Accountancy: Faculty Publications
Manufacturing and Fraud
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
12-1-2024
Publication Title
Journal of Forensic Accounting Research
DOI
10.2308/JFAR-2023-038
Abstract
We examine fraud from an industry competition perspective, oriented from inventory theory. We find that fraud occurs among manufacturers more than nonmanufacturers and that the association between price competition and fraud is significantly more pronounced in the manufacturing sector. Aggregating inventory and cash flow patterns to the industry level, we report that industry inventory imbalance rates, from either excessive stockpiling or inventory leanness, associate with increased future price competition, which subsequently associates with more fraud. However, for manufacturers, the industry-wide prevalence of either excess or leanness amplifies future price competition, which is observed as a U-shaped association that ultimately ties to more fraud. These effects are stronger when extreme leanness is the manufacturing industry’s standard. We also provide evidence that the association between price competition and fraud is comparable to managerial incentives’ association with fraud. Together, our findings contribute to the literature on price competition, inventory management, and corporate misconduct.
Recommended Citation
Du Pon, Adam W., Stephanie Hairston, Dallin O. Smith.
2024.
"Manufacturing and Fraud."
Journal of Forensic Accounting Research, 9 (1): 58-86.
doi: 10.2308/JFAR-2023-038
https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/account-facpubs/190
Copyright
Publisher Copyright: © 2024, American Accounting Association. All rights reserved.
Comments
Publisher Copyright: © 2024, American Accounting Association. All rights reserved.