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The influence of process accountability and accounting standard type on auditor usage of a status quo heuristic
Authors:William F Messier Jr  Linda A Quick  Scott D Vandervelde
Institution:1. Lee Business School, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, United States;2. Norwegian School of Economics (NHH), Norway;3. East Carolina University, United States;4. Moore School of Business, University of South Carolina, 1705 College Street, Columbia, SC 29208, United States
Abstract:There has been considerable discussion about the U.S. reporting standards becoming less rules based, similar to International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS). One proposed advantage of a change to IFRS is increased comparability across multinational and non-U.S. companies. Additionally, some believe that IFRS afford greater flexibility in its principles, thereby enabling firms’ accounting choices to better reflect the true economic nature of any given transaction (FASB, 2002; SEC, 2003). With fewer rules, both financial statement preparers and auditors would be expected to adjust to having more options with regards to financial reporting. However, some proposed changes leave the option open to implement IFRS (or other principles-based standards) in ways that still follow rules in U.S. GAAP. This paper investigates whether prior year accounting treatments influence the judgment for current year treatments when one way to implement the standard is to follow the prior year treatment. We find that some auditors fixate on prior year scenarios and judgments, even if the current year scenario and applicable accounting standards are different. We find that holding auditors accountable for their decision making process reduces the likelihood of sticking with the prior year treatment most notably when the prior year standards were U.S. GAAP.
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