Examinando por Autor "Moreno, Alonso"
Mostrando 1 - 11 de 11
- Resultados por página
- Opciones de ordenación
Ítem A longitudinal study of the textual characteristics in the chairman’s statements of Guinness - an impression management perspective(Emerald, 2019-09-19) Moreno, Alonso; Jones, Michael John; Quinn, MartinPurpose - This paper longitudinally analyses the evolution of multiple narrative textual characteristics in the chairman’s statements of Guinness from 1948 to 1996, with the aim of studying impression management influences. It attempts to contribute insights on impression management over time. Design/methodology/approach - The paper attempts to contribute to external accounting communication literature, by building on the socio-psychological tradition within the functionalist-behavioural transmission perspective. The paper analyses multiple textual characteristics (positive, negative, tentative, future and external references, length, numeric references and first person pronouns) over 49 years and their potential relationship to profitability. Other possible disclosure drivers are also controlled. Findings - The findings show that Guinness consistently used qualitative textual characteristics with a self-serving bias, but did not use those with a more quantitative character. Continual profits achieved by the company, and the high corporate/personal reputation of the company/chairpersons, inter alia, may well explain limited evidence of impression management associated with quantitative textual characteristics. The context appears related to the evolution of the broad communication pattern. Practical implications - Impression management is likely to be present in some form in corporate disclosures of most companies, not only those companies with losses. If successful, financial reporting quality may be undermined and capital misallocations may result. Companies with a high public exposure such as those with a high reputation or profitability may use impression management in a different way. Originality/value - Studies analysing multiple textual characteristics in corporate narratives tend to focus on different companies in a single year, or in two consecutive years. This study analyses multiple textual characteristics over many consecutive years. It also gives an original historical perspective, by studying how impression management relates to its context, as demonstrated by a unique data set. In addition, by using the same company, the possibility that different corporate characteristics between companies will affect results is removed. Moreover, Guinness, a well-known international company, was somewhat unique as it achieved continual profits. This is the Accepted Manuscript of the article published in Accounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal, 32(6), 1714-1741, available online: https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/AAAJ-01-2018-3308. Please cite the published version. This Accepted Manuscript is deposited under the CC BY-NC licence and that any reuse is allowed in accordance with the terms outlined by the licence.Ítem Accountability and accounting for fisheries - six decades of reporting by the Electricity Supply Board of Ireland, 1935-1993(Emerald, 2023) Quinn, Martin; Moreno, Alonso; Bhatta, BibekPurpose: This study aims to contribute to the relatively limited historic literature on social and environmental accounting/accountability. More specifically, the study explores accounting and accountability for fisheries over time and determines potential legitimacy relations as conveyed through reporting. Design/methodology/approach: A content analysis method is used to analyse a fisheries-related section of an annual report of a state-owned electricity firm for 56 years (1935/36–1993). The time frame analysed is a period when environmental or social reporting was, in general, informal and not mandated. However, accountability was established for the company under study, through the legally mandated provision of (unspecific/discretional) information about fisheries activities. A lens evoking legitimacy relationships as a dyad is utilised. Findings: The fisheries reporting within the case organisation is an early example of recognition of the important effects of business activities on the environment and biodiversity. The findings of the analyses suggest the content aligns with what may be anticipated in a contemporary setting. Drawing on trends noted from the content analysis, three potential legitimacy relationships are identified around the fisheries reporting. Only one is determined as a complete legitimacy relationship. Research limitations/implications: The research is limited in that it is an analysis of one case in a single context. Also, the content analysis methods used were developed specifically for the study, which may limit their application. Finally, the data source used, and the historic nature of the study, to some extent limits the ability to determine some legitimacy relationships. Originality/value: This study offers some insights on the historic nature of environmental reporting from a fisheries perspective in the Northern Hemisphere. The longitudinal nature of the analysis also offers insights into how the content of the reporting changed over time. Additionally, the use of a relatively new approach to operationalising legitimacy may prove useful for future researchers in the accounting discipline, especially given recent concerns on how the concept of legitimacy has been utilised in such research.