Title
Auditor-Provided Lobbying Service and Audit Quality
School/Department
Crowell School of Business
Publication Date
7-2018
Abstract
Regulators and the public have expressed concerns about accounting firms lobbying politicians and regulators on behalf of their own audit clients because it could pose an advocacy threat to auditor independence. In this study, we examine whether these lobbying activities by accounting firms are associated with their clients’ audit quality. As required disclosures of lobbying activities under the Lobbying Disclosure Act are very limited, we construct a proxy to capture auditor lobbying on behalf of audit clients. Using our proxy for lobbying, we find that perceived audit quality (measured using earnings response coefficients) is negatively related to lobbying. However, we fail to find that actual audit quality is lower for these clients (measured as the propensity to restate earnings, propensity to issue a going-concern opinion, and discretionary accruals). Our findings suggest that investors perceive auditors’ lobbying for clients’ political interests as harmful to audit quality but that these concerns do not appear to materialize in the financial statements. Similar to the literature on other nonaudit services, our evidence suggests that reputation concerns and litigation risk provide enough incentive for auditors to maintain their independence in the presence of an advocacy threat to auditor independence
Keywords
Lobbying; Auditing;
Publication Title
Journal of Accounting, Auditing & Finance.
Volume
33
Issue
5
First Page
402
Last Page
434
DOI of Published Version
10.1177/0148558X16657249.
Recommended Citation
Burnett, Brian M., "Auditor-Provided Lobbying Service and Audit Quality" (2018). Faculty Articles & Research. 38.
https://digitalcommons.biola.edu/faculty-articles/38