Publication | Closed Access
The Role of Auditing in Small, Private Family Firms: Is It About Quality and Credibility?
93
Citations
35
References
2010
Year
Continuous AuditingAuditingAudit QualityFamily FirmAudit Market StructureOwnership StructureAudit Firm SizeAccountingPrivate Family FirmsCorporate GovernanceAudit OversightQuality AuditsFamily OwnershipFamily Business StudiesAccounting PolicyBusinessAudit RegulationAccounting AuditFamily-owned BusinessConcentrated Family OwnershipCorporate Finance
The authors present empirical evidence of how family ownership and control affect the demand for audit quality measured by audit firm size in a sample of small private firms. The results indicate that family-held or -controlled firms are less likely to use Big 4 auditors than nonfamily firms and that an increase in family ownership decreases the likelihood of a Big 4 audit. The results imply that the less concentrated family ownership is, the more need there is for outside control mechanisms because of higher agency costs. The results imply that family influence increases firms’ incentives to employ Big 4 audit firms, thereby increasing the credibility of their financial statements vis-à-vis outside stakeholders.
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