Essays on financial misreporting and audit quality

Research output: ThesisDoctoral thesis

Authors

  • Maximilian Rohmann

Research Organisations

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Details

Original languageEnglish
QualificationDoctor rerum politicarum
Awarding Institution
Supervised by
  • Stefan Wielenberg, Supervisor
Date of Award21 Sept 2023
Place of PublicationHannover
Publication statusPublished - 2023

Abstract

This dissertation comprises four articles. The first three articles analyze auditing research questions using analytical models. The fourth article uses an experimental empirical research method to analyze the rationalization of misreporting. The first article analyzes how enforcement institutions’ inspection focus disclosure influences the managers’ misreporting, the auditors’ effort choices, and thus the financial reporting quality. We, thereby, show that focus disclosure can enhance or deteriorate financial reporting quality. We also highlight conditions under which focus disclosure can yield a higher financial reporting quality and how enforcement institutions can influence these conditions. The second article analyzes how third-party auditor hiring (e.g., by a stock exchange) affects entrepreneurs’ misreporting choices and overall investment efficiency. I show that even though independence issues could be solved, third-party auditor hiring can enhance or deteriorate investment efficiency. Third-party hiring can harm investment efficiency as it reduces misreporting, and thus, misreporting cannot be used to compensate a conservative accounting system to prevent underinvestment. Further, I highlight conditions under which third-party hiring yields a higher or lower investment efficiency. The third article analyzes driving forces for audit firm split-ups into stand-alone audit and advisory firms, such as the once planned EY split-up. In addition, we explore the potential consequences of audit firm split-ups on audit quality and the role of enforcement strength. We find that three effects determine split-up preferences and its consequences: First, as the advisory partner wants to prevent an adverse audit opinion to keep the client, independence problems arise. Second, as the advisory partner loses reputation in case of an audit failure, an advisory project creates positive effort incentives. Third, spillovers from audit to advisory lower the advisory partner’s project costs. Enforcement strength, thereby, determines which of the first two effects dominates because enforcement strength determines effort incentives. These effects and, thus, enforcement strength determine the overall effect of audit split-ups on audit quality. The fourth article analyzes the rationalization of financial misreporting. Using a 2x2 between-subjects experiment, we find that an externally caused bad environmental state causes a higher misreporting likelihood. This effect only occurs if participants are aware of other environmental states. Observing other states where it is easier to achieve a bonus, managers in the bad environmental state feel a greater sense of entitlement and misreport more. Thus, we find that entitlement works as a mediator for financial misreporting.

Cite this

Essays on financial misreporting and audit quality. / Rohmann, Maximilian.
Hannover, 2023. 133 p.

Research output: ThesisDoctoral thesis

Rohmann, M 2023, 'Essays on financial misreporting and audit quality', Doctor rerum politicarum, Leibniz University Hannover, Hannover. https://doi.org/10.15488/14834
Rohmann, M. (2023). Essays on financial misreporting and audit quality. [Doctoral thesis, Leibniz University Hannover]. https://doi.org/10.15488/14834
Rohmann M. Essays on financial misreporting and audit quality. Hannover, 2023. 133 p. doi: 10.15488/14834
Rohmann, Maximilian. / Essays on financial misreporting and audit quality. Hannover, 2023. 133 p.
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title = "Essays on financial misreporting and audit quality",
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Download

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