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INTRODUCTION
Some recent discussions of U.S. financial reporting include implicit or explicit recommendations that the U.S. abandon the current allegedly "rules-based" system in favor of a "principles-based" system, with the implication that some or all of the current difficulties facing U.S. financial reporting would be alleviated or even eliminated by such a shift.1 In addition, Section 108 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 instructs the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to conduct a study on the adoption of a principles-based accounting system. The study is to have four elements:
* The extent to which a principles-based accounting system exists in the U.S.;
* The time required to change to such a system;
* The feasibility of such a system (and how it might be implemented); and
* An economic analysis of the implementation of a principles-based system.
Two themes emerge from these discussions. The first theme is that the current financial reporting system in the U.S. is undesirable or inappropriate because it is rules-based, fostering an alleged current "check-box" or compliance mentality that is, in the view of some, an open invitation to financial structuring and other activities that subvert highquality financial reporting. The second theme is that moving to a principles-based system is desirable, because such a system allows (or requires) the appropriate exercise of professional judgment. As part of these discussions, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) developed a "Proposal for a Principles-Based Approach to U.S. Standard Setting," available at http://www.fasb.org, and has held a public roundtable discussion. Relative to this commentary, the perspective of the FASB's proposal is that of standard setting, while I take a combined standard-setting and accounting-research perspective. In addition, the FASB's proposal considers several matters that I do not discuss, such as the possibility of a "true and fair override," and changes to the roles, composition, and processes of other standard setters such as the Emerging Issues Task Force.
This commentary is intended to raise several empirical questions that might be asked in discussions about the attributes, desirability, and effects of "principle-based accounting standards." I begin with an argument that U.S. GAAP is based on a recognizable set of principles derived from the FASB's Conceptual Framework, but nonetheless contains elements that cause some commentators to conclude that U.S....