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The impact of COVID-19 on earnings management: evidence from South Africa

This study aims to determine whether the COVID-19 pandemic impacted the earnings management practices of South African firms and various industries by assessing the quality of total accruals. The study used discretionary accruals as a proxy for the magnitude of earnings management activities, estima...

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Main Author: Mpumpula, Asanda
Other Authors: De Jesus, Carlos
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: College of Accounting 2025
Subjects:
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access_status_str Open Access
author Mpumpula, Asanda
author2 De Jesus, Carlos
author_browse De Jesus, Carlos
Mpumpula, Asanda
author_facet De Jesus, Carlos
Mpumpula, Asanda
author_sort Mpumpula, Asanda
collection Thesis
description This study aims to determine whether the COVID-19 pandemic impacted the earnings management practices of South African firms and various industries by assessing the quality of total accruals. The study used discretionary accruals as a proxy for the magnitude of earnings management activities, estimated using the Modified Jones Model adapted by Kothari et al. (2005). 2016 to 2019 was deemed the pre-crisis period, while 2020 to 2022 was deemed the crisis period. The discretionary accruals of a sample of 159 Johannesburg Stock Exchange-listed firms were observed to determine the impact of COVID-19 on earnings management. Further, due to how different the impact of COVID-19 and the lockdown protocols were on the various industries, earnings management practices across the industries were observed. The findings suggest that COVID-19 had a significant impact on earnings management. Firms were found to engage in income- decreasing discretionary accruals during the crises. Further, the industry analysis suggests that the impact of COVID-19 on the industries observed was not symmetrical. A statistically significant increase in income-decreasing discretionary accruals was observed in basic metals, consumer discretionary and the technology industry. Consumer staples, health care and the telecommunications industry that were deemed to provide essential services during the pandemic were found to have increased their discretionary accruals and utilised income-decreasing accruals; however, the difference between pre- crisis and crisis-period discretionary accruals is not statistically significant. The study results also found that the energy and industrials industry decreased their discretionary accruals and improved the quality of accruals reported during the pandemic. This study adds to the limited research on earnings management in South Africa, an emerging market with characteristics of a developed country. This study may be useful for standard setters in their mandate to improve reporting standards and thus the quality of financial reports, investors seeking to value companies accurately, and regulators of financial statements concerned with the quality of financial reports in South Africa, such as the JSE and the South African Institute of Chartered Accountants.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:41:19.690Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher College of Accounting
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/41782 The impact of COVID-19 on earnings management: evidence from South Africa Mpumpula, Asanda De Jesus, Carlos Covid-19 South Africa This study aims to determine whether the COVID-19 pandemic impacted the earnings management practices of South African firms and various industries by assessing the quality of total accruals. The study used discretionary accruals as a proxy for the magnitude of earnings management activities, estimated using the Modified Jones Model adapted by Kothari et al. (2005). 2016 to 2019 was deemed the pre-crisis period, while 2020 to 2022 was deemed the crisis period. The discretionary accruals of a sample of 159 Johannesburg Stock Exchange-listed firms were observed to determine the impact of COVID-19 on earnings management. Further, due to how different the impact of COVID-19 and the lockdown protocols were on the various industries, earnings management practices across the industries were observed. The findings suggest that COVID-19 had a significant impact on earnings management. Firms were found to engage in income- decreasing discretionary accruals during the crises. Further, the industry analysis suggests that the impact of COVID-19 on the industries observed was not symmetrical. A statistically significant increase in income-decreasing discretionary accruals was observed in basic metals, consumer discretionary and the technology industry. Consumer staples, health care and the telecommunications industry that were deemed to provide essential services during the pandemic were found to have increased their discretionary accruals and utilised income-decreasing accruals; however, the difference between pre- crisis and crisis-period discretionary accruals is not statistically significant. The study results also found that the energy and industrials industry decreased their discretionary accruals and improved the quality of accruals reported during the pandemic. This study adds to the limited research on earnings management in South Africa, an emerging market with characteristics of a developed country. This study may be useful for standard setters in their mandate to improve reporting standards and thus the quality of financial reports, investors seeking to value companies accurately, and regulators of financial statements concerned with the quality of financial reports in South Africa, such as the JSE and the South African Institute of Chartered Accountants. 2025-09-12T09:05:26Z 2025-09-12T09:05:26Z 2025 2025-09-12T08:59:22Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MCom http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41782 en eng application/pdf College of Accounting Faculty of Commerce University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Covid-19
South Africa
Mpumpula, Asanda
The impact of COVID-19 on earnings management: evidence from South Africa
thesis_degree_str Master's
title The impact of COVID-19 on earnings management: evidence from South Africa
title_full The impact of COVID-19 on earnings management: evidence from South Africa
title_fullStr The impact of COVID-19 on earnings management: evidence from South Africa
title_full_unstemmed The impact of COVID-19 on earnings management: evidence from South Africa
title_short The impact of COVID-19 on earnings management: evidence from South Africa
title_sort impact of covid 19 on earnings management evidence from south africa
topic Covid-19
South Africa
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41782
work_keys_str_mv AT mpumpulaasanda theimpactofcovid19onearningsmanagementevidencefromsouthafrica
AT mpumpulaasanda impactofcovid19onearningsmanagementevidencefromsouthafrica