The statement of cash flows (SCF) is, in principle, the least judgmental of the primary financial statements. In practice, however, its preparation, presentation, and interpretation are shaped by deep institutional, regulatory, linguistic, and economic forces that operate with particular intensity in emerging economies. This paper develops a critical synthesis of how the SCF is prepared, audited, and used in emerging-market settings, with explicit attention to International Accounting Standard 7 (IAS 7), the indirect-method bias inherited from common reporting practice, the classification of interest, dividends, and taxation, non-cash transaction disclosure, the treatment of foreign currency translation and hyperinflation, supplier finance and reverse factoring arrangements, restricted cash, and the role of the SCF in earnings-quality assessment. The paper is structured around a transparent, replicable, and reflexive methodology: a structured narrative review combined with a thematic synthesis of 124 sources identified through a systematic search of Scopus, Web of Science, EBSCO Business Source Complete, ScienceDirect, JSTOR, SSRN, and Google Scholar, supplemented by hand searches of leading journals, snowballing of citations, and targeted retrieval of regulator and standard-setter pronouncements. The review documents pervasive evidence of classification shifting between operating and non-operating sections of the SCF in jurisdictions with weak enforcement and concentrated ownership, persistent under-disclosure of non-cash items, inconsistent treatment of foreign currency cash flows and the effects of restating hyperinflationary economies, and growing concern over supplier finance arrangements that obscure operating cash-flow dynamics. The paper also surfaces a methodological lesson for emerging-economy scholarship: the SCF is best studied as a socio-technical artefact whose information content depends jointly on standards, enforcement, audit quality, governance, and macroeconomic volatility. The implications for standard-setters, securities regulators, auditors, preparers, and accounting educators are discussed, and an agenda for future empirical and qualitative research is proposed.
Ripon Chandra Das Ripon Chandra Das (Sun,) studied this question.
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