Making Sense of Expected Credit Losses: A Qualitative Analysis of IFRS 9 Compliance Strategies in an Emerging Market

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Abstract

Following the global financial crisis, the transition to IFRS 9’s forward-looking Ex-pected Credit Loss (ECL) model has introduced significant implementation complexity, particularly in emerging markets facing data limitations. This study investigates the heterogeneous ECL compliance strategies adopted within the Cambodian banking sector during a period of heightened credit stress, marked by a system-wide non-performing loan ratio of 8.6%. Utilizing a multiple-case study design and replication logic, a quali-tative content analysis was conducted on the 2024 audited financial statements of 13 representative institutions, ranging from market leaders to international subsidiaries. The findings reveal a pronounced technical divide: market leaders utilize advanced internal statistical methods, such as cohort analysis, while international subsidiaries rely on top-down parent-group proxy models to bridge local data gaps. A “macro-correlation paradox” was identified, where certain institutions prioritize faithful representation by excluding macroeconomic variables when statistical links to historical defaults remain weak. Furthermore, a significant transparency gap exists, where granular disclosures are leveraged as strategic communication tools to signal institutional safety. These results suggest that ECL compliance in data-limited environments is a strategic management choice rather than a standardized technical exercise, highlighting the need for regulatory standardization of modeling assumptions to improve inter-bank comparability.

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europepmc
last seen: 2026-05-20T01:45:00.602351+00:00
unpaywall
last seen: 2026-05-27T02:00:06.600101+00:00
License: CC-BY-4.0