Auditor size and going concern reporting
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
5-1-2018
Abstract
© 2018, American Accounting Association. All Rights Reserved. Auditing theory predicts that larger auditors will be more likely to issue a going concern opinion to a distressed client. However, the existing empirical evidence on this issue is mixed. We attribute these mixed results to a failure to adequately control for clients’ financial health. We demonstrate how properly controlling for clients’ financial health reveals a positive relationship between auditor size and the propensity to issue a going concern opinion. We corroborate our findings by replicating a related study and showing how the results change when financial health variables are added to the model. In supplemental analysis, we find that Big 4 auditors are more likely than mid-tier auditors (Grant Thornton and BDO Seidman) to issue going concern opinions to distressed clients. We also find that, compared to other auditors, the Big 4 are less likely to issue false-positive (Type I error) going concern opinions. We find no evidence that the Big 4 are more or less likely to fail to issue a going concern opinion to a client that eventually files for bankruptcy (Type II error). Our results are robust to the use of a variety of matching techniques.
Publication Title
Auditing
Recommended Citation
Berglund, N.,
Eshleman, J.,
&
Guo, P.
(2018).
Auditor size and going concern reporting.
Auditing,
37(2), 1-25.
http://doi.org/10.2308/ajpt-51786
Retrieved from: https://digitalcommons.mtu.edu/michigantech-p/13863