Does the publication or the implementation of IAS 19(R) have real economic consequences?
Chircop, J; Kiosse, PV
Date: 14 August 2024
Article
Journal
Abacus: A Journal of Accounting, Finance and Business Studies
Publisher
Wiley / Accounting Foundation, The University of Sydney
Publisher DOI
Abstract
IAS 19(R) abolished the corridor approach and replaced the expected rate of return on pension
plan assets with the discount rate. While the abolition of the corridor method did not have a
significant impact on UK firms, which were historically using a different method to recognize
actuarial gains or losses, the elimination of the ...
IAS 19(R) abolished the corridor approach and replaced the expected rate of return on pension
plan assets with the discount rate. While the abolition of the corridor method did not have a
significant impact on UK firms, which were historically using a different method to recognize
actuarial gains or losses, the elimination of the expected rate of return was anticipated to have
a major impact. We examine whether the elimination of the expected rate of return has real
economic consequences for UK firms around the publication and implementation dates of IAS
19(R). Our findings suggest that UK firms shifted pension investments away from equities
following the publication and the implementation of IAS 19(R). In addition, we find evidence
that firms with higher pension deficits and firms that used higher expected rates of return
reduced equity investments to a greater extent following the publication of IAS 19(R);
interestingly, firms with larger differences between the expected and actual rates of return on
pension plan assets reduced equity investments to a greater extent only following the
implementation of IAS 19(R). These findings may be of interest to regulators in the context of
standard-setting, investment professionals as well as other stakeholders.
Finance and Accounting
Faculty of Environment, Science and Economy
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