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Class-action privileges and contingent legal fees: Investor and lawyer incentives to litigate and the effect on audit quality
Authors:Douglas V. DeJong
Abstract:The Cohen Commission recognized the importance of litigation incentives and recommended that research based upon an economic approach be conducted into the effects that litigation incentives can have on the auditing profession. By extending Simon (1981), an economic analysis of an auditing environment is presented wherein audit firms issue reports, representative investors make decisions based upon audit reports, and lawyers (as well as representative investors) play an active role in determining whether or not to initiate litigation against audit firms. The influence that alternative litigation privileges (i.e., class-action privileges with contingent legal fees and no class-action privileges with fixed legal fees) have on representative investor and lawyer incentives to litigate and on the equilibrium characteristics of this audit market are analyzed.
Keywords:Address reprint requests to: Douglas V. DeJong   Assistant Professor of Accounting   College of Business Administration   University of Iowa   Iowa City   IA 52242   USA.
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