Can prohibitions of non-audit services and an expanded auditor liability improve audit quality?

IF 2.1 4区 管理学 Q2 BUSINESS, FINANCE International Journal of Auditing Pub Date : 2022-03-02 DOI:10.1111/ijau.12268
Reiner Quick
{"title":"Can prohibitions of non-audit services and an expanded auditor liability improve audit quality?","authors":"Reiner Quick","doi":"10.1111/ijau.12268","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Law entrusts auditors to conduct statutory audits. They fulfil a societal role in providing an opinion on the truth and fairness of the financial statements of audited entities and reducing the risk of misstatement. The purpose of an audit is to enhance the credibility of financial reports prepared by management (Watts &amp; Zimmerman, <span>1986</span>). Thereby, audits contribute to financial stability, trust and market confidence in the economy by protecting investors from agency risk, which in turn reduces the cost of capital for companies (European Commission, <span>2010</span>). To fulfil this function, auditors need to provide an adequate service quality. According to the generally accepted definition of DeAngelo (<span>1981</span>), audit quality is the market-assessed joint probability that an auditor will discover material misstatements (auditor competence) and report them (auditor independence). This definition stresses that providing a high factual audit quality is insufficient but that users must also perceive audit quality as appropriate. Accounting scandals like Carillion, a UK construction and facility services company, or Wirecard, a German fintech company, raise public suspicion of auditing failures and result in regulatory initiatives, which seek to improve audit quality.</p><p>In the UK, the regulatory response mainly focused on expanding the prohibition of non-audit services (NAS) by audit firms (Department for Business, Energy, &amp; Industrial Strategy, <span>2021</span>). The provision of NAS to a public-interest entity (PIE) audit client is now limited to services regarding legally required reports and audit-related services (FRC, <span>2019</span>). Moreover, the Big 4 audit firms have to operationally separate their audit and NAS practices by 30 June 2024 (FRC, <span>2020</span>). The latter should ensure a focus on audit quality and protect auditors from influences from the NAS practice. The UK regulator even considered an audit-only firm approach, which would have resulted in a spin-off of UK audit firms' consulting arms (Marriage, <span>2018</span>). The German legislator, who originally made use of the European Union (EU) Member State option to allow certain tax and valuation services from the blacklist of prohibited NAS, just recently reversed this decision in response to the Wirecard scandal. More importantly, Germany significantly increased the existing liability caps in case of negligent misconduct. In audits of PIEs, auditor liability is now unlimited in cases of gross negligence. The EU also considers eliminating or setting more appropriate liability caps (Council of the European Union, <span>2021</span>).</p><p>From a theoretical point of view, the joint provision of audit and NAS exerts opposing effects on audit quality, and the overall impact remains unclear. The provision of NAS to audit clients may improve auditor's ability to detect material misstatements through knowledge spillovers (Arruñada, <span>1999</span>; Knechel et al., <span>2012</span>). The auditor obtains additional insights into the client's business and operations, improving the understanding of the client's procedures and controls and the assessment of the client's business and financial risks (for further advantages, see Quick &amp; Warming-Rasmussen, <span>2005</span>).</p><p>However, if the auditor renders NAS to audit clients, auditor independence could be threatened, due to economic and social bonding (Antle et al., <span>2006</span>; Ferguson et al., <span>2004</span>; Svanström, <span>2013</span>). Total revenue from one particular client increases, which creates an economic bond between auditor and auditee (self-interest threat, Arruñada, <span>1999</span>; Ruddock et al., <span>2006</span>; Zhang &amp; Emanuel, <span>2008</span>). Moreover, NAS establishes a unique bond of trust between the consultant (i.e., the audit firm) and management, and this social bonding may hamper the auditor's professional scepticism, which is necessary for an objective testing of a client's accounting data (familiarity threat). A further threat to independence exists when the auditor reviews facts, which were influenced by the consulting activities, threatening an objective distance (self-review threat) (IESBA Code of Ethics 2021, 120.6 A3). Finally, the representation of the client's interests towards third parties by the auditor also creates an advocacy threat (IESBA Code of Ethics 2021, 120.6 A3). An additional reason for a potentially negative effect of high NAS fee levels is that a focus on NAS provision could distract from auditing services (Beardsley et al., <span>2019</span>).