The role of audit styles in financial statement comparability : South African evidence

Item

Title
The role of audit styles in financial statement comparability : South African evidence
Description
This study investigates the role of audit styles at different levels on financial statement comparability in South Africa, a setting where firms report under International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), the institutional environment is strong and the audit environment is dominated by the Big 4 audit firms. An output-based comparability measure is used to consider the association between audit styles at a firm level, audit office level and individual auditor level and financial statement comparability. Evidence of audit style effects on financial statement comparability is found at the three different levels—the audit firm, the audit office and the individual auditor. The study further finds some evidence that audit office style dominates audit firm style and individual auditor style dominates audit office style. This finding suggests that even in countries where internal (within the audit firm) and external (country regulations) control mechanisms are strong, the audit style of the individual auditor is present and associated with increased financial statement comparability. Using a setting where firms report under IFRS further suggests that in a principles-based environment, despite strong internal controls and in-house working rules by audit firms, individual auditors continue to have some level of autonomy in the interpretation and application of the accounting principles and in-house working rules.
http://wileyonlinelibrary.com/journal/ijau
hj2023
Accounting
Creator
Smith, Christelle
Publisher
Date
2023-04-26T10:13:00Z
2023-04-26T10:13:00Z
2022-10
Type
Article
Format
application/pdf
Identifier
Smith, C. (2022). The role of audit
styles in financial statement comparability: South African
evidence. International Journal of Auditing, 26(4), 572–589.
https://doi.org/10.1111/ijau.12296.
1090-6738 (print)
1099-1123 (online)
10.1111/ijau.12296
http://hdl.handle.net/2263/90500
Language
en
Rights
© 2022 The Author. International Journal of Auditing published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License.
Item sets
Accounting