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Legal liability, government intervention, and auditor behavior : evidence from structural reform of audit firms in China

Version 2 2024-06-13, 09:31
Version 1 2015-11-27, 14:05
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-13, 09:31 authored by K He, X Pan, G Tian
This paper investigates how legal liability influences audit quality and audit fees, particularly in the presence of government intervention. Since 2010, all Chinese audit firms were required to transform from a structure of limited liability company (LLC) to limited liability partnership (LLP), which removes the cap on the liability exposure of negligent auditors. By adopting this natural experiment, we document the following findings: first, after audit firms reorganize as LLPs, auditors are more likely to (1) issue modified audit opinions and going-concern opinions, (2) constrain clients’ earnings management, and (3) charge a premium in audit fees, which suggest that exerting unlimited legal liability on negligent auditors improves both audit quality and audit fees. Second, the effect of the LLP adoption is more pronounced when auditors are from local audit firms, and clients are controlled by local governments. Further analyses suggest that the stock prices of clients positively react to the reform event, which indicates that LLP adoption improves the overall value of audits. In summary, our empirical findings are consistent with the argument that legal liability is able to effectively shape auditor behavior in emerging markets where the other institutional mechanisms are relatively weaker and government intervention is heavy.

History

Journal

European accounting review

Volume

26

Pagination

61-95

Location

London, Eng.

ISSN

0963-8180

eISSN

1468-4497

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article, C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2015, European Accounting Association

Issue

1

Publisher

European Accounting Association