</p><p>Prior research on the impact of a simultaneous provision of audit and NAS on factual audit quality is extensive and not completely conclusive. However, the majority of previous studies failed to identify significant effects. Archival studies predominate and use proxies for audit quality, like earnings management (e.g., Al-Okaily et al., <span>2020</span>; Antle et al., <span>2006</span>; Campa &amp; Donnelly, <span>2016</span>; Hohenfels &amp; Quick, <span>2020</span>; Lim &amp; Tan, <span>2008</span>), audit opinions (e.g., Ianniello, <span>2012</span>; Lennox, <span>1999</span>), going concern opinions (e.g., Basioudis et al., <span>2008</span>; Causholli et al., <span>2014</span>) or restatements (e.g., Knechel et al., <span>2012</span>; Lisic et al., <span>2019</span>). The provision of tax services seems to be less problematic and may even improve audit quality (e.g., Castillo-Merino et al., <span>2020</span>; Huang et al., <span>2007</span>; Krishnan &amp; Visvanathan, <span>2011</span>).</p><p>In contrast, the majority of research on the relationship between NAS fees and perceived audit quality identifies a negative influence. Related research methods are surveys (e.g., Dart, <span>2011</span>; van Liempd et al., <span>2019</span>), experiments (Aschauer &amp; Quick, <span>2018</span>; Meuwissen &amp; Quick, <span>2019</span>; Quick &amp; Warming-Rasmussen, <span>2015</span>) and archival studies. The latter measure capital market reactions to disclosed non-audit fees paid to the auditor (e.g., Eilifsen et al., <span>2018</span>) or their impact on the cost of capital (e.g., Alsadoun et al., <span>2018</span>; Hollingsworth &amp; Li, <span>2012</span>). Again, results regarding tax fees show a different pattern, often with positive perceptions (e.g., Chen et al., <span>2019</span>, Cook et al., <span>2020</span>).</p><p>The perceived effect of NAS fees on audit quality differs by type of service. This confirms the blacklist approach chosen by the EU. In contrast, a general prohibition of the provision of NAS services to audit clients, or even an audit firm only-approach, seems unnecessarily strict. In addition, the perceptions vary between stakeholder groups and become more negative as the auditing expertise of subjects decline. Hence, regulators face the problematic decision to which stakeholders they should address prohibitions of NAS.</p><p>Despite extensive prior research, promising avenues for future research exist. In conjunction with the idea of pure audit firms, it would be of interest to analyse whether NAS revenues earned from non-audit clients affect audit quality. Moreover, the association between NAS provision to audit clients and audit quality could be nonlinear. Knowledge spillover effects may occur at low levels of NAS with diminishing benefits at higher levels. In contrast, it is less (more) likely that economic bonding reduces audit quality at lower (higher) NAS levels. Non-linearity is the underlying assumption of the 70% NAS fee cap by the EU. In summary, knowledge spillovers and economic bonding may not equally offset each other across the NAS fee distribution. A working paper by Beardsley et al. (<span>2018</span>) has already taken up this idea. There is some research on the impact of future NAS fees on current audit quality (e.g., Castillo-Merino et al., <span>2020</span>; Causholli et al., <span>2014</span>). However, the EU recently introduced mandatory audit firm rotation, which may result in a cyclic alteration of audit firm roles as providers of audits and NAS. Therefore, it may be worth to revisit this association. Lastly, there is still a lack of research investigating the effects of a simultaneous audit and NAS provision on an office and, in particular, a partner level.</p><p>Individuals will take higher risk and the likelihood of moral hazard increases if they can assume that third parties suffer the potential consequences of a risk (theory of moral hazard). Furthermore, people adjust their behaviour in response to perceived levels of risk, becoming more careful where they sense greater risk and less careful when feeling more protected (theory of risk compensation; e.g., Levym &amp; Miller, <span>2000</span>). Thus, auditors will have incentives to reduce their performance level and increase their risk exposure if they do not bear the full costs of that risk, i.e., if they are not unlimitedly liable for damages resulting from audit failure. Therefore, an expanded auditor liability may create an incentive for higher audit quality, prevent lowly qualified public accountants from performing audits and foster the credibility of audits.</p><p>However, a higher liability exposure of auditors may also cause negative effects. Insurance premiums, and thereby also audit costs, will increase. Moreover, it is likely that auditors will intensify their efforts in preparing sufficient and appropriate audit documentation with similar effects on audit costs. As a consequence, audit fees may increase. In the likely case that (some) clients will not accept higher fees, margins will decrease and the attractiveness of audit services will further diminish. This may result in a further loss of focus on audit services and a decrease of audit quality (Boyd, <span>2004</span>). Moreover, there is reason to fear that some public accounting firms get deterred by costs and risks and will not offer audit services anymore. This would result in a further increase of audit market concentration and contradict the EU's objective to reduce such concentration. The market already appears to be too concentrated in certain segments, entailing a systemic risk and limiting clients' auditor choice (European Commission, <span>2010</span>). Finally, clients associated with a high litigation risk, e.g., financially distressed firms, might have problems to find any auditor (Bockus &amp; Gigler, <span>1998</span>; Laux &amp; Newmann, <span>2010</span>; Shu, <span>2000</span>).