The economic theory of auditor independence (DeAngelo 1981b) suggests that auditors' incentives to compromise their independence are related to client importance. Using ratios of client fees and of nonaudit fees divided by the audit firm's U.S. revenues or a surrogate for the audit‐practice‐office revenues as measures of client importance, we investigate their association with Jones‐model abnormal accruals. In a sample of 1,871 clients of Big 5 audit firms we do not find a statistically significant association between abnormal accruals and any of the client importance measures. Our theory development also suggests that auditor incentives to compromise independence should increase with the extent of client opportunities and incentives to manage earnings, and decrease with the strength of corporate governance and auditor expertise. We also do not find a statistically significant association between abnormal accruals and client importance in subsets of the samples partitioned by proxies for these factors.
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1 October 2003
Research Article|
October 01 2003
Client Importance, Nonaudit Services, and Abnormal Accruals Available to Purchase
Sanjay Kallapur
Sanjay Kallapur
bUniversity of California, Irvine.
cPurdue University.
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Online ISSN: 1558-7967
Print ISSN: 0001-4826
American Accounting Association
2003
The Accounting Review (2003) 78 (4): 931–955.
Citation
Hyeesoo Chung, Sanjay Kallapur; Client Importance, Nonaudit Services, and Abnormal Accruals. The Accounting Review 1 October 2003; 78 (4): 931–955. https://doi.org/10.2308/accr.2003.78.4.931
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