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Bridget Stomberg
Researcher at Indiana University
Publications - 44
Citations - 818
Bridget Stomberg is an academic researcher from Indiana University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Tax avoidance & Deferred tax. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 41 publications receiving 643 citations. Previous affiliations of Bridget Stomberg include University of Texas at Austin & University of Georgia.
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Distilling the Reserve for Uncertain Tax Positions: The Revealing Case of Black Liquor
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine the extent to which the reserve for unrecognized tax benefits consistently reflects uncertain tax avoidance and find significant variation in the tax accruals meant to represent uncertain tax positions.
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One Size Does Not Fit All: How the Uniform Rules of FIN 48 Affect the Relevance of Income Tax Accounting
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine how the uniform rules of FIN 48, which governs accounting for income tax uncertainty, affect the relevance of income tax accounting and find no evidence that FIN 48 increased the ability of tax expense to predict future tax cash flows.
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Internal Control Quality: The Role of Auditor-Provided Tax Services
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose that auditor-provided tax services (tax NAS) improve internal control quality by accelerating audit firm awareness of transactions material to the financial statements and find that companies purchasing tax NAS are significantly less likely to disclose a material weakness and that this result is not due to auditor independence impairment.
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Media Coverage of Corporate Taxes
TL;DR: In this paper, a large-sample empirical study examines the media coverage of corporate taxes and identifies the factors that contribute to this phenomenon, but no large-scale empirical study is available.
Journal ArticleDOI
Internal Control Quality: The Role of Auditor-Provided Tax Services
TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose that auditor-provided tax services (tax NAS) improve internal control quality by accelerating audit firm awareness of transactions material to the financial statements, and find that companies purchasing tax NAS are significantly less likely to disclose a material weakness and that this result is not due to auditor independence impairment.