</p><p>Analytical research demonstrates that a high liability exposure of the auditor or an unlimited auditor liability fosters an appropriate audit quality. However, the optimal liability level depends on the potential reputation loss an auditor suffers in case of an accounting scandal. If the reputation risk is high, a moderate level of liability is adequate (e.g., Bigus, <span>2015</span>; Deng et al., <span>2012</span>; Liao &amp; Radhakrishnan, <span>2020</span>). In addition, analytical research shows that proportionate liability is superior to joint and several liability (e.g., Narayanan, <span>1994</span>) and that strict liability, in contrast to negligence liability, results in a socially optimal auditor effort level (Liu &amp; Wang, <span>2006</span>).</p><p>Findings from archival studies consistently indicate that a higher liability exposure results in increased audit quality. The Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 made it more difficult for plaintiffs' attorneys to successfully pursue class-action litigation against auditors and provided proportionate liability in damage awards. This relief to the public accounting profession resulted in a loss of audit quality (Francis &amp; Krishnan, <span>2002</span>; Geiger et al., <span>2001</span>; Geiger &amp; Raghunandan, <span>2001</span>). Gaver et al. (<span>2012</span>) provide evidence that more stringent state-level liability standards for third-party claims against the auditor for negligence are associated with higher audit quality. Evidence from China suggests that auditors in partnership public accounting firms are more likely to issue modified audit reports than auditors in limited liability public accounting firms (Firth et al., <span>2012</span>) and that the removal of a cap on the liability exposure of negligent auditors improves audit quality (He et al., <span>2017</span>). Cross-country studies show similar results (e.g., Choi et al., <span>2008</span>; Francis &amp; Wang, <span>2008</span>).</p><p>Future archival research could investigate whether the expanded auditor liability impacts audit quality in Germany. In addition, it would be of interest to explore the optimal size of a liability cap. Furthermore, research evidence on the best way to limit auditor liability, capped vs. proportional, is missing. According to the deterrence theory (Becker, <span>1968</span>), deterrence from the threat of punishment is multifaceted; i.e., it depends on the certainty, severity and swiftness of punishment. Future research should consider this multi-dimensionality. Moreover, auditors are not only exposed to a litigation threat but also to other types of legal punishments (like disciplinary sanctions or criminal conviction) and to a reputation threat. Therefore, an isolated scientific assessment of the effects of auditor liability is insufficient. Future research should rather investigate interactions between different types of punishment and search for an optimal mix.</p><p>Results on the impact of NAS provision to audit clients on factual and perceived audit quality are conflicting and indicate that it is quite likely that NAS fees are not related to factual audit quality but that the users of audited financial statements do not believe in an unaffected audit quality. This indicates the existence of a specific type of an expectation gap (Quick, <span>2020</span>). Currently, regulators' attempts to narrow this gap are characterized by stricter prohibitions of NAS, which means an adaption of standards towards misperceptions. Alternatively, regulators could have chosen to focus on education and reassuring of the public (Humphrey et al., <span>1992</span>).</p><p>Prior research shows that the expansion of auditor liability may improve audit quality but is associated with some disadvantages. The economically optimal liability level remains an open question.</p><p>A recent survey of auditors and investors by Quick et al. (<span>2021</span>) broadens the perspective on PIE-auditor independence beyond the above-discussed issues. It reveals that improved audit committees, stricter penalties under criminal law, more severe disciplinary sanctions, expanded auditor rights during general assemblies and enhanced auditor oversight are the top priorities of auditors. Investors have similar preferences for penalties and sanctions. However, they also favour a higher liability exposure of the auditor, an application of the external rotation principle to audit team members and joint audits and do not prioritize measures regarding audit committees and general assemblies.</p>","PeriodicalId":47092,"journal":{"name":"International Journal of Auditing","volume":"26 1","pages":"18-22"},"PeriodicalIF":2.1000,"publicationDate":"2022-03-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/ijau.12268","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"International Journal of Auditing","FirstCategoryId":"91","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ijau.12268","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"管理学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"BUSINESS, FINANCE","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

