Virtues of integrity and veracity in reporting, data alone is not enough. A case study approach

Author

Cugueró Escofet, Natàlia

Villaescusa Serrano, Núria

Publication date

2019-10-22T11:09:12Z

2019-10-22T11:09:12Z

2018-05-01



Abstract

One of the claims made in reporting is that firms should publish more information, both quantitative and qualitative. The annual reports of companies are thought precisely to fulfill this function: allowing the ones who have any type of interest in companies to be aware of the data, both quantitative and qualitative (in the form of annual reports). In this paper, we argue that data alone is not enough. We use the case of the company Fish&Fish, Inc. to show that the problem goes beyond the data itself. The most well calculated data and the most detailed reports could be insufficient to deter future ethical misbehaviors or to perform ethical behavior for the stakeholders. We argue that data must be complemented with several ethical virtues: integrity on the managerial part, veracity in the way reports are written. These two should also be complemented with justice, meaning that balancing several interests that parties have at the same time and managing the way integrity and veracity needs to be implemented in reporting decisions. Looking at Fish&Fish, Inc. we show that the main problems was the lack of veracity and integrity in the reporting that may mask present or future fraud.

Document Type

Article
Published version

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Reporting; Management Control Systems; Justice; Fairness; Virtues; Integrity; Veracity; Accounting fraud; Accounting; Financial statements; Management; Comptabilitat; Estats financers; Direcció i administració; Contabilidad; Estados financieros; Dirección y administración

Publisher

European Accounting and Management Review

Related items

https://doi.org/10.26595/eamr.2014.4.2.4

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