Authors
Rebecca Warren, David Bernard Carter, Christopher J Napier
Publication date
2020/1/17
Journal
Accounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal
Volume
33
Issue
1
Pages
124-151
Publisher
Emerald Publishing Limited
Description
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to investigate an element of the internal politics of standard setting by reference to the International Accounting Standards Board’s (IASB) movement to the International Financial Reporting Standard for Small and Medium-Sized Entities (IFRS for SMEs). The authors examine the politics of the IASB’s expertise in technocratic governance by focussing on how the IASB defined SMEs, gave the standard a title and issued a guide for micro-entities.
Design/methodology/approach
The narrative case study focusses on central “moments” in the development of IFRS for SMEs. The authors employ Laclau and Mouffe’s condensation, displacement and overdetermination to illustrate embedded politics in articulating IFRS for SMEs.
Findings
The authors extend literature on the internal politics of standard setting, such as agenda setting, by examining the condensing of disagreements between …
Total citations
2020202120222023202446754
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