The Effect of Governance on Specialist Auditor Choice and Audit Fees in US Family Firms

被引:113
作者
Srinidhi, Bin N. [1 ]
He, Shaohua [2 ]
Firth, Michael [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Texas Arlington, Arlington, TX 76019 USA
[2] Univ Lancaster, Lancaster LA1 4YW, England
[3] Lingnan Univ, Fu Tei, Peoples R China
关键词
family firms; board governance; earnings quality; auditor choice; audit fees; CORPORATE GOVERNANCE; EARNINGS MANAGEMENT; INDUSTRY SPECIALIZATION; BOARD CHARACTERISTICS; NONAUDIT SERVICES; LITIGATION RISK; OWNERSHIP; QUALITY; ACCRUALS; DISCLOSURE;
D O I
10.2308/accr-50840
中图分类号
F8 [财政、金融];
学科分类号
0202 ;
摘要
Family firms are characterized by less separation between ownership and control (Type 1 agency problem), but greater conflict of interest between controlling insiders and non-controlling outside investors (Type 2 agency problem). Although strong board governance is known to decrease the Type 1 agency problem, its effectiveness in mitigating the adverse consequences of the Type 2 agency problem has not been well documented in the literature. We show that strongly governed family firms are more likely to choose specialist auditors and exhibit higher earnings quality than nonfamily firms. Weakly governed family firms demand lower audit effort and exhibit earnings quality that is no different from that of nonfamily firms. Within family firms, we show that strongly governed family firms choose higher quality audits in the form of a greater use of specialist auditors and higher audit efforts, and exhibit higher earnings quality than other family firms. These findings provide consistent evidence that strong board governance can effectively mitigate the adverse consequences of the Type 2 agency problem on financial reporting and transparency in family firms.
引用
收藏
页码:2297 / 2329
页数:33
相关论文
共 62 条
[41]   SIMULTANEOUS DETERMINATION OF INSIDER OWNERSHIP, DEBT, AND DIVIDEND POLICIES [J].
JENSEN, GR ;
SOLBERG, DP ;
ZORN, TS .
JOURNAL OF FINANCIAL AND QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS, 1992, 27 (02) :247-263
[42]   THEORY OF FIRM - MANAGERIAL BEHAVIOR, AGENCY COSTS AND OWNERSHIP STRUCTURE [J].
JENSEN, MC ;
MECKLING, WH .
JOURNAL OF FINANCIAL ECONOMICS, 1976, 3 (04) :305-360
[43]   Auditor independence, non-audit services, and restatements: Was the US government right? [J].
Kinney, WR ;
Palmrose, ZV ;
Scholz, S .
JOURNAL OF ACCOUNTING RESEARCH, 2004, 42 (03) :561-588
[44]   Does auditor industry specialization matter? Evidence from market reaction to auditor switches [J].
Knechel, W. Robert ;
Naiker, Vic ;
Pacheco, Gail .
AUDITING-A JOURNAL OF PRACTICE & THEORY, 2007, 26 (01) :19-45
[45]   The Association Between Big 6 Auditor Industry Expertise and the Asymmetric Timeliness of Earnings [J].
Krishnan, Gopal .
JOURNAL OF ACCOUNTING AUDITING AND FINANCE, 2005, 20 (03) :209-228
[46]   Do Auditors Price Audit Committee's Expertise? The Case of Accounting versus Nonaccounting Financial Experts [J].
Krishnan, Gopal ;
Visvanathan, Gnanakumar .
JOURNAL OF ACCOUNTING AUDITING AND FINANCE, 2009, 24 (01) :115-144
[47]  
Lansberg I., 1983, Organizational Dynamics, V12, P39
[48]   Corporate governance, accounting outcomes, and organizational performance [J].
Larcker, David F. ;
Richardson, Scott A. ;
Tuna, Irem .
ACCOUNTING REVIEW, 2007, 82 (04) :963-1008
[49]   Selection Models in Accounting Research [J].
Lennox, Clive S. ;
Francis, Jere R. ;
Wang, Zitian .
ACCOUNTING REVIEW, 2012, 87 (02) :589-616
[50]   Earnings management and investor protection: an international comparison [J].
Leuz, C ;
Nanda, D ;
Wysocki, PD .
JOURNAL OF FINANCIAL ECONOMICS, 2003, 69 (03) :505-527