Ítem Classroom learning and the perception of social responsibility amongst graduate students of management accounting(MDPI, 2020-08-31) Castilla-Polo, Francisca; Ruiz-Rodríguez, M Consuelo; Moreno, Alonso; Licerán-Gutiérrez, Ana; Cámara de la Fuente, Macario; Chamorro Rufián, Eva; Cano-Rodríguez, ManuelThis study analyzes how learning about social responsibility (SR) can modify the perceptions of university students about the importance of responsible behavior on the part of companies. To this end, a questionnaire was designed and administered to Management Accounting students before (n = 128) and after (n = 71) receiving two training activities on SR. The descriptive results obtained testify to the importance of SR in the views of the sampled students, both before and after receiving the specific learning in SR. In this latter moment, students demonstrated a vision highly committed to the need for SR to be part of the economic agenda. The results also show that there was a significant change in the perception of SR and its implications in terms of benefits and costs before and after receiving the training. All of this suggests that SR training has partially modified students’ perceptions of SR. This paper provides important insights that could be leveraged by university and business school managers for the purpose of designing or modifying curricula related to SR. At the same time, it evaluates the potential of SR learning as a tool for modifying attitudes.Ítem Discursive strategies for internal legitimacy: Narrating the alternative organizational form(Elsevier, 2022) van-der-Steen, Martijn Pieter; Quinn, Martin; Moreno, AlonsoA significant body of academic work has explored the ways in which hybrid organizations seek to secure external legitimacy. However, there is a more limited understanding of the ways in which organizational units in hybrid organizations seek to acquire internal legitimacy – legitimacy which is conferred by internal stakeholders. This study draws on more than a century of communications in a Dutch cooperative bank to uncover how a major organizational unit enacted distinct discursive strategies to seek internal legitimacy. The paper extends prior work by showing how internal legitimacy work – the efforts to shape, reinforce, or suppress internal legitimacy judgments – in a hybrid organization is a dynamic process whereby an internal unit generates multiple complementary narratives to promote a fit between its own attributes and the legitimacy evaluations by internal audiences. In addition, it shows how internal legitimacy work can promote this fit by attempting to manipulate not only the impressions of the internal unit's attributes, but also its audiences’ understanding of wider cultural norms of the day, on which their legitimacy judgments are based. In this vein, the paper highlights how discursive internal legitimacy work seeks to generate a taken-for-granted organizational position for the internal units concerned.Ítem Explaining stable accounting practices at the Mahou brewery, Madrid, 1890s to 1970s(Taylor & Francis, 2024) Quinn, Martin; Moreno, AlonsoGiven the generally ubiquitous practice of brewing, exploring accounting in breweries is useful to understand the evolution of accounting practices within firms over time. Breweries, many of which have survived for centuries, operate(d) in differing political, legal, professional and economic contexts, yet produce a relatively standardised product. A standard product but differing context may influence how accounting was practised within breweries over time, and some prior studies have adopted institutional concepts to explore the stability/change of brewery accounting. To date, much of the existing research is in an Anglo-Saxon context. This study contributes to a growing literature in other contexts by exploring Mahou, a Spanish brewer with the aim to examine how internal accounting practices were affected by a differing institutional context and the stability/change of these practices. The accounting records of Mahou reveal stable practices over the study period, despite change in its operating context. They also reveal an emphasis on meeting legal requirements, with less evidence of accounting information which may be useful for decision making. This conclusion is in apparent contrast to practices at other breweries of a similar period.Ítem Impression management in bankruptcy: An analysis of the narratives in listed companies(ASEPUC-EDITUM, 2024) Moreno, Alonso; Camacho-Miñano, María-del-MarManagers tend to use opportunistically corporate narrative disclosure when financial performance is poor.However, there is little research on impression management in situations of extreme distress, such as bank-ruptcy. This paper analyzes ten textual characteristics of corporate reports at two moments in time, thelast year just before entering the legal bankruptcy procedure (sick year) and five years earlier (healthyyear). Specifically, it investigates the management reports of all bankrupt listed companies in Spain from2005 to 2019. Our findings near bankruptcy only show behavior that may be compatible with impressionmanagement in relation to length and positive language. Litigation risk associated with bankruptcy maycondition managers’ attitudes to using narratives in a self-serving manner. Our results are also robust if weonly test the most financially distressed bankrupt companies. This paper contributes to the understandingofimpression managementin companies in conditions of extreme financial distress.Ítem Impression management in bilingual corporate reporting: An analysis of textual characteristics in Spanish and English(Elsevier, 2024) Moreno, AlonsoGlobalization has made it more important for companies to communicate in different languages. However, translation in financial reporting is neglected in practice, despite offering managers the potential to increase/decrease opportunistic attitudes in different languages. In particular, opposing pressure and monitoring effects would suggest higher/lower incentives for impression management. This paper investigates whether there are different levels of impression management in different versions of bilingual (Spanish/English) annual reports produced by Spanish listed companies. Patterns in textual characteristics that may be used for impression management purposes are analyzed. Despite different incentives, the results show little difference in the opportunistic use (or lack thereof) of every textual variable analyzed between the different language versions. This implies that stakeholders may feel free to read the bilingual reports in the language in which they feel most comfortable, because the translation process does not seem to result in different levels of impression management.