Affiliation:
1. Virginia Commonwealth University Professor Accounting Box 844000 301 W Main St UNITED STATES Richmond Virginia 23284 804-828-8884 850-559-5913
2. Appalachian State University
3. UNITED STATES University of Toledo
Abstract
This study examines the effects of using the internal audit function as a management training ground (MTG) and fraud magnitude on internal fraud reporting decisions. Two experiments examine (1) internal auditors’ reporting behaviors, and (2) other employees’ willingness to report directly to internal audit. In the first experiment, experienced internal auditors indicate that the use of internal audit as a MTG may negatively impact fraud reporting likelihood by internal auditors to the Chief Audit Executive (CAE). Further, using the internal audit function as a MTG inhibits the sense of urgency internal auditors feel to report large fraudulent acts. The second experiment compares management accountants’ preferences for reporting to an anonymous third-party hotline versus reporting directly to internal audit. The results indicate a preference for the hotline that increases with a MTG. This preference is fully mediated by the perceived trustworthiness of internal audit, which is negatively impacted by a MTG.
Publisher
American Accounting Association
Subject
Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management,Accounting
Cited by
2 articles.
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