ABSTRACT

Philip Brown is one of the most admired and respected accounting academics alive today. He was a pioneer in capital markets research in accounting, and his 1968 article, co-authored with Ray Ball, "An Empirical Evaluation of Accounting Income Numbers," arguably had a greater impact on the course of accounting research, directly and indirectly, than any other article during the second half of the twentieth century. Since that time, his innovative research has focused on issues that bridge accounting and finance, including the relationships between net profit reports and the stock market, the long-run performance of acquiring firms, statutory sanctions and voluntary corporate disclosure, and the politics and future of national accounting standards to name a few.

This volume brings together the greatest hits of Brown’s career, including several articles that were published in out-of-the-way places, for easier use by students and researchers in the field. With a foreword written by Stephen A. Zeff, and an introduction that discusses the evolution of Brown’s research interests and explains the context for each of the essays included in the volume, this book offers the reader a unique look inside this remarkable 50-year career.

chapter |23 pages

Introduction

part I|98 pages

Returns and Earnings

part III|176 pages

Standard-Setting and Regulation

chapter 14|9 pages

Global Harmonisation of Accounting Standards

What research into Capital Markets Tells Us

chapter 15|17 pages

International Financial Reporting Standards

What are the Benefits?

chapter 17|36 pages

Achieving High Quality, Comparable Financial Reporting

A Review of Independent Enforcement Bodies in Australia and the United Kingdom

part IV|35 pages

In Theory

chapter 19|27 pages

Valuing Executive Stock Options

Performance Hurdles, Early Exercise and Stochastic Volatility