Ítem Impression management in corporate annual reports during the global financial crisis(Elsevier, 2022) Moreno, Alonso; Jones, Michael JohnThis paper analyses impression management (IM) during the global financial crisis (GFC). It examines the differences in multiple textual characteristics and attributions between a highly positive performance period (2002–2007) and the GFC period (2008–2012), within the setting of Spain, where these two economic cycles were extreme. In contrast to previous research, companies’ extreme poor performance in our sample is driven by an exogenous event. The findings do not show clear evidence of IM based on textual characteristics specifically linked to the GFC. Companies tried not to use overt IM and, to some extent, tried to clarify the impact of the crisis on performance. They were under great scrutiny and probably preferred to tell a more careful story. However, a general pattern of IM was still present during the GFC in the form of consistent positive attributions, favourable benchmarks and enhancement practices. In essence, the crisis did not fully stop IM practices, but rather influenced the way IM was produced. Overall, our results show that IM was lower during the GFC than in the case of poor performance in normal macroeconomic conditions found by previous literature. The results also show that the narratives of firms in the finance and real estate sectors were the most reactive to the GFC, probably linked to their key role in the crisis.Ítem Socioemotional wealth in family firms: a longitudinal content analysis of corporate disclosures(Elsevier, 2018-12-26) Cleary, Peter; Quinn, Martin; Moreno, AlonsoFamily business literature has noted the nature and presence of socioemotional wealth (SEW) in family firms. One method of observing SEW is by a five-dimension approach, collectively termed FIBER. While the dimensions are well defined, they have been critiqued, as have the theoretical foundations of SEW. Regardless, given the concept of SEW is about a decade old and the FIBER dimensions less so, it is reasonable to argue more research is needed. One potentially useful research approach is an historical one, which we will here term SEW history – the use of historical research to support (or question) the development of SEW as a concept. We undertake a content analysis of corporate disclosures through the Chairman’s Statement of two Irish family breweries over a period of about two decades. To conduct the analysis, we develop a coding scheme based on the FIBER dimensions and offer some research propositions around these dimensions of SEW being stable (or not) over time. Our findings reveal that the Chairman’s Statement does include FIBER dimensions in both breweries and they do change over time. Subsequent statistical analysis reveals significant differences in the FIBER dimensions between the two breweries and context is revealed as a key issue in the assessment of SEW, something prior research has noted. The study also raises some questions on the nature of some FIBER dimensions, in particular the “I” dimension. This is the Accepted Manuscript of the article published in Journal of Family Business Strategy, 2019, 10(2), pp. 119-132, available online: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jfbs.2018.11.002. Please cite the published version. This Accepted Manuscript is deposited under a CC-BY-NC-ND license.Ítem The impact of socioemotional wealth on corporate reporting readability in a multinational family-controlled firm(ASEPUC-EDITUM, 2023) Moreno, Alonso; Quinn, MartinExtant research suggests that the most significant elements of a family firm’s socioemotional wealth (SEW)can drive financial reporting decisions. This paper explores this empirically by analyzing corporate disclos-ures of a case organization – Guinness, a multinational family brewing firm – over an extended period. Weidentify the presence of the SEW dimensions in the firm’s corporate disclosures and explore the relationshipbetween the most salient SEW dimension (family identity) and readability, measured by the Bog index. Theanalysis finds a positive association between family identity and readability in the period when the firmunder study can be defined as a family firm. Other SEW dimensions do not appear to have an influence onreadability. In addition, at the end of the period of study, when the firm under study ceased to be a familyfirm, the SEW dimensions failed to have an effect on readability.Ítem The influence of institutional factors on corporate narratives: a thematic content analysis of Guinness(SAGE, 2019-11-28) Moreno, Alonso; Quinn, MartinThis paper provides a thematic content analysis of the Chairman’s Statement of Arthur Guinness & Son Ltd over time. The analysis traces the evolution of the content over four distinct periods using a coding scheme developed from extant research. The objective is to study whether the corporate narratives change in line with the institutional factors over time. To interpret the results, we draw on an institutional theory-based lens to offer potential explanations of some of the change and stability noted. Institutions can constrain behaviour, but they can also support and empower agents to bring about change. The results of the longitudinal content analysis reveals some variations over time, but in general the content is relatively stable. This may be explained by the organisation itself being an institution that is sufficiently institutionalised so that corporate reporting remained relatively stable. This suggests Guinness may be an example of a strong institution over time. "The final, definitive version of this paper has been published in Accounting History, 2020, 25(3), 425-447, published by SAGE Publishing. Available online: https://doi.org/10.1177/1032373219881811. DOI: 10.1177/1032373219881811. Please cite the published version."