Law entrusts auditors to conduct statutory audits. They fulfil a societal role in providing an opinion on the truth and fairness of the financial statements of audited entities and reducing the risk of misstatement. The purpose of an audit is to enhance the credibility of financial reports prepared by management (Watts & Zimmerman, 1986). Thereby, audits contribute to financial stability, trust and market confidence in the economy by protecting investors from agency risk, which in turn reduces the cost of capital for companies (European Commission, 2010). To fulfil this function, auditors need to provide an adequate service quality. According to the generally accepted definition of DeAngelo (1981), audit quality is the market-assessed joint probability that an auditor will discover material misstatements (auditor competence) and report them (auditor independence). This definition stresses that providing a high factual audit quality is insufficient but that users must also perceive audit quality as appropriate. Accounting scandals like Carillion, a UK construction and facility services company, or Wirecard, a German fintech company, raise public suspicion of auditing failures and result in regulatory initiatives, which seek to improve audit quality.

In the UK, the regulatory response mainly focused on expanding the prohibition of non-audit services (NAS) by audit firms (Department for Business, Energy, & Industrial Strategy, 2021). The provision of NAS to a public-interest entity (PIE) audit client is now limited to services regarding legally required reports and audit-related services (FRC, 2019). Moreover, the Big 4 audit firms have to operationally separate their audit and NAS practices by 30 June 2024 (FRC, 2020). The latter should ensure a focus on audit quality and protect auditors from influences from the NAS practice. The UK regulator even considered an audit-only firm approach, which would have resulted in a spin-off of UK audit firms' consulting arms (Marriage, 2018). The German legislator, who originally made use of the European Union (EU) Member State option to allow certain tax and valuation services from the blacklist of prohibited NAS, just recently reversed this decision in response to the Wirecard scandal. More importantly, Germany significantly increased the existing liability caps in case of negligent misconduct. In audits of PIEs, auditor liability is now unlimited in cases of gross negligence. The EU also considers eliminating or setting more appropriate liability caps (Council of the European Union, 2021).

From a theoretical point of view, the joint provision of audit and NAS exerts opposing effects on audit quality, and the overall impact remains unclear. The provision of NAS to audit clients may improve auditor's ability to detect material misstatements through knowledge spillovers (Arruñada, 1999; Knechel et al., 2012). The auditor obtains additional insights into the client's business and operations, improving the understanding of the client's procedures and controls and the assessment of the client's business and financial risks (for further advantages, see Quick & Warming-Rasmussen, 2005).

However, if the auditor renders NAS to audit clients, auditor independence could be threatened, due to economic and social bonding (Antle et al., 2006; Ferguson et al., 2004; Svanström, 2013). Total revenue from one particular client increases, which creates an economic bond between auditor and auditee (self-interest threat, Arruñada, 1999; Ruddock et al., 2006; Zhang & Emanuel, 2008). Moreover, NAS establishes a unique bond of trust between the consultant (i.e., the audit firm) and management, and this social bonding may hamper the auditor's professional scepticism, which is necessary for an objective testing of a client's accounting data (familiarity threat). A further threat to independence exists when the auditor reviews facts, which were influenced by the consulting activities, threatening an objective distance (self-review threat) (IESBA Code of Ethics 2021, 120.6 A3). Finally, the representation of the client's interests towards third parties by the auditor also creates an advocacy threat (IESBA Code of Ethics 2021, 120.6 A3). An additional reason for a potentially negative effect of high NAS fee levels is that a focus on NAS provision could distract from auditing services (Beardsley et al., 2019).

