Centre for Economic Policy Research
partners to focus on who hires or fires them, as well as who negotiates the fee
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partners to focus on who hires or fires them, as well as who negotiates the fee paid. In a highly competitive environment, local branches serving dominant firms, coupled with a lack of independence from management created the potential for lower quality audits. 3.7 Litigation risk and rules-based audits While supplying non-audit services and fee pressure reduce the independence of auditors from managers, thus creating conflicts of interest, it is unlikely that these conflicts were exploited to an extent that can explain the recent, huge audit failures, as there is evidence that auditors understood that the audit firm’s primary asset is its reputation. In fact, paradoxical as it may seem, it may have been audit firms’ heightened concerns to protect their reputation and guard against litigation Accounting: Conflicts of Interest in Auditing and Consulting 37 risks that were a driving factor in the audit failures. There was a sharp rise in litigation risk for US audit firms in the 1970s and 1980s in the United States, as class action lawsuits were filed on behalf of shareholders, claiming that declines in share prices were caused by faulty auditing (Palmrose, 1991). Litigation defeats provide both an immediate direct cost in the penalty and higher insurance costs, and an indirect cost in reputational loss that can cause firms to lose audit clients. For audit firms, the cost of defence in these lawsuits and the large settlements focused attention on reducing litigation risk. The national offices of audit firms began to perform risk assessments of clients and practices to manage these costs. Firms adjusted their activities to protect themselves from litigation. 36 The threat of such lawsuits against company managers increased the incentive for earnings management and, as auditors were often part of the litigation, there were large negative incentives to force companies to ‘miss’ earnings targets especially over ‘judgement’ calls. One reaction to counter the growing legal threat to the auditing profession and the corporations themselves was to seek and rely on increased codification of auditing and accounting standards that facilitated a legal defence of compliance with rules (Dye, 1993). Since the creation of the Financial Accounting Standards Board in 1973, there has been a proliferation of codified accounting rules in the United States. These rules have allowed for a clear shift in auditors’ focus from opining on whether financial statements fairly present the ‘true’ financial condition and performance of the company to a focus on compliance with the detailed ‘Generally Accepted Accounting Principles’ (GAAP) rules. This focus permitted managers to argue that audit opinions should concentrate on compli- ance with the rules, shifting attention from the ‘true’ condition and performance of the company. Managers and auditors could also use the rules to create struc- tures that allowed them to obscure the true economic condition of companies by, for example, placing assets and obligations in unconsolidated entities. The Enron debacle has all of the elements described above, including the focus on rules rather than the true condition of the firm. While it remains to be seen who bears legal responsibility for the failure of the firm, many of the conflicts discussed above existed at Enron. Several financial executives were ex-auditors from Andersen. Non-audit service fees were greater than the audit fees. Enron purportedly was the prize audit client of the Houston office and its growth appeared to be spectacular. In addition, it had complex structures that distorted the economic reality but were constructed, with the help of their auditors and legal advisers, to meet codified standards. Finally, Anderson was the only big firm to devolve decisions on some accounting principles to its local offices. Two examples serve to illustrate how an audit and accounting system based on prescriptive GAAP rules aided in distorting the economic picture. Enron was listed in the top ten of the Fortune 500 companies based on its consolidated sales. The sales measure had no bearing on reality, however, as it reflected trading activity in energy contracts that were recorded on a gross rather than a net basis because of a GAAP rule EITF 98-10. 37 (This rule was recently rescinded.) Enron also created Special Purpose Entities (SPEs) that placed assets, associated liabilities and guarantees off the balance sheet. These SPEs were acceptable as long as there was a ‘minimum’ outside equity position based on interpretations of existing rules. When the chairman of Arthur Andersen testified before a congressional commit- tee on Enron he commented that the problem was with the interpretation of the consolidation rules not that the structures had totally distorted the economic realities. This typifies the way in which many in the audit profession perceived their role, opining on compliance with arcane rules, irrespective of the economic substance. 38 Conflicts of Interest in the Financial Services Industry The evolution of audit practice over the last 50 years has been rapid, especially in the United States. Increased competition for audit clients put pressure on audit revenue and pushed firms to cut costs to sustain profits. Simultaneously non-audit services, especially the installation of management information systems, grew dramatically leading to growing concern about auditors’ independence. As the revenues from these non-audit services increased, profit-sharing structures that favoured audit partners created internal tensions that often led to audit partners and local offices being pushed to deliver audit revenues and profits. Furthermore, there was an increase in litigation against audit firms in the 1980s resulting in rising costs and damage to reputations. To defend themselves, audit firms sought to reduce litigation risk, most notably by demanding and obtaining legally defensible rules in regulatory accounting and audit principles, even if these practices limited the auditors’ ability to provide relevant and reliable information about the financial performance and condition of firms. As competition for audits heated up and risks increased, the governance structure around hiring and audit-fee decisions shifted away from boards of directors to the senior executives of the companies being audited. Each of these factors contributed to the conflicts of interest in the audit system of the late 1990s that were part of the spectacular business failures. Download 1.95 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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