Publication Type
Journal Article
Publication Date
9-2012
Abstract
Using samples from 12 non-U.S.A. countries, we find that following Arthur Andersen's failure in the United States of America, successor Big-N auditors charged an audit fee premium for ex-Andersen clients compared to existing clients and non-Andersen switch-ins. We show that this audit fee premium is not attributable to the Andersen switch-ins having lower prior earnings quality or lower bargaining power than non-Andersen switch-ins. We also show that ex-Andersen clients exhibit higher earnings quality after the switch than do ongoing clients and other switch-ins. These results suggest that the audit fee premium is attributable to auditor conservatism. Furthermore, we find that risk assessments for ex-Andersen clients are higher in countries with weak legal and extra-legal institutions. We interpret this result as suggesting that the effect of lost auditor reputation is stronger when objective evidence of earnings quality is uncertain because of weaker supporting institutions. This is the first study to document a direct effect of countrywide institutions on audit risk assessment.
Discipline
Accounting | Business Law, Public Responsibility, and Ethics
Research Areas
Corporate Governance, Auditing and Risk Management
Publication
Journal of International Financial Management and Accounting
Volume
23
Issue
3
First Page
208
Last Page
244
ISSN
0954-1314
Identifier
10.1111/jifm.12001
Publisher
Wiley
Citation
SRINIDHI, Bin; HOSSAIN, Mahmud; and LIM, Chee Yeow.
The Effect of Arthur Andersen's Demise on Clients' Audit Fees and Auditor Conservatism: International Evidence. (2012). Journal of International Financial Management and Accounting. 23, (3), 208-244.
Available at: https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soa_research/1185
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International License.
Additional URL
http://doi.org/10.1111/jifm.12001