Abstract This article discusses the nature and treatment of dividends under a entity concept of corporate residual equity. It was hypothesized that the main objective of the corporation after its inception is to survive, and that the corporation strives to maintain both economic and financial competence in implementing this objective. It was argued that the only significant representation made by the corporation in soliciting stockholders' capital contributions was its agreement to pay dividends when and if declared, and that capital thus contributed becomes the corporation's equity. It was advanced that the treatment of several persistent problems in corporation accounting might be rendered more consistent if the nature of corporate residual equity as thus analyzed were accepted. The corporation, in soliciting stockholders' capital contributions, agrees to pay dividends when and if declared. This suggests that both the timing and the amount of dividends are at the corporation's discretion, and that stockholders cannot force the corporation to pay dividends even though earnings are ample.
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D Li
University of Southern California
E. M. Myatt-Price
Julius Wiener
University of Freiburg
The Accounting Review
University of Southern California
London School of Economics and Political Science
Southern California University for Professional Studies
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Li et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69ba43694e9516ffd37a4a4b — DOI: https://doi.org/10.2308/tar-7063515