Prior research on the impact of a simultaneous provision of audit and NAS on factual audit quality is extensive and not completely conclusive. However, the majority of previous studies failed to identify significant effects. Archival studies predominate and use proxies for audit quality, like earnings management (e.g., Al-Okaily et al., 2020; Antle et al., 2006; Campa & Donnelly, 2016; Hohenfels & Quick, 2020; Lim & Tan, 2008), audit opinions (e.g., Ianniello, 2012; Lennox, 1999), going concern opinions (e.g., Basioudis et al., 2008; Causholli et al., 2014) or restatements (e.g., Knechel et al., 2012; Lisic et al., 2019). The provision of tax services seems to be less problematic and may even improve audit quality (e.g., Castillo-Merino et al., 2020; Huang et al., 2007; Krishnan & Visvanathan, 2011).

In contrast, the majority of research on the relationship between NAS fees and perceived audit quality identifies a negative influence. Related research methods are surveys (e.g., Dart, 2011; van Liempd et al., 2019), experiments (Aschauer & Quick, 2018; Meuwissen & Quick, 2019; Quick & Warming-Rasmussen, 2015) and archival studies. The latter measure capital market reactions to disclosed non-audit fees paid to the auditor (e.g., Eilifsen et al., 2018) or their impact on the cost of capital (e.g., Alsadoun et al., 2018; Hollingsworth & Li, 2012). Again, results regarding tax fees show a different pattern, often with positive perceptions (e.g., Chen et al., 2019, Cook et al., 2020).

The perceived effect of NAS fees on audit quality differs by type of service. This confirms the blacklist approach chosen by the EU. In contrast, a general prohibition of the provision of NAS services to audit clients, or even an audit firm only-approach, seems unnecessarily strict. In addition, the perceptions vary between stakeholder groups and become more negative as the auditing expertise of subjects decline. Hence, regulators face the problematic decision to which stakeholders they should address prohibitions of NAS.

Despite extensive prior research, promising avenues for future research exist. In conjunction with the idea of pure audit firms, it would be of interest to analyse whether NAS revenues earned from non-audit clients affect audit quality. Moreover, the association between NAS provision to audit clients and audit quality could be nonlinear. Knowledge spillover effects may occur at low levels of NAS with diminishing benefits at higher levels. In contrast, it is less (more) likely that economic bonding reduces audit quality at lower (higher) NAS levels. Non-linearity is the underlying assumption of the 70% NAS fee cap by the EU. In summary, knowledge spillovers and economic bonding may not equally offset each other across the NAS fee distribution. A working paper by Beardsley et al. (2018) has already taken up this idea. There is some research on the impact of future NAS fees on current audit quality (e.g., Castillo-Merino et al., 2020; Causholli et al., 2014). However, the EU recently introduced mandatory audit firm rotation, which may result in a cyclic alteration of audit firm roles as providers of audits and NAS. Therefore, it may be worth to revisit this association. Lastly, there is still a lack of research investigating the effects of a simultaneous audit and NAS provision on an office and, in particular, a partner level.

Individuals will take higher risk and the likelihood of moral hazard increases if they can assume that third parties suffer the potential consequences of a risk (theory of moral hazard). Furthermore, people adjust their behaviour in response to perceived levels of risk, becoming more careful where they sense greater risk and less careful when feeling more protected (theory of risk compensation; e.g., Levym & Miller, 2000). Thus, auditors will have incentives to reduce their performance level and increase their risk exposure if they do not bear the full costs of that risk, i.e., if they are not unlimitedly liable for damages resulting from audit failure. Therefore, an expanded auditor liability may create an incentive for higher audit quality, prevent lowly qualified public accountants from performing audits and foster the credibility of audits.

