Effect Of Voluntary Accounting Disclosures On Financial Performance Of Insurance Companies In Kenya
Date
2021
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Kca University
Abstract
Non-disclosure of vital reports has made stakeholders to lack confidence in investing with such
companies leading to a decline in performance. As a result, various organizations, including
insurance companies have in the recent past adopted voluntary accounting disclosures as part of
their financial management. Nonetheless, despite the use of voluntary accounting disclosures, the
performance of Kenyan insurance companies still remains low. The general study objective will
be to examine effect of voluntary accounting disclosures on financial performance of Kenyan
insurance companies. Moreover, the study also sought to establish the influence of financial
information disclosure, forward looking information disclosure and environmental accounting on
financial performance of Kenyan insurance companies. Further, the on-going study sought to
evaluate moderating effect of corporate governance on the association between voluntary
accounting disclosure and financial performance of Kenyan insurance companies. Additionally,
explanatory research design was employed during the study. The target population was the 55
Kenyan insurance companies. The present study deployed census approach and hence all the 55
insurance companies were included in the study. The study made use of secondary data, which
was obtained from the annual reports of insurance companies in Kenya and from Central Bank of
Kenya‘s bank supervision reports. The study made use of a data extraction tool to collect
secondary data. In the analysis of data, the study used both inferential and descriptive statistics
and all statistical analysis was carried out using STATA version 14. Descriptive statistics
comprised of frequency distributions, percentages, mean, variances and standard deviation. On
the other hand, inferential statistics were carried out using regression analysis, which was either
fixed effect or random effects depending on the results from Hausman test. The study found that
financial information disclosure has positive and significant effect on financial performance of
insurance companies in Kenya. In addition, forward looking information disclosure has an
inverse and significant effect on financial performance of insurance companies in Kenya.
Further, the study found that environmental accounting information disclosure has positive and
significant impact on financial performance of insurance companies in Kenya. Also, the study
established that corporate governance has statistically significant effect on the relationship
between voluntary accounting disclosures and financial performance of insurance companies in
Kenya. The study recommends that insurance companies should improve the disclosure of
information such as returns on assets, return on shareholders 'funds, liquidity ratios, bank loans
and mortgages and historical summary of financial data among others. In addition, the
management of insurance companies should increase the use of forward-looking information
disclosure including profit forecast, earnings per share forecast, new product/service
development as well as planned research and development expenditure, capital expenditure and
advertising and publicity expenditure. Further, the management of insurance companies should
improve the use of environmental accounting including environment policy, environment
management system, environmental compliance, environmental cost identification, waste
management and environmental budget among others.