We examine the effect of auditing on dividends in small private firms. We
hypothesize that auditing can constrain dividends by way of promoting
accounting conservatism. We use register data on private Norwegian firms and
random variation induced by the introduction of a policy allowing small private
firms to forgo the use of an auditor to estimate the effect of auditing on
dividend payout. Identification is obtained by a regression discontinuity
around the arbitrary thresholds for the policy. Propensity score matching is
used to create a balanced synthetic control. We consistently find that forgoing
auditing led to a significant increase in dividends in small private firms