January 23, 2015 | by Tricia Seibold Text Equivalent View Larger Image Accounting Corporate Governance Share on X Share on Linkedin Share on Facebook Share on Email Copy Link Copied to clipboard Share this http://stanford.io/15DXVRZ Sign up for more insights and ideas. For media inquiries, visit the Newsroom. Editor’s Picks Editor’s Picks Decoding the Proposed Netflix-Warner Bros. Mega-Merger What If We’re Looking at the National Debt All Wrong? Why Sanctions Failed to Restrain Russia’s Oligarchs Related David Larcker The James Irvin Miller Professor of Accounting, Emeritus
July 06, 2023 Another Price of Sloppy Bookkeeping: Employees Want a Wage Premium. Employees may not understand complex financial reports. But they know when their jobs could be at risk.
March 23, 2023 Why Do Companies Cook the Books? Look to the Bean Counters. Paying corporate accountants more removes incentives for financial misreporting.
December 15, 2022 By Revealing More, Private Firms May Lure Investors Away From Public Equity Investments in publicly traded companies shift when their private competitors share information, a new study finds.