Publication | Open Access
Implications of the Joint Provision of CSR Assurance and Financial Audit for Auditors' Assessment of Going‐Concern Risk
124
Citations
75
References
2019
Year
Continuous AuditingFinancial Risk ManagementCsr AssuranceRisk AnalysisFinancial RiskAuditingSecurities LawRisk ManagementCsr Assurance TeamJoint ProvisionManagementAudit QualityAudit Market StructureAccountingGeneral BusinessCorporate Social ResponsibilityAudit OversightFinanceClient PressureBusinessAudit RegulationAccounting AuditFinancial Audit
ABSTRACT We examine whether the joint provision of corporate social responsibility (CSR) assurance services and financial audit by the same audit firm influences auditors' assessment of going‐concern risk. We predict that the provision of CSR assurance and financial audit by the same audit firm creates CSR‐related knowledge spillovers from the CSR assurance team to the financial audit engagement team, which helps in the auditor's assessment of going‐concern risk. Using more than 28,000 firm‐year observations from 55 countries, we document that, relative to audit firms that provide only the financial audit, audit firms that provide both CSR assurance and financial audit for the same client (i) issue more frequent going‐concern opinions and have lower Type II going‐concern errors, (ii) have clients that book larger environmental and litigation provisions, (iii) report earnings that are more persistent and value‐relevant and are less likely to book income‐decreasing earnings restatements, and (iv) do not charge higher audit fees or total fees. Our results are important especially because of firms' increasing exposure to CSR risks and the growing number of countries that require assurance of CSR reports.
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