When assuming less responsibility backfires : the effects of audit responsibility assignment, audit failure location, and engagement partner signature on auditor legal liability

This thesis examines the effects of audit responsibility assignment (divide versus assume), audit failure location (lead versus participating audit firm), and engagement partner signature (present versus absent) on jurors’ evaluations of auditor legal liability. The PCAOB recently proposed two audit...

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Main Author: Cao, Tongrui
Other Authors: TAN, Hun Tong
Format: Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/139474
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1394742024-01-12T10:14:57Z When assuming less responsibility backfires : the effects of audit responsibility assignment, audit failure location, and engagement partner signature on auditor legal liability Cao, Tongrui TAN, Hun Tong Nanyang Business School Centre for Accounting and Auditing Research ahttan@ntu.edu.sg Business::Auditing::Standards This thesis examines the effects of audit responsibility assignment (divide versus assume), audit failure location (lead versus participating audit firm), and engagement partner signature (present versus absent) on jurors’ evaluations of auditor legal liability. The PCAOB recently proposed two auditing standards amendments regarding how the lead audit firm assigns audit responsibility in group audits, and whether the engagement partner of the lead audit firm signs the group audit report in his/her personal name. This thesis finds that relative to assuming full audit responsibility for the entire audit engagement, dividing audit responsibility with the participating audit firm reduces the lead audit firm liability when the audit failure is found in the audit area of the participating audit firm. Dividing audit responsibility thus appears beneficial for the lead audit firm but actually comes with costs: it increases the lead audit firm liability when the audit failure is found in the audit area of the lead audit firm. Further, this thesis finds that an engagement partner signature generally reduces jurors’ negligence verdicts because signing an audit report with the engagement partner’s name increases jurors’ assessments of auditor credibility. Doctor of Philosophy 2020-05-19T12:13:29Z 2020-05-19T12:13:29Z 2020 Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy Cao, T. (2020). When assuming less responsibility backfires : the effects of audit responsibility assignment, audit failure location, and engagement partner signature on auditor legal liability. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/139474 10.32657/10356/139474 en This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0). application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Business::Auditing::Standards
spellingShingle Business::Auditing::Standards
Cao, Tongrui
When assuming less responsibility backfires : the effects of audit responsibility assignment, audit failure location, and engagement partner signature on auditor legal liability
description This thesis examines the effects of audit responsibility assignment (divide versus assume), audit failure location (lead versus participating audit firm), and engagement partner signature (present versus absent) on jurors’ evaluations of auditor legal liability. The PCAOB recently proposed two auditing standards amendments regarding how the lead audit firm assigns audit responsibility in group audits, and whether the engagement partner of the lead audit firm signs the group audit report in his/her personal name. This thesis finds that relative to assuming full audit responsibility for the entire audit engagement, dividing audit responsibility with the participating audit firm reduces the lead audit firm liability when the audit failure is found in the audit area of the participating audit firm. Dividing audit responsibility thus appears beneficial for the lead audit firm but actually comes with costs: it increases the lead audit firm liability when the audit failure is found in the audit area of the lead audit firm. Further, this thesis finds that an engagement partner signature generally reduces jurors’ negligence verdicts because signing an audit report with the engagement partner’s name increases jurors’ assessments of auditor credibility.
author2 TAN, Hun Tong
author_facet TAN, Hun Tong
Cao, Tongrui
format Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy
author Cao, Tongrui
author_sort Cao, Tongrui
title When assuming less responsibility backfires : the effects of audit responsibility assignment, audit failure location, and engagement partner signature on auditor legal liability
title_short When assuming less responsibility backfires : the effects of audit responsibility assignment, audit failure location, and engagement partner signature on auditor legal liability
title_full When assuming less responsibility backfires : the effects of audit responsibility assignment, audit failure location, and engagement partner signature on auditor legal liability
title_fullStr When assuming less responsibility backfires : the effects of audit responsibility assignment, audit failure location, and engagement partner signature on auditor legal liability
title_full_unstemmed When assuming less responsibility backfires : the effects of audit responsibility assignment, audit failure location, and engagement partner signature on auditor legal liability
title_sort when assuming less responsibility backfires : the effects of audit responsibility assignment, audit failure location, and engagement partner signature on auditor legal liability
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/139474
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