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Corporate ownership concentration and audit fees: The case of an emerging economy
Authors:Arifur Rahman Khan  Dewan Mahboob Hossain  Javed Siddiqui
Affiliation:aSchool of Accounting, Economics and Finance, Deakin University, 221 Burwood Highway, Burwood VIC3125, Australia;bDepartment of Accounting and Information Systems, Faculty of Business Studies, University of Dhaka, Dhaka 1000, Bangladesh;cManchester Business School, University of Manchester, MBS Crawford House, Oxford Road, Manchester M13 9PL, UK
Abstract:The paper investigates the effects of corporate ownership concentration on audit fees in emerging economies, using Bangladesh as a case. Prior studies have indicated that audit fees in Bangladesh are significantly low. Also, the Bangladeshi private sector is dominated by high ownership concentration. Agency theory predicts that in an efficient market, managers in a highly concentrated ownership situation will have sufficient incentives to have more rigorous audits performed. However, managers in emerging economies, where the markets are not as strong, may not have similar incentives. We test whether audit fees in Bangladesh are related to corporate ownership concentration. Our results indicate that audit fees have a significant negative relationship with sponsor and institutional ownership concentrations. This indicates that in Bangladesh, companies actually pay lower audit fees when these are dominated by sponsor and institutional shareholders. For the public shareholders, we find a negative, but statistically insignificant relationship. The results seem to suggest that corporate ownership pattern may be a major factor in explaining the low audit fees in Bangladesh.
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