Addressing the auditor independence puzzle: Regulatory models and proposal for reform

Auditors play a major role in corporate governance and capital markets. Ex ante, auditors facilitate firms’ access to finance by fostering trust among public investors. Ex post, auditors can prevent misbehavior and financial fraud by corporate insiders. In order to fulfill these goals, however, in a...

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Main Authors: GELTER, Martin, GURREA-MARTINEZ, Aurelio
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Language:English
Published: Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University 2020
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Online Access:https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sol_research/3253
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sol_research/article/5214/viewcontent/Gelter_and_Gurrea._Auditor_independence_puzzle.pdf
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spelling sg-smu-ink.sol_research-52142021-05-04T06:08:10Z Addressing the auditor independence puzzle: Regulatory models and proposal for reform GELTER, Martin GURREA-MARTINEZ, Aurelio Auditors play a major role in corporate governance and capital markets. Ex ante, auditors facilitate firms’ access to finance by fostering trust among public investors. Ex post, auditors can prevent misbehavior and financial fraud by corporate insiders. In order to fulfill these goals, however, in addition to having the adequate knowledge and expertise, auditors must perform their functions in an independent manner. Unfortunately, auditors are subject to conflicts of interest by, for example, providing non-audit services or the mere fact of being hired and paid by the audited company. Therefore, even if auditors act independently, investors have reason to think otherwise. This lack of trust can undermine a firm’s access to financing and the development of capital markets. Policymakers and scholars around the world have attempted to solve the auditor independence puzzle through a variety of mechanisms, including prohibitions and rotations. More recent proposals have also included breaking up audit firms and the empowerment of shareholders. This paper argues that none of these solutions is entirely convincing. For this reason, we propose a new model to solve the auditor independence puzzle. Our proposal is based on four pillars. First, we argue that, in the context of controlled firms, auditors should be elected with a majority-of-the-minority vote. Second, while auditors in many jurisdictions are subject to certain temporal prohibitions to be hired by previous clients, we believe that the length of these temporal prohibitions should be extended. Moreover, regulators should also restrict the type of services potentially provided to the audit client. Third, policymakers must pay closer attention to the internal governance and compensation systems of audit firms. We argue that increased transparency of audit firms is essential to enhance the independence of auditors. Finally, some studies have shown that audit committees seem to fail to perform their monitoring functions. A major reason appears to be the influence of corporate insiders on the audit committee. For this reason, we propose to increase the power and presence of public investors in the audit committee. 2020-07-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sol_research/3253 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sol_research/article/5214/viewcontent/Gelter_and_Gurrea._Auditor_independence_puzzle.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection Yong Pung How School Of Law eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Auditing Accounting Big 4 Enron Sarbanes-Oxley EU audit directive EU audit regulation Gatekeepers Quasi-rents Auditor rotation Non-audit services Majority-of-the-minority approval Auditor compensation Transparency reports Audit firm governance Accounting Law Commercial Law
institution Singapore Management University
building SMU Libraries
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider SMU Libraries
collection InK@SMU
language English
topic Auditing
Accounting
Big 4
Enron
Sarbanes-Oxley
EU audit directive
EU audit regulation
Gatekeepers
Quasi-rents
Auditor rotation
Non-audit services
Majority-of-the-minority approval
Auditor compensation
Transparency reports
Audit firm governance
Accounting Law
Commercial Law
spellingShingle Auditing
Accounting
Big 4
Enron
Sarbanes-Oxley
EU audit directive
EU audit regulation
Gatekeepers
Quasi-rents
Auditor rotation
Non-audit services
Majority-of-the-minority approval
Auditor compensation
Transparency reports
Audit firm governance
Accounting Law
Commercial Law
GELTER, Martin
GURREA-MARTINEZ, Aurelio
Addressing the auditor independence puzzle: Regulatory models and proposal for reform
description Auditors play a major role in corporate governance and capital markets. Ex ante, auditors facilitate firms’ access to finance by fostering trust among public investors. Ex post, auditors can prevent misbehavior and financial fraud by corporate insiders. In order to fulfill these goals, however, in addition to having the adequate knowledge and expertise, auditors must perform their functions in an independent manner. Unfortunately, auditors are subject to conflicts of interest by, for example, providing non-audit services or the mere fact of being hired and paid by the audited company. Therefore, even if auditors act independently, investors have reason to think otherwise. This lack of trust can undermine a firm’s access to financing and the development of capital markets. Policymakers and scholars around the world have attempted to solve the auditor independence puzzle through a variety of mechanisms, including prohibitions and rotations. More recent proposals have also included breaking up audit firms and the empowerment of shareholders. This paper argues that none of these solutions is entirely convincing. For this reason, we propose a new model to solve the auditor independence puzzle. Our proposal is based on four pillars. First, we argue that, in the context of controlled firms, auditors should be elected with a majority-of-the-minority vote. Second, while auditors in many jurisdictions are subject to certain temporal prohibitions to be hired by previous clients, we believe that the length of these temporal prohibitions should be extended. Moreover, regulators should also restrict the type of services potentially provided to the audit client. Third, policymakers must pay closer attention to the internal governance and compensation systems of audit firms. We argue that increased transparency of audit firms is essential to enhance the independence of auditors. Finally, some studies have shown that audit committees seem to fail to perform their monitoring functions. A major reason appears to be the influence of corporate insiders on the audit committee. For this reason, we propose to increase the power and presence of public investors in the audit committee.
format text
author GELTER, Martin
GURREA-MARTINEZ, Aurelio
author_facet GELTER, Martin
GURREA-MARTINEZ, Aurelio
author_sort GELTER, Martin
title Addressing the auditor independence puzzle: Regulatory models and proposal for reform
title_short Addressing the auditor independence puzzle: Regulatory models and proposal for reform
title_full Addressing the auditor independence puzzle: Regulatory models and proposal for reform
title_fullStr Addressing the auditor independence puzzle: Regulatory models and proposal for reform
title_full_unstemmed Addressing the auditor independence puzzle: Regulatory models and proposal for reform
title_sort addressing the auditor independence puzzle: regulatory models and proposal for reform
publisher Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University
publishDate 2020
url https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sol_research/3253
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sol_research/article/5214/viewcontent/Gelter_and_Gurrea._Auditor_independence_puzzle.pdf
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