No. 233: Segment Disclosure Regulation, Proprietary Costs, and Organizational Restructuring

Jahr: 2026
Typ: Working Paper

Abstract

This study examines the response of firms with high proprietary costs to the segmental transparency requirements of SFAS 131, which mandates external reporting of internal divisions. We posit that firms with high proprietary costs react to the disclosure requirements by restructuring their organizational setup to withhold information from competitors. Analyzing a sample of 1,563 firms through a difference-indifferences approach, we observe a significant increase in net divisional manager hires among high proprietary cost firms after the mandate was announced, indicating the combination of internal divisions to reduce divisional transparency. Further analyses suggest that these changes in internal divisional structure are not attributable to general firm restructuring or growth. Furthermore, firms that restructured their internal divisional structure pre-SFAS 131 show decreased ex-post performance, suggesting net costs of the restructuring. Our findings highlight how proprietary costs can motivate firms‘ organizational restructuring that diminishes the effectiveness of transparency regulations.

 

Beteiligte Institutionen

Die Hauptstandorte vom TRR 266 sind die Universität Paderborn (Sprecherhochschule), die HU Berlin und die Universität Mannheim. Alle drei Standorte sind seit vielen Jahren Zentren für Rechnungswesen- und Steuerforschung. Hinzu kommen Wissenschaftler der LMU München, der Frankfurt School of Finance and Management, der Goethe-Universität Frankfurt, der Universität zu Köln, der Leibniz Universität Hannover und der TU Darmstadt, die die gleiche Forschungsagenda verfolgen.

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