Acc312 - international managerial accounting discuss


International Managerial Accounting  

Requirements of Submission: This assignment must follow these formatting guidelines: two to three pages in length, double spacing, 12-point Times New Roman font, one-inch margins, and APA-style citations.

Case - Seeing Is Believing

From book Choi, F. Meek, G. (2011). International Accounting, 7th edition.

Tyler Poland is a stock picker responsible for recommending Mexican securities for his brokerage firm's clients. He is often frustrated about the lack of credible information on companies in Mexico. "Everything is always so top secret," he says. "Any time I try to learn about a company's activities, all I hear is 'I wouldn't know what to tell you'." In Mexico, it seems, information is power.

Trivial or not, information seems to be off-limits to anyone who is not an insider. Tyler knows that this secretiveness goes way back in Mexico's history. The Aztec rulers kept their subjects amazed by powerful deities who were both unpredictable and hard to understand. The Spanish followed many detailed bureaucratic rules but hardly ever shared them with ordinary Mexicans. After independence, the ruling politi- cal parties made sure that compro- mising information never got in the wrong hands. Historian and novelist Hector Aguilar Camin has written, "In Mexico, powerful people have traditionally kid- napped information. Part of the process of democratization is freeing it." But "there is still a tendency to want to hold it hostage for some kind of benefit." Most economists believe that gov- ernment secrecy made the 1994 currency collapse more severe because the Mexican government withheld vital macroeconomic statistics from the inter- national banking community. Many worry now that secrecy will limit Mexico's economic growth. Yet pressure for transparency has grown along with an influx of foreign investors doing busi- ness in Mexico. The rise of opposition political parties and the growth of a free press have fueled a new debate over access to information. "What good are all of these trends to me?" complains Tyler. "I need better information now."

Required

1. Discuss at least five characteristics that predict relatively low disclosure levels in Mexico. Your response should be based on a review of the material presented in Chapters 2 and 4 and this chapter, in addition to the case information above.

2. Discuss characteristics or features that predict relatively high levels of disclosure in Mexico.

3. Accounting measurement and disclosure practices are improving (from aninvestor-protection viewpoint) in many emerging- market economies. What are some of the recent improvements in these areas in Mexico? Discuss the underlying factors that help explain why the improvements are occurring. Again, refer to the material presented in Chapters 2 and 4 in addition to the case information above.

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