Abstract:
Earnings quality is an important aspect that influences decisions relating to resource
allocation in the capital markets. Earnings also indicate the extent to which the firm
has engaged in value-added activities. Manipulation of earnings has degraded
shareholders' trust in the quality of information reported by corporations throughout
the world and the eventual survival of the firm. This has heightened the interest of
scholars, practitioners, and policymakers in the studies on earnings quality. Although
many studies suggest that Chief Executive Officer (CEO) power affects earnings
quality (EQ), the findings are mixed and inconclusive. The main objective of the
study was to investigate the moderating effect of Institutional Ownership (IO) in the
relationship between CEO power and EQ as mediated by Integrated Reporting (IR).
The specific objectives were to establish whether: First, the various dimension of
CEO power; CEO structural power (CEOSP), CEO ownership power (CEOOP), and
CEO expert power (CEOEP) affect EQ. Second, IO moderates the relationship
between CEO power and EQ. Third, IR mediated the relationship between CEO
power and EQ. Finally, IO moderates the relationship between CEO power and EQ as
mediated by IR. The study was grounded on; Upper Echelon theory, Agency theory,
and Signaling theory. The study used the positivism paradigm and adopted the
explanatory and longitudinal research design. The target population comprised 117
firms listed in East Africa (EA). Based on inclusion criteria for the study period 2013
to 2021, the sample size was 78 firms with 702 firm-year observations. Panel data was
extracted from the individual firm’s audited annual reports. The data was analyzed
through descriptive and inferential statistics. The results of the Hausman test guided
the choice between fixed and random effect regression. The study found that CEOSP
(β=-0.417, ρ<0.05), CEOOP (β=-0.201, ρ<0.05), and CEOEP (β=-0.176, ρ<0.05) had
a positive and significant effect on EQ. Further results indicated that IO moderated the
relationship between CEOSP (β=0.088, ρ<0.05, ∆R 2 0.198), CEOOP (β=-0.88,
ρ<0.05 ∆R 2 , 0.188), CEOEP (β=-0.064, ρ<0.05, ∆R 2 0.224) and EQ. The results
further indicated that IR mediated the relationship between CEO power and EQ;
CEOSP (β=-0.0076, ρ<0.05), CEOOP (β=-0.0138, ρ<0.05), and CEOEP (β=-0.0101,
ρ<0.05). Lastly, the study found that IO moderated the relationship between; CEOSP
(β=-0.656, ρ<0.05), CEOOP (β=0.061, ρ<0.05), and CEOEP (β=0.054, ρ<0.05) on
EQ as mediated by IR. Therefore the study concludes that CEO power is a positive
driver of EQ. Additionally, the study revealed an indirect relationship between CEO
power and EQ through IR and IO as a moderator. The study's findings support Upper
Echelon’s and agency theories, that CEOs affect the accounting results of the firm
which affects the quality of earnings. The results further support the signaling theory,
that the CEO signals to the shareholders by producing IR to indicate that the company
has quality earnings. The study recommends; that policymakers and regulatory bodies
may consider the mandatory adoption of IR to improve EQ. Since the study focused
on listed firms in EA, the results may not be generalized in other regions, which is
fertile ground for further research.