Affiliation:
1. Utah State University
2. University of Washington
3. University of Utah
Abstract
We examine the relation between accruals quality and internal controls using 705 firms that disclosed at least one material weakness from August 2002 to November 2005 and find that weaknesses are generally associated with poorly estimated accruals that are not realized as cash flows. Further, we find that this relation between weak internal controls and lower accruals quality is driven by weakness disclosures that relate to overall company-level controls, which may be more difficult to “audit around.” We find no such relation for more auditable, account-specific weaknesses. We find similar results using four additional measures of accruals quality: discretionary accruals, average accruals quality, historical accounting restatements, and earnings persistence. Our results are robust to the inclusion of firm characteristics that proxy for difficulty in accrual estimation, known determinants of material weaknesses, and corrections for self-selection bias.
Publisher
American Accounting Association
Subject
Economics and Econometrics,Finance,Accounting
Reference41 articles.
1. Altamuro, J., and A. Beatty. 2006. Do internal control reforms improve earnings quality? Working paper, The Ohio State University.
2. Anderson, K., and T. Yohn. 2002. The effect of 10-K restatements on firm value, information asymmetries, and investors' reliance on earnings. Working paper, Georgetown University and University of Massachusetts.
3. Ashbaugh-Skaife, H., D. Collins, W. Kinney, and R. LaFond. 2006. Internal control deficiencies, remediation and accrual quality. Working paper, University of Wisconsin, The University of Iowa, The University of Texas at Austin, and Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
4. The discovery and reporting of internal control deficiencies prior to SOX-mandated audits
5. The Effect of Audit Quality on Earnings Management
Cited by
880 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献