However, a higher liability exposure of auditors may also cause negative effects. Insurance premiums, and thereby also audit costs, will increase. Moreover, it is likely that auditors will intensify their efforts in preparing sufficient and appropriate audit documentation with similar effects on audit costs. As a consequence, audit fees may increase. In the likely case that (some) clients will not accept higher fees, margins will decrease and the attractiveness of audit services will further diminish. This may result in a further loss of focus on audit services and a decrease of audit quality (Boyd, 2004). Moreover, there is reason to fear that some public accounting firms get deterred by costs and risks and will not offer audit services anymore. This would result in a further increase of audit market concentration and contradict the EU's objective to reduce such concentration. The market already appears to be too concentrated in certain segments, entailing a systemic risk and limiting clients' auditor choice (European Commission, 2010). Finally, clients associated with a high litigation risk, e.g., financially distressed firms, might have problems to find any auditor (Bockus & Gigler, 1998; Laux & Newmann, 2010; Shu, 2000).

Analytical research demonstrates that a high liability exposure of the auditor or an unlimited auditor liability fosters an appropriate audit quality. However, the optimal liability level depends on the potential reputation loss an auditor suffers in case of an accounting scandal. If the reputation risk is high, a moderate level of liability is adequate (e.g., Bigus, 2015; Deng et al., 2012; Liao & Radhakrishnan, 2020). In addition, analytical research shows that proportionate liability is superior to joint and several liability (e.g., Narayanan, 1994) and that strict liability, in contrast to negligence liability, results in a socially optimal auditor effort level (Liu & Wang, 2006).

Findings from archival studies consistently indicate that a higher liability exposure results in increased audit quality. The Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 made it more difficult for plaintiffs' attorneys to successfully pursue class-action litigation against auditors and provided proportionate liability in damage awards. This relief to the public accounting profession resulted in a loss of audit quality (Francis & Krishnan, 2002; Geiger et al., 2001; Geiger & Raghunandan, 2001). Gaver et al. (2012) provide evidence that more stringent state-level liability standards for third-party claims against the auditor for negligence are associated with higher audit quality. Evidence from China suggests that auditors in partnership public accounting firms are more likely to issue modified audit reports than auditors in limited liability public accounting firms (Firth et al., 2012) and that the removal of a cap on the liability exposure of negligent auditors improves audit quality (He et al., 2017). Cross-country studies show similar results (e.g., Choi et al., 2008; Francis & Wang, 2008).

Future archival research could investigate whether the expanded auditor liability impacts audit quality in Germany. In addition, it would be of interest to explore the optimal size of a liability cap. Furthermore, research evidence on the best way to limit auditor liability, capped vs. proportional, is missing. According to the deterrence theory (Becker, 1968), deterrence from the threat of punishment is multifaceted; i.e., it depends on the certainty, severity and swiftness of punishment. Future research should consider this multi-dimensionality. Moreover, auditors are not only exposed to a litigation threat but also to other types of legal punishments (like disciplinary sanctions or criminal conviction) and to a reputation threat. Therefore, an isolated scientific assessment of the effects of auditor liability is insufficient. Future research should rather investigate interactions between different types of punishment and search for an optimal mix.

Results on the impact of NAS provision to audit clients on factual and perceived audit quality are conflicting and indicate that it is quite likely that NAS fees are not related to factual audit quality but that the users of audited financial statements do not believe in an unaffected audit quality. This indicates the existence of a specific type of an expectation gap (Quick, 2020). Currently, regulators' attempts to narrow this gap are characterized by stricter prohibitions of NAS, which means an adaption of standards towards misperceptions. Alternatively, regulators could have chosen to focus on education and reassuring of the public (Humphrey et al., 1992).

Prior research shows that the expansion of auditor liability may improve audit quality but is associated with some disadvantages. The economically optimal liability level remains an open question.

A recent survey of auditors and investors by Quick et al. (2021) broadens the perspective on PIE-auditor independence beyond the above-discussed issues. It reveals that improved audit committees, stricter penalties under criminal law, more severe disciplinary sanctions, expanded auditor rights during general assemblies and enhanced auditor oversight are the top priorities of auditors. Investors have similar preferences for penalties and sanctions. However, they also favour a higher liability exposure of the auditor, an application of the external rotation principle to audit team members and joint audits and do not prioritize measures regarding audit committees and general assemblies.

