Mandatory joint audit and audit quality in the context of the European blue chips
Other authors
Publication date
2021-10-13ISSN
2029-4433
Abstract
This study investigates audit quality under joint and single audit regimes with a sample of large European firms. Both, the economic relevance of these companies, and the fact that the impact of joint audit on audit quality should be stronger when the audited company is a blue-chip firm motivate the study. If mandatory joint audit were positively associated with audit quality, French firms, under mandatory joint audit since 1966, should present higher audit quality compared to their European peers. The results do not indicate this to be the case. Specifically, similar levels of discretionary accruals are observed for French and other European firms. Furthermore, for the first time in the literature, evidence is reported indicating that French firms may even present lower audit quality than their European peers, when audit quality is measured by the likelihood of just beating earnings benchmarks. These results are expected to inform the ongoing debate in several countries about joint audits.
Document Type
Article
Document version
Published version
Language
English
Subject (CDU)
33 - Economics. Economic science
Keywords
Mandatory joint audit
Audit quality
Discretionary accruals
Earnings benchmarks
Standard and Poor’s 350 Europe
Audit firm type
Pages
18 p.
Publisher
Vilnius Gediminas Technical University Journals
Is part of
Journal of Business Economics & Management 2021;22(5):1378-1395
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
Rights
© L'autor/a
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/