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Journal ArticleDOI

The Audit Committee: Management Watchdog or Personal Friend of the CEO?

TLDR
This article found that firms whose audit committees have "friendship" ties to the CEO purchase fewer audit services and engage more in earnings management, and that auditors are also less likely to issue going-concern opinions or to report internal control weaknesses when friendship ties are present.
Abstract
To ensure that audit committees provide sufficient oversight over the auditing process and quality of financial reporting, legislators have imposed stricter requirements on the independence of audit committee members. Although many audit committees appear to be “fully” independent, anecdotal evidence suggests that CEOs often appoint directors from their social networks. Based on a 2004 to 2008 sample of U.S.-listed companies after the Sarbanes-Oxley Act we find that these social ties have a negative effect on variables that proxy for oversight quality. In particular, we find that firms whose audit committees have “friendship” ties to the CEO purchase fewer audit services and engage more in earnings management. Auditors are also less likely to issue going-concern opinions or to report internal control weaknesses when friendship ties are present. On the other hand, social ties formed through “advice networks” do not seem to hamper the quality of audit committee oversight.

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Citations
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It`s Not Who You Know But How You Know Them: Who Exchanges What With Whom?

TL;DR: This paper investigated the extent to which interpersonal ties, network characteristics, and people's personal characteristics (e.g., gender) affect the nature of reciprocal relationships and found that giving support is strongly associated with getting it.
Journal ArticleDOI

Are Boards Designed to Fail? The Implausibility of Effective Board Monitoring

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors conceptualize a model based on the premise of boards as groups of individuals obtaining, processing and sharing information and explain how variation in information processing demands at the director, board and firm level may challenge effective monitoring.
Journal ArticleDOI

Do School Ties between Auditors and Client Executives Influence Audit Outcomes

TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper identify connected auditors as those who attended the same university as the executives of their clients and find that connected audrators are more likely to issue favorable audit opinions, especially for financially distressed clients.
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Master of Puppets: How Narcissistic CEOs Construct Their Professional Worlds

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore how narcissistic CEOs address two powerful and conflicting needs: the need for acclaim and the need to dominate others by employing lower-status, younger and less experienced top management team members who will be more deferential to and dependent on them.
Journal ArticleDOI

Do Social Ties between External Auditors and Audit Committee Members Affect Audit Quality

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine whether social ties between engagement auditors and audit committee members shape audit outcomes and find that close interpersonal relations can undermine auditors' monitoring of the financial reporting process.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Audit Committee Quality and Internal Control: An Empirical Analysis

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the association between audit committee quality and the quality of corporate internal control and found that independent audit committees and audit committees with financial expertise are significantly less likely to be associated with the same problems.
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Audit Committee Composition and Auditor Reporting

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the relation between the composition of financially distressed firms' audit committees and the likelihood of receiving going-concern reports for firms experiencing financial distress during 1994 and found that the greater the percentage of affiliated directors on the audit committee, the lower the probability the auditor will issue a going concern report.
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The Role of Accruals in Asymmetrically Timely Gain and Loss Recognition

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate the role of accrual accounting in the asymmetrically timely recognition (incorporation in reported earnings) of gains and losses, and show that nonlinear accruals models incorporating the asymmetry in gain and loss recognition (timelier loss recognition, or conditional conservatism) offer a substantial specification improvement, explaining substantially more variation in accruality than equivalent linear specifications.
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Audit Partner Tenure and Audit Quality

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the relationship between audit quality and long audit partner tenure and found a lower propensity to issue a going-concern opinion and some evidence of just beating (missing) earnings benchmarks.
Journal ArticleDOI

Board Characteristics and Audit Fees

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine the relationship between board characteristics and external audit fees for Fortune 1000 companies and find significant positive relationships between board independence, diligence, and expertise and audit fees.
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