2012
DOI: 10.2308/ajpt-10179
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The Effects of Employer and Client Identification on Internal and External Auditors' Evaluations of Internal Control Deficiencies

Abstract: SUMMARY The Public Company Accounting Oversight Board's (PCAOB) Auditing Standard No. 5 (AS5) encourages external auditors to rely on internal auditors to increase the efficiency of lower-risk internal control evaluations (PCAOB 2007). We use post-SOX experimental data to compare the levels and effects of employer (client) identification on the control evaluations of internal (external) auditors. First, we find that internal auditors perceive a greater level of identification with the evaluated … Show more

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Cited by 64 publications
(65 citation statements)
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References 48 publications
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“…Prior studies in the accounting literature find that client identification impairs external auditor objectivity (Bamber and Iyer 2007;Stefaniak et al 2012;Svanberg and Ö hman 2015). Consistent with this literature, we predict that client identification will be negatively associated with auditor objectivity.…”
Section: Background and Predictionssupporting
confidence: 77%
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“…Prior studies in the accounting literature find that client identification impairs external auditor objectivity (Bamber and Iyer 2007;Stefaniak et al 2012;Svanberg and Ö hman 2015). Consistent with this literature, we predict that client identification will be negatively associated with auditor objectivity.…”
Section: Background and Predictionssupporting
confidence: 77%
“…Confirming previous research (Bamber and Iyer 2007;Stefaniak, Houston, and Cornell 2012;Svanberg and Ö hman 2015), we find that client identification impairs auditor objectivity. Extending prior research, this is the first study to evaluate the impact of client commitment on auditor objectivity.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 77%
“…External auditors must develop and maintain client relationships to ensure that clients do not become dissatisfied and seek replacements; however, they also must provide objective, high-quality audits with appropriate evaluations of the firm, including its internal controls (Stefaniak et al 2012). Prior accounting research shows that external auditors' desire to maintain client relationships can affect their objectivity (Carcello et al 2000;Blay 2005;Carey and Simnett 2006) and can cause them to acquiesce to client-preferred accounting positions (Bamber and Iyer 2007).…”
Section: Social Identification and Auditor Behaviormentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, since SOX, internal auditors are more likely to form informal partnerships with management (Bou-Raad 2000), and likely do not have the same level of employment relationship risk in that they have longer-term employment horizons with the organization, which yields less risk that their employers will seek a replacement if they are dissatisfied with the internal auditors' decisions (Balkaran 2008). Moreover, internal auditors' employers typically are the internal auditor's primary income source; accordingly, internal auditors are more likely to be concerned with the organization's long-term sustainability because the costs associated with seeking and securing new employment are high (Stefaniak et al 2012). …”
Section: Social Identification and Auditor Behaviormentioning
confidence: 99%
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