The institutionalisation of XBRL in a developing capital market: the Indonesian regulators’ and filers’ perspective

Article


Amalia, Fitri, Yigitbasioglu, Ogan and Tooley, Stuart. 2024. "The institutionalisation of XBRL in a developing capital market: the Indonesian regulators’ and filers’ perspective." Qualitative Research in Accounting and Management. 21 (5), pp. 524-554. https://doi.org/10.1108/QRAM-12-2022-0209
Article Title

The institutionalisation of XBRL in a developing capital market: the Indonesian regulators’ and filers’ perspective

ERA Journal ID19115
Article CategoryArticle
AuthorsAmalia, Fitri, Yigitbasioglu, Ogan and Tooley, Stuart
Journal TitleQualitative Research in Accounting and Management
Journal Citation21 (5), pp. 524-554
Number of Pages31
Year2024
PublisherEmerald
Place of PublicationUnited Kingdom
ISSN1176-6093
1758-7654
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1108/QRAM-12-2022-0209
Web Address (URL)https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/qram-12-2022-0209/full/html
Abstract

Purpose
Drawing on institutional theory analytical perspectives of theorisation and translation, this study aims to explore the institutionalisation of eXtensible Business Reporting Language (XBRL) in Indonesia from a regulatory and filer perspective.

Design/methodology/approach
The Indonesian capital market offers a unique case of the integration of XBRL regulatory reporting between multiple regulators and a transfer from capital market regulation to state-level regulation. This study uses semi-structured interviews with key actors employed with Indonesian XBRL-regulatory bodies and listed companies (filers).

Findings
External pressures, monitoring issues and tensions in the implementation process were instrumental in the theorisation and translation of XBRL in Indonesia. Specifically, the findings show that choices made with respect to XBRL regulation and implementation created tensions between XBRL reporting fulfilling a monitoring purpose and serving stakeholders’ interests. The findings also indicate that the Indonesian approach to XBRL regulation and implementation had distinct characteristics compared to XBRL implementation in other jurisdictions.

Practical implications
This study emphasises the necessity for robust regulatory support and strict enforcement to navigate the complexities and tensions arising from a multi-regulatory approach. Additionally, it stresses the importance of firms’ readiness and expertise in XBRL as more sophisticated implementation strategies are considered.

Originality/value
Using the analytical lens of theorisation and translation, the study provides a deeper understanding of how a globally diffused accounting technology was institutionalised and legitimised in a developing country. Specifically, this study explains why a conversion approach to XBRL implementation was favoured and how XBRL implementation and reporting were managed and coordinated between different Indonesian regulators.

KeywordsDeveloping country; Institutional theory; Regulation; XBRL; Indonesia; Theorisation; Translation
Contains Sensitive ContentDoes not contain sensitive content
ANZSRC Field of Research 2020350103. Financial accounting
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Byline AffiliationsGadjah Mada University, Indonesia
Queensland University of Technology
School of Business
Central Queensland University
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