significant differences between earnings management
before and after IFRS adoption. The adoption of IFRS
in China has been proven to improve accounting
quality, which is characterized by an increase in the
relevance of earnings value and a decrease in earnings
management (Barth, Landsman and Lang, 2008);
Chen et al. (2010); Liu et al. (2011). Other studies
provide different results. Jeanjean and Stolowy
(2011) found that the pervasiveness of earnings
management did not decrease after the introduction of
IFRS, and even in fact, increased in France. So as the
study by (Ames. 2013) has shown that the earnings
quality is not significantly improved after IFRS
adoption.
That mixed result contradicts the need for
research to determine the effect of IFRS adoption on
earnings management in Indonesia. That mixed result
makes it necessary to research to determine the effect
of IFRS adoption on earnings management in
Indonesia. This research is useful to increase
knowledge about the changes in earnings
management due to the adoption of IFRS. Besides,
this research is useful as a material consideration for
regulators in assessing the benefits of IFRS adoption
related to earnings management.
2 LITERATURE REVIEW
2.1 Earnings Management
Earnings management can be defined as intentional
interference by management in the external financial
reporting process to obtain personal benefits
(Schipper, 1989). Earnings management occurs when
managers use considerations in financial reporting
and structuring transactions to change financial
statements to mislead some stakeholders about the
company's economic performance or to influence
contractual results that depend on accounting
numbers (Healy and Wahlen, 1999). Management
behavior that benefits oneself through earnings
management can be explained by agency theory. The
owner of the company is the principal who delegates
tasks to the agent, namely, management. The agent
will act to satisfy his interests and always have more
information than the principal has (Jensen and
Meckling, 1976).
ICBEEM 2019 - International Conference on Business, Economy, Entrepreneurship and Management
476