Macquarie University
Browse
01whole.pdf (879.67 kB)

How does economic policy uncertainty influence the timeliness of goodwill impairment? ─ Australian evidence

Download (879.67 kB)
thesis
posted on 2022-11-02, 22:57 authored by Yi Shi

This thesis investigates the effect of economic policy uncertainty (EPU) on the timeliness of goodwill impairment of Australian listed firms from 2006 to 2019. Using the EPU index developed by Baker, Bloom, and Davis (2016), this thesis builds a multivariate logistic regression model to estimate the effect of EPU on the timeliness of corporate goodwill impairment. The analyses show that EPU attenuates the timeliness of goodwill impairment, and this attenuating effect is robust to different model specifications. The thesis then employs cross-sectional analyses to examine whether the attenuating effect of EPU varies with firms’ life cycle, firms’ severity of financial constraints, and the geographic location of firms’ headquarters. The results reveal that the negative effect of EPU is driven by mature firms, firms with severe financial constraints, and firms located in small states of Australia. Against the backdrop of a gubernatorial election triggering economic policy-related uncertainty, the thesis conducts a difference-in-differences test, and the results corroborate the main finding. The thesis also performs a Two-Stage Least Square regression test to alleviate the concerns about potential endogeneity due to omitted variables. Furthermore, to alleviate the concern about measurement errors, the thesis adopts a two-step regression approach to remove other non-policy-related factors from the original EPU measure and uses the residuals of the estimation as an alternative measure of EPU for a sensitivity test. The main results are also robust to a battery of additional sensitivity tests, such as controlling for business cycles and other macroeconomic confounding factors in the regression analysis and using the Australian federal government election as a parsimonious measure of EPU.

History

Table of Contents

Chapter 1: Introduction -- Chapter 2: Literature review and hypothesis development -- Chapter 3: Methodology -- Chapter 4: Main results -- Chapter 5: Sensitivity tests -- Chapter 6: Discussion

Notes

This thesis is presented for the degree of Master of Research

Awarding Institution

Macquarie University

Degree Type

Thesis MRes

Degree

Thesis MRes, Macquarie University, Department of Accounting and Corporate Governance, 2021

Department, Centre or School

Department of Accounting and Corporate Governance

Year of Award

2021

Principal Supervisor

Haiyan Jiang

Additional Supervisor 1

Colly He

Rights

Copyright: The Author Copyright disclaimer: https://www.mq.edu.au/copyright-disclaimer

Language

English

Extent

67 pages

Usage metrics

    Macquarie University Theses

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC