Do Audit Attributes Impact Earnings Quality Evidence From India (10-1108 - AJAR-12-2022-0428)
Do Audit Attributes Impact Earnings Quality Evidence From India (10-1108 - AJAR-12-2022-0428)
Do Audit Attributes Impact Earnings Quality Evidence From India (10-1108 - AJAR-12-2022-0428)
https://www.emerald.com/insight/2443-4175.htm
Abstract
Purpose – The present study’s goal is to analyze the impact of audit quality (AQ) on earnings quality (EQ) using
different audit attributes. The study shows empirical evidence from India, considered an emerging market.
Design/methodology/approach – The sample selected represents the 376 non-financial firms listed on the
Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE). With a 20-year time frame, the authors used the absolute value of discretionary
accruals (McNichols, 2002) (DA) as a proxy for EM, which is inversely related to EQ. The authors analyzed data
using OLS, fixed effect (FE), 2SLS and Panel-IV estimators.
Findings – The authors found that most audit attributes positively affect EQ. In the Indian context, joint auditor
(JA), auditor size (A_SIZE), auditor fee (A_FEE) and auditor tenure (A_TENURE) have a negative association with
EM indicating high EQ. In contrast, auditor rotation (A_ROTATON) positively affects EM confirming low EQ.
Research limitations/implications – The present study uses Big-4 and its member firms as a proxy of
auditor size (A_SIZE); instead, other bases may be taken for it, like the dominant audit firms in a particular
industry in sample data, etc. The authors have started audit tenure from the base year, i.e. 2001, which may
ignore the association of auditor and auditee just before 2001.
Practical implications – The study findings would enhance policymakers’ willingness to prepare
appropriate regulations regarding JAs and auditor rotation, which might improve financial market efficiency
and reduce financial fraud among Indian corporates.
Originality/value – To the best of the authors’ knowledge, this is the first study to incorporate “Joint Auditor”
(JA) as a proxy for audit quality in the Indian context, which might significantly contribute to the literature.
Keywords Accruals, Earnings quality, Auditor size, Joint auditor, Audit fee, Auditor tenure, Auditor rotation,
India
Paper type Research paper
1. Introduction
The truthfulness of financial statements is frequently contested because they were created by
the organization’s management, which agency theory claims are subject to manipulation.
3. Research methodology
3.1 The sample, data collection and study period
The present study is related to Indian firms listed on the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE).
An initial sample consisted of 408 non-financial firms from 39 industries, but the non-
availability of data restricted the number to 376 firms for empirical analysis. The present
study uses the period from 2001 to 2020 because it gives an overall image and long-term
development of the Indian economy. During the COVID-19 pandemic, there was an
unexpected change in every business environment and government policy, which may lead
to biased results in the present study. The present study chose a period before the COVID-19
break in India and restricted it till 2020. The data source is CMIE–ProwessIQ, an
authenticated database for Indian firms.
3.2 Measurement of variables Do audit
3.2.1 Measurement of earnings management (EM): (dependent variable). Numerous analyses attributes
of EM, including the valuation of changes in accounting policy, specific accounting
transactions and accruals (Dechow and Dichev, 2002; McNichols, 2002) have been used in the
impact earnings
literature, but DA were used significantly as a proxy for EM measurement (Alzoubi, 2016). quality?
According to (Jones, 1991), “abnormal accruals” or “DA” in total accruals are indicators of
EM, which can be quantified as [DAit 5 TACCit – NDAit]. With the argument that estimation
errors (Dechow and Dichev, 2002), introduced a new indicator for the quality of working
capital accruals by linking mapping importance of accruals in cash flow realization.
McNichols (2002) further improved the (Dechow and Dichev, 2002) model and studied the
mapping ability of cash flows for accruals after controlling for the accruals due to changes in
credit sales and depreciation accruals on PPE. In the present study, we have used the
McNichols model (2002) as suggested in past studies (Duarte et al., 2022).
