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Is Enhanced Audit Quality Associated with Greater Real Earnings Management?
394
Citations
31
References
2011
Year
AuditingContinuous AuditingAccountingAccounting PolicyAccounting PracticeBusinessAudit Quality AssociatedReal Earnings ManagementAudit RegulationAudit QualityAccrual Earnings ManagementQuality AuditsFinancial AccountingAccounting AuditAccounting ProblemFinanceAudit Firm RotationAudit Market Structure
SYNOPSIS We examine whether firms resort to real earnings management when their ability to manage accruals is constrained by higher quality auditors. In settings involving strong upward earnings management incentives, i.e., for firms that meet or just beat earnings benchmarks and firms that issue seasoned equities, we find that city-level auditor industry expertise and audit fees are associated with higher levels of real earnings management. We find similar, albeit weaker, results for the Big N auditors. Our paper suggests an unintended consequence of higher quality auditors constraining accrual earnings management, namely, firms resorting to potentially even more costly real earnings management. We also find that longer auditor tenure is associated with greater real earnings management, which could suggest merits of mandating audit firm rotation. JEL Classifications: M40; M41.
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