Abstract:
Human Resource Accounting (HRA) is an emerging topic in modern academic and business society due to the increased 
necessity of accounting for the worth of human resources as a result of their capacity to affect the firm's performance 
through their skills and capabilities. However, Sri Lankan businesses struggle to adopt HRA into their organizational 
practices due to a lack of assurance about how it affects the performance of firms as a result of the unavailability of the 
proper guidelines for HRA and the scarcity of research related to its effects on performance. This study attempted to 
answer this problem with the objective of investigating the impact of human resource accounting on the firm performance 
of listed material sector companies listed in Colombo Stock Exchange (CSE). The research model was conceptualized 
by using the independent variable, human resource accounting, and the dependent variable, firm performance. A 
quantitative approach was used for this study, and a sample of eighteen companies was drawn from the population of 
listed companies operating in the material industrial sector in Sri Lanka using the purposive sampling method. The 
published annual reports in the CSE for a five-year period (2017–2022) were used to collect the data, and four hypotheses 
were formulated to conduct the research. Descriptive statistics, correlation analysis, and panel regression analysis were 
used as analytical techniques. Results of the study revealed that the current degree of adoption of human resource 
accounting among the listed material sector companies was within the moderate level, while the panel regression analysis 
depicted that human resource accounting has a significant effect on the performance of listed material sector companies. 
These results imply the necessity of increasing the level of adoption of human resource accounting practices to boost the 
firm performance of listed material sector companies. Moreover, these results have numerous implications for employees, 
labor unions, regulatory authorities, accounting standard-setters, and policymakers.