Ethical leadership, managerial risk-based incentives, and accounting conservatism: a comparative evidence from Egypt and Saudi Arabia

Abstract This study investigates how managerial risk-based incentives and ethical leadership influence accounting conservatism in Egyptian and Saudi-listed companies from 2018 to 2020. Drawing on Agency, Upper-Echelons and Social Learning theories, this paper examines the relationship between manage...

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Main Author: Maysa Ali M. Abdallah
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2025-06-01
Series:Future Business Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s43093-025-00546-2
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author Maysa Ali M. Abdallah
author_facet Maysa Ali M. Abdallah
author_sort Maysa Ali M. Abdallah
collection DOAJ
description Abstract This study investigates how managerial risk-based incentives and ethical leadership influence accounting conservatism in Egyptian and Saudi-listed companies from 2018 to 2020. Drawing on Agency, Upper-Echelons and Social Learning theories, this paper examines the relationship between managerial risk-based incentives, specifically, incentive stock options and performance-based bonuses, and conservative financial reporting. Also, it investigates the moderating effect of ethical leadership on this relationship. Using a panel regression analysis for 110 firms with 330 firm-year observations, the main results indicate that both incentive stock options and performance are positively associated with accounting conservatism, suggesting that these incentives encourage more conservative financial reporting. Furthermore, ethical leadership strengthens this positive relationship in the Egyptian market by promoting conservative practices through role modeling and behavior reinforcement. Meanwhile, it enhances transparency in the Saudi Arabian market, moderating the effect of incentives on conservatism. These findings highlight the context-specific role of ethical leadership in shaping financial reporting practices. This study contributes to accounting literature by providing comparative evidence from two major security markets in the Middle East and North Africa, addressing a gap in understanding the association between leadership ethics and incentive structures in emerging economies. It highlights the importance of ethical leadership in shaping cautious financial reporting, offering valuable insights for regulators and policymakers in these regions.
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spelling doaj-art-18454c92907b4e2a9c3ee88c03f074262025-08-20T02:05:13ZengSpringerOpenFuture Business Journal2314-72102025-06-0111111610.1186/s43093-025-00546-2Ethical leadership, managerial risk-based incentives, and accounting conservatism: a comparative evidence from Egypt and Saudi ArabiaMaysa Ali M. Abdallah0Department of Accounting, Faculty of Commerce, Tanta UniversityAbstract This study investigates how managerial risk-based incentives and ethical leadership influence accounting conservatism in Egyptian and Saudi-listed companies from 2018 to 2020. Drawing on Agency, Upper-Echelons and Social Learning theories, this paper examines the relationship between managerial risk-based incentives, specifically, incentive stock options and performance-based bonuses, and conservative financial reporting. Also, it investigates the moderating effect of ethical leadership on this relationship. Using a panel regression analysis for 110 firms with 330 firm-year observations, the main results indicate that both incentive stock options and performance are positively associated with accounting conservatism, suggesting that these incentives encourage more conservative financial reporting. Furthermore, ethical leadership strengthens this positive relationship in the Egyptian market by promoting conservative practices through role modeling and behavior reinforcement. Meanwhile, it enhances transparency in the Saudi Arabian market, moderating the effect of incentives on conservatism. These findings highlight the context-specific role of ethical leadership in shaping financial reporting practices. This study contributes to accounting literature by providing comparative evidence from two major security markets in the Middle East and North Africa, addressing a gap in understanding the association between leadership ethics and incentive structures in emerging economies. It highlights the importance of ethical leadership in shaping cautious financial reporting, offering valuable insights for regulators and policymakers in these regions.https://doi.org/10.1186/s43093-025-00546-2Accounting conservatismManagerial risk-based incentivesEthical leadershipIncentive stock optionsPerformance-based bonusesSocial learning theory
spellingShingle Maysa Ali M. Abdallah
Ethical leadership, managerial risk-based incentives, and accounting conservatism: a comparative evidence from Egypt and Saudi Arabia
Future Business Journal
Accounting conservatism
Managerial risk-based incentives
Ethical leadership
Incentive stock options
Performance-based bonuses
Social learning theory
title Ethical leadership, managerial risk-based incentives, and accounting conservatism: a comparative evidence from Egypt and Saudi Arabia
title_full Ethical leadership, managerial risk-based incentives, and accounting conservatism: a comparative evidence from Egypt and Saudi Arabia
title_fullStr Ethical leadership, managerial risk-based incentives, and accounting conservatism: a comparative evidence from Egypt and Saudi Arabia
title_full_unstemmed Ethical leadership, managerial risk-based incentives, and accounting conservatism: a comparative evidence from Egypt and Saudi Arabia
title_short Ethical leadership, managerial risk-based incentives, and accounting conservatism: a comparative evidence from Egypt and Saudi Arabia
title_sort ethical leadership managerial risk based incentives and accounting conservatism a comparative evidence from egypt and saudi arabia
topic Accounting conservatism
Managerial risk-based incentives
Ethical leadership
Incentive stock options
Performance-based bonuses
Social learning theory
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s43093-025-00546-2
work_keys_str_mv AT maysaalimabdallah ethicalleadershipmanagerialriskbasedincentivesandaccountingconservatismacomparativeevidencefromegyptandsaudiarabia