Publication | Closed Access
An examination of the relationship between internal and external audit in the Saudi Arabian corporate sector
136
Citations
16
References
2004
Year
AuditingInternal Audit DepartmentContinuous AuditingFirm PerformanceInternal Audit DepartmentsAccountingManagementBusinessExternal EnvironmentExternal AuditCorporate GovernanceAudit RegulationAudit QualityAudit OversightExternal AuditorsAccounting AuditAudit Market Structure
This paper uses questionnaires from and interviews to examine the level of co‐operation and co‐ordination between directors of internal audit departments, and partners and managers in external audit firms in Saudi Arabian companies. The results revealed that external auditors expressed concern about the independence, scope of work and small size of many internal audit departments. Internal auditors considered co‐operation between internal and external audits to be limited, although external auditors were more positive about the extent of co‐operation when the internal audit department was of high quality. The extent of reliance by the external auditor on the work of the internal auditor varied with the quality of the internal audit department. External auditors suggested that the objectivity, competence and work experience were important factors affecting the reliance decision. They felt that the internal audit function in many Saudi companies lacked professionalism and independence from management, which adversely affected its work and the potential for reliance thereon.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1