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禁止非审计服务和扩大审计师责任能提高审计质量吗?
, 2014)或重述(例如,Knechel et al., 2012;Lisic等人,2019)。提供税务服务似乎问题较少,甚至可能提高审计质量(例如,Castillo-Merino等人,2020;Huang et al., 2007;克里希,Visvanathan, 2011)。相比之下,大多数关于NAS费用与感知审计质量之间关系的研究发现了负面影响。相关的研究方法是调查(例如,Dart, 2011;van Liempd et al., 2019),实验(Aschauer &很快,2018;Meuwissen,很快,2019;快速的,warm - rasmussen, 2015)和档案研究。后者衡量资本市场对已披露的支付给审计师的非审计费用的反应(例如,Eilifsen等人,2018)或其对资本成本的影响(例如,Alsadoun等人,2018;•霍林斯沃思,李,2012)。同样,关于税费的结果显示出不同的模式,通常是积极的看法(例如,Chen等人,2019年,Cook等人,2020年)。NAS费用对审计质量的感知影响因服务类型而异。这证实了欧盟选择的黑名单方法。相比之下,普遍禁止向审计客户提供NAS服务,甚至禁止只向审计公司提供NAS服务,似乎没有必要这么严格。此外,利益相关者群体之间的看法各不相同,并且随着主体审计专业知识的下降而变得更加消极。因此,监管机构面临着一个有问题的决定,即他们应该向哪些利益相关者解决NAS禁令问题。尽管已有广泛的研究,但未来的研究仍有希望。结合纯粹审计公司的想法,分析NAS从非审计客户获得的收入是否会影响审计质量将是有趣的。此外,向审计客户提供NAS与审计质量之间的关联可能是非线性的。知识溢出效应可能发生在低水平的NAS上,而在高水平的NAS上收益递减。相反,在较低(较高)的NAS水平上,经济联系降低审计质量的可能性较小(更大)。非线性是欧盟对70% NAS费用上限的基本假设。总之,知识溢出和经济联系在NAS费用分配中可能不会平等地相互抵消。Beardsley等人(2018)的一篇工作论文已经采纳了这一想法。有一些关于未来NAS费用对当前审计质量影响的研究(例如,Castillo-Merino等,2020;Causholli et al., 2014)。然而,欧盟最近引入了强制性审计事务所轮岗,这可能导致审计事务所作为审计和NAS提供商角色的循环变化。因此,重新审视这种联系可能是值得的。最后,仍然缺乏调查审计和NAS同时提供对办公室,特别是伙伴一级的影响的研究。如果个人能够假设第三方遭受风险的潜在后果(道德风险理论),那么个人将承担更高的风险,道德风险的可能性也会增加。此外,人们根据感知到的风险水平调整自己的行为,当他们感觉到更大的风险时变得更加小心,当他们感到更受保护时变得不那么小心(风险补偿理论;例如,levy &米勒,2000)。因此,如果审计人员不承担该风险的全部成本,也就是说,如果他们不对审计失败造成的损害承担无限责任,他们将有动机降低其绩效水平并增加风险暴露。因此,扩大审计师的责任可能会激励更高的审计质量,防止低资格的公共会计师执行审计,并促进审计的可信度。然而,审计人员较高的负债暴露也可能造成负面影响。保险费用将会增加,因此审计成本也会增加。此外,审计员很可能会加紧努力编制充分和适当的审计文件,对审计费用产生类似的影响。因此,审计费用可能会增加。如果(一些)客户不愿接受更高的费用,利润率将会下降,审计服务的吸引力将进一步下降。这可能会导致对审计服务的进一步关注和审计质量的下降(Boyd, 2004)。此外,我们有理由担心,一些会计师事务所会因成本和风险而却步,不再提供审计服务。这将导致审计市场集中度的进一步提高,与欧盟降低这种集中度的目标相矛盾。市场似乎已经过于集中于某些细分市场,导致系统性风险并限制了客户的审计师选择(欧盟委员会,2010年)。最后,与高诉讼风险相关的客户,例如财务困难的公司,可能很难找到任何审计师(Bockus &gigl, 1998;Laux,牛曼,2010;蜀,2000)。 分析研究表明,审计师的高负债敞口或审计师的无限责任有助于提高适当的审计质量。然而,最优责任水平取决于审计师在发生会计丑闻时遭受的潜在声誉损失。如果声誉风险很高,适度的责任水平就足够了(例如,Bigus, 2015;邓等,2012;廖,Radhakrishnan, 2020)。此外,分析研究表明,比例责任优于共同责任和部分责任(例如,Narayanan, 1994),严格责任与疏忽责任相比,导致社会最优审计师努力水平(Liu &王,2006)。档案研究的结果一致表明,较高的负债敞口导致审计质量的提高。1995年的《私人证券诉讼改革法》使原告律师更难成功地对审计师提起集体诉讼,并在损害赔偿中规定了相应的责任。这种对公共会计行业的缓解导致了审计质量的下降(弗朗西斯&;克里,2002;Geiger et al., 2001;盖革,Raghunandan, 2001)。Gaver等人(2012)提供的证据表明,更严格的国家层面的责任标准对于第三方对审计师的过失索赔与更高的审计质量相关。来自中国的证据表明,合伙会计师事务所的审计师比有限责任会计师事务所的审计师更有可能发布修改后的审计报告(Firth et al., 2012),并且取消对疏忽的审计师责任敞口的上限可以提高审计质量(He et al., 2017)。跨国研究显示了类似的结果(例如,Choi等人,2008;弗朗西斯,王,2008)。未来的档案研究可以探讨扩大的审计责任是否影响德国的审计质量。此外,探索责任上限的最佳规模将是有趣的。此外,关于限制审计师责任的最佳方法(上限与比例)的研究证据缺失。根据威慑理论(Becker, 1968),惩罚威胁的威慑是多方面的;也就是说,它取决于惩罚的确定性、严重度和快速性。