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Fair Value Measurement in Financial Reporting
Author(s): Leslie Hodder;Patrick Hopkins;Katherine Schipper
Source: Journal:Foundations and Trends® in Accounting ISSN Print:1554-0642, ISSN Online:1554-0650 Publisher:Now Publishers Volume 8 Number 3-4, Pages: 131(143-270) DOI: 10.1561/1400000030 Keywords: Fair value measurement;Accounting standards;Accounting information;Accounting measurement
Abstract:
This monograph provides a historically informed discussion of
conceptual and procedural issues related to the use of the fair value
measurement attribute in financial reporting. Our goal is to provide
a structure, based on the conceptual frameworks of the Financial
Accounting Standards Board and International Accounting Standards
Board, for researchers’ evaluations of empirical research studies that
investigate the informational properties of all measurement bases,
including fair values. We begin by defining, addressing misconceptions
about, and providing a brief history of the fair value measurement
attribute. We next discuss decision usefulness of fair value and other
measurement bases, and describe and evaluate examples of empirical
research that documents the decision usefulness of recognized and
disclosed fair value information, focusing on predictive ability, value relevance,
and risk relevance.We also discuss the role of verifiability in the
context of relevant and faithfully represented accounting information;
describe three untested, verifiability-related maintained assumptions
that arise in discussions of fair-value-measurement research; and discuss
research designs for investigating questions related to accounting
measurement verifiability. Finally, we discuss claims that use of the
fair value measurement attribute causes procyclical behavior among
financial institutions and that accounting standards have become
increasingly fair-value-oriented during the last two decades.
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