Abstract : In the contemporary era of economic globalization, multinational enterprises operate across multiple jurisdictions characterized by diverse accounting standards, tax systems, and regulatory frameworks. Although cross-border financial reporting is designed to enhance transparency and comparability, it has increasingly become a channel for ethically contentious practices such as transfer pricing manipulation, aggressive tax avoidance, and creative accounting. This study examines the ethical challenges embedded in crossborder financial reporting and analyzes how these practices affect financial transparency, corporate accountability, and stakeholder trust. The research adopts a descriptive and analytical methodology based exclusively on secondary data obtained from authoritative international sources, including the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) Foundation, World Bank, Bank for International Settlements (BIS), and the Tax Justice Network, supported by relevant academic literature. The findings indicate that while practices such as transfer pricing and tax planning often comply with legal provisions, they frequently violate ethical principles of fairness, disclosure, and social responsibility. The study further observes that global regulatory initiatives, particularly the OECD’s Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS) framework and the widespread adoption of IFRS, have improved reporting consistency and disclosure standards at the international level. However, their effectiveness remains constrained by uneven enforcement, governance deficiencies, and regulatory asymmetries across countries, especially in developing economies. The analysis highlights that ethical issues in crossborder financial reporting are systemic rather than incidental, arising from persistent conflicts between profit maximization and ethical accountability. By integrating ethical evaluation with empirical evidence, the study contributes to the existing literature by offering a comprehensive understanding of ethical risks in global financial reporting. The paper concludes by emphasizing the need for stronger international cooperation, effective enforcement mechanisms, and the integration of ethical considerations into corporate financial governance to promote transparent and responsible cross-border reporting.
Jyoti et al. (Fri,) studied this question.