未来的研究应该考虑这种多维性。此外,审计人员不仅面临诉讼威胁,还面临其他类型的法律惩罚(如纪律制裁或刑事定罪)和声誉威胁。因此,对审计师责任的影响进行孤立的科学评估是不够的。未来的研究应该研究不同类型的惩罚之间的相互作用,并寻找最佳的组合。关于向审计客户提供审计服务对实际审计质量和感知审计质量影响的结果是相互矛盾的,表明审计服务费用很可能与实际审计质量无关,但经审计财务报表的使用者并不相信审计质量不受影响。这表明存在一种特定类型的期望差距(Quick, 2020)。目前,监管机构试图缩小这一差距的特点是更严格地禁止NAS,这意味着对误解的标准进行调整。或者,监管者可以选择将重点放在教育和安抚公众上(Humphrey et al., 1992)。已有研究表明,扩大审计责任可以提高审计质量,但也存在一定的弊端。经济上最优的负债水平仍然是一个悬而未决的问题。Quick等人(2021)最近对审计师和投资者进行的一项调查拓宽了对pie -审计师独立性的看法,超出了上述讨论的问题。报告显示,改进审计委员会、更严格的刑法处罚、更严厉的纪律制裁、扩大审计人员在全体大会期间的权利和加强审计人员监督是审计人员的首要任务。投资者对惩罚和制裁也有类似的偏好。但是,它们也赞成审计员承担更高的责任,对审计组成员实行外部轮换原则和联合审计,并且不优先考虑有关审计委员会和全体大会的措施。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
15.00%
发文量
43
期刊介绍: In addition to communicating the results of original auditing research, the International Journal of Auditing also aims to advance knowledge in auditing by publishing critiques, thought leadership papers and literature reviews on specific aspects of auditing. The journal seeks to publish articles that have international appeal either due to the topic transcending national frontiers or due to the clear potential for readers to apply the results or ideas in their local environments. While articles must be methodologically and theoretically sound, any research orientation is acceptable. This means that papers may have an analytical and statistical, behavioural, economic and financial (including agency), sociological, critical, or historical basis. The editors consider articles for publication which fit into one or more of the following subject categories: • Financial statement audits • Public sector/governmental auditing • Internal auditing • Audit education and methods of teaching auditing (including case studies) • Audit aspects of corporate governance, including audit committees • Audit quality • Audit fees and related issues • Environmental, social and sustainability audits • Audit related ethical issues • Audit regulation • Independence issues • Legal liability and other legal issues • Auditing history • New and emerging audit and assurance issues
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Issue Information Key drivers of cybersecurity audit effectiveness: A neo‐institutional perspective Fresh‐look effect of audit firm and audit partner rotations? Evidence from European key audit matters The Big 4 effect for new audit services: The case of the Danish COVID‐19 fixed‐cost business‐support scheme Are there audit fee premiums for client portfolio management?
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