Total Accruals (TACC) are calculated using the cash flow approach (Hribar and Collins,
2002). For estimating non-discretionary accruals (NDA), we used (McNichols, 2002) model
(equation 1) cross-sectionally for each industry, which gives better estimates than the time-
series model for identifying EM (Alzoubi, 2016).
TACC i;j;t CFOi;j;t−1 CFOi;j;t CFOi;j;tþ1 ΔREV i;j;t
¼ β0;j þ β1;j þ β2;j þ β3;j þ β4;j
Assetsi;j;t−1 Assetsi;j;t−1 Assetsi;j;t−1 Assetsi;j;t−1 Assetsi;j;t−1
PPE i;j;t
þ β5;j þ εi;j;t (1)
Assetsi;j;t−1
Where for each i (firm), j (industry) and t (year): TACC represents total accruals; CFO
represents cash from operation; ΔREC represents operating revenue, and PPE represents
depreciation accruals. All variables are divided by total assets (Assetsi,j,t1) at the beginning
of the year to control heteroscedasticity. We found the magnitude of discretionary accruals
(DAi,j,t) as a remaining part of TACCi,j,t after deducting NDAi,j,t. In the consistency of previous
studies, the absolute value of DA would be a measure of the level of EM (Alzoubi, 2016; Houqe
et al., 2017; Jadiyappa et al., 2021) since it keeps a consistent description and is free from any
direction as EM may go in any direction (Ma and Ma, 2017).
3.2.2 Measurement of auditor size (A_SIZE): (independent variable). In the auditing
literature, auditor size (Abu Afifa et al., 2021; Alzoubi, 2016; Houqe et al., 2017) is taken as an
indicator of AQ. We used a binary variable assigning “1” if Big-4 firm audits a sample firm in
a particular year; otherwise, “0”.
3.2.3 Measurement of joint auditor (JA): (independent variable). We have created a binary
variable having a value of “1” if more than one auditor audits the firm for a specific year;
otherwise, “0” (Andre et al., 2016; Garcia-Blandon et al., 2021; Ratzinger-Sakel et al., 2013).
3.2.4 Measurement of audit fee (A_FEE): (independent variable). The engagement of an
independent auditor has empirical and theoretical support to cut agency cost strategy. Audit
fees, i.e. the auditor charges, show auditor independence (Alali, 2011; Gul et al., 2003). Auditor
fee divided by total assets is a proxy for audit independence.
3.2.5 Measurement of auditor tenure (A_TENURE): (independent variable). The term
“Auditor Tenure” describes how long a firm has been an auditor’s client. As suggested by
(Ghosh and Moon, 2005; Lim and Tan, 2009), the variable is created by calculating the
cumulative number of years that a specific audit firm has continuously examined the
financial statements of a particular client over time in our sample period.
3.2.6 Measurement of auditor rotation (A_ROTATION): (independent variable). This
variable is a binary variable signifying a particular year in which a new auditor is appointed,
AJAR i.e. the existing auditor is rotated or changed. “1” is assigned for a particular year in which a
new auditor is selected for a specific firm; otherwise, “0”.
3.2.7 Control variables. The corporate and its financial environment are affected by
numerous factors. To control such impact, various corporate attributes, as suggested in the
literature, including liquidity; firm size; firm age; leverage; return; growth; applicability of Ind-AS
have been covered in the present research, as shown in Table 1 (available online at: https://drive.
google.com/file/d/1v_o1cO42cPM-3amDRmH8_lHsY1kpD1U9/view?usp5share_link).
Apart from the pooled OLS, we also used the panel fixed effect (FE) estimator, suggested by
the Hausman test, as shown in Table 4 (available online at: https://drive.google.com/file/d/
1KERhgQ9nX_f3kJpzpBnwgu8oqVra7ZhZ/view?usp5share_link).
