84 research outputs found

    The Impact of Error-Management Climate, Error Type and Error Originator on Auditorsā€™ Reporting Errors Discovered on Audit Work Papers

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    We examine factors affecting the auditorā€™s willingness to report their own or their peersā€™ self-discovered errors in working papers subsequent to detailed working paper review. Prior research has shown that errors in working papers are detected in the review process; however, such detection rates only rarely exceed 50% of the seeded errors. Hence, measures that encourage auditors to be alert to their own (or their peersā€™) potential errors any time they revisit the audit working papers may be valuable in detecting such residual errors and potentially correcting them before damage occurs to the audit firm or its client. We hypothesize that three factors affect the auditorā€™s willingness to report post detailed review discovered errors: the local office error-management climate (open versus blame), the type of error (mechanical versus conceptual) and who committed the error (the individual who committed the error (self) or a peer). Local office error-management climate is said to be open and supportive where errors and mistakes are accepted as part of everyday life as long as they are learned from and not repeated. In alternative, a blame error-management climate focuses on a ā€œget it right the first timeā€ culture where mistakes are not tolerated and blame gets attached to those admitting to or found committing such errors. We find that error-management climate has a significant overall effect on auditor willingness to report errors, as does who committed the error originally. We find both predicted and unpredicted significant interactions among the three factors that qualify these observed significant main effects. We discuss implications for audit practice and further research

    Can auditors be independent? ā€“ Experimental evidence on the effects of client type

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    Recent regulatory initiatives stress that an independent oversight board, rather than the management board, should be the client of the auditor. In an experiment, we test whether the type of client affects auditorsā€™ independence. Unique features of the German institutional setting enable us to realistically vary the type of auditorsā€™ client as our treatment variable: we portray the client either as the management preferring aggressive accounting or the oversight board preferring conservative accounting. We measure auditorsā€™ perceived client retention incentives and accountability pressure in a post-experiment questionnaire to capture potential threats to independence. We find that the type of auditorsā€™ client affects auditorsā€™ behaviour contingent on the degree of the perceived threats to independence. Our findings imply that both client retention incentives and accountability pressure represent distinctive threats to auditorsā€™ independence and that the effectiveness of an oversight board in enhancing auditorsā€™ independence depends on the underlying threat

    The Impact of Error-Management Climate, Error Type and Error Originator on AuditorsĆ¢ā‚¬ā„¢ Reporting Errors Discovered on Audit Work Papers

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    We examine factors affecting the auditorĆ¢ā‚¬ā„¢s willingness to report their own or their peersĆ¢ā‚¬ā„¢ self-discovered errors in working papers subsequent to detailed working paper review. Prior research has shown that errors in working papers are detected in the review process; however, such detection rates only rarely exceed 50% of the seeded errors. Hence, measures that encourage auditors to be alert to their own (or their peersĆ¢ā‚¬ā„¢) potential errors any time they revisit the audit working papers may be valuable in detecting such residual errors and potentially correcting them before damage occurs to the audit firm or its client. We hypothesize that three factors affect the auditorĆ¢ā‚¬ā„¢s willingness to report post detailed review discovered errors: the local office error-management climate (open versus blame), the type of error (mechanical versus conceptual) and who committed the error (the individual who committed the error (self) or a peer). Local office error-management climate is said to be open and supportive where errors and mistakes are accepted as part of everyday life as long as they are learned from and not repeated. In alternative, a blame error-management climate focuses on a Ć¢ā‚¬Å“get it right the first timeĆ¢ā‚¬ culture where mistakes are not tolerated and blame gets attached to those admitting to or found committing such errors. We find that error-management climate has a significant overall effect on auditor willingness to report errors, as does who committed the error originally. We find both predicted and unpredicted significant interactions among the three factors that qualify these observed significant main effects. We discuss implications for audit practice and further research.review;adjustments;audit quality;materiality
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