The FE model also removes the effect of that time-invariant unobserved heterogeneity of the
factors (which are not in our model explicitly), which impact the dependent variable. After
estimating equations (2 and 3) using the FEs estimator, we checked groupwise Do audit
heteroscedasticity using the modified Wald test (H0: sigma(i)^2 5 sigma^2 for all i) attributes
(P-value 5 0.0000 for each model). Statistics rejected H0, confirming groupwise
heteroscedasticity in the data. In literature, in this situation, it is strongly advised to
impact earnings
calculate robust standard errors (SE), which will not change the values of β coefficients but will quality?
address the problem of groupwise heteroscedasticity by adjusting estimates’ values of SE
(Wooldridge, 2015). Hence, we have used robust SE for OLS and FE estimators. Regression
(with robust SE) results for empirical models are given in Table 5 (available online at: https://
drive.google.com/file/d/1TCQXfHA4sle3EH4p6ifzheKB9NMnSWJX/view?usp5share_link).
4.3.1 Robustness checks. To check the robustness of the empirical models, we have used
different control variables, for liquidity: CASH; for profitability: NOPR; for firm size: FA_
SIZE have been used. Table 6 (available online at: https://drive.google.com/file/d/
1rRyIrKUfTzkCBrpMWTWG0bIrqpjoUxeU/view?usp5share_link) shows the results with
changed variables that are consistent with the previous result shown in Table 5.
4.3.2 Endogeneity. Tables 5 and 6 reveal the results of the fixed-effects FE estimator,
which is assumed to take care of the endogeneity problem due to time-invariant unobserved
unit-specific heterogeneity (Alzoubi, 2016). The present paper also uses the instrumental
variable (OLS-2SLS and Panel-IV) approach for the endogeneity issue with regressors
(Alzoubi, 2016; Cameron and Trivedi, 2010; Gaio and Raposo, 2011). Independent variables
and lag values (Alzoubi, 2016; Wooldridge, 2015) of control variables are used as instruments
for A_FEE, which is supposed to be endogenous. After running 2SLS regression, we
performed a post-estimation test for endogeneity (Durbin (score) p-value (0.2442);
Wu-Hausman p-value (0.2447)) failed to reject the H0: Variables are exogenous, indicating
that A_FEE is not an endogenous variable. Regression results are shown in Table 7 (available
online at https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Ob65tVFVh0UtO4rU8RZrHd9ZZp_Js0EC/view?
usp5share_link).
Then we performed a test for overidentifying restrictions, test statistics χ 2(7) 5 12.7111,
p-values 0.0795, which is more than 0.05. We could not reject the H0 and concluded that the
model held valid overidentifying restrictions. We also applied panel IV regression with OLS-
2SLS regression; results shown in table 7 are primarily in line with tables 5 and 6 in direction
and significance, except for A_FEE, which gives a different sign supporting past studies
conducted by (Alali, 2011; Antle et al., 2006; Gul et al., 2003).
5.2 Contribution/implications
The present study gives a progressive and significant intuition regarding AQ and its impact
on reported EQ to the policymakers to revisit the applicability of a JA, which is optional at
present to make it mandatory for a specific class of Indian firms. Another contribution of the
study is to suggest that corporates continue with the same auditor as long as possible under
the Companies Act 2013 to improve EQ as other stakeholders desire. One of the critical pieces
of advice for investors and other stakeholders is to take caution in the year the auditor is
rotated while using reported earnings.
5.3 Limitations
The present study uses a sample of non-financial Indian firms, which restricts its implication
on financial firms; at the same time, it also gives an idea for financial sector also. Big-4 audit
firms are taken as a proxy for auditor size, which may be one of the limitations that motivate
to explore other proxies for it, like the number of audit engagements, industry experts, audit
fee collected, the number of partners in an audit firm, etc. While calculating audit tenure, we
have ignored the relationship before 2001 of a particular auditor with a specific client.
Note
1. Big-4 audit firms include Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu India Private Limited, PwC India, KPMG India
Private Limited and Ernst & Young India with its member firms.
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