This Note argues that the existing regulatory mechanism has failed to address adequately the problem of opinion shopping, and that better means of ensuring the reliability of financial statements are needed. Part I describes the nature and extent of the opinion-shopping problem, including a discussion of its larger, macroeconomic impact. Part II argues that the underlying causes of the problem are systemic and that present safeguards against opinion shopping are inadequate. Finally, Part III examines some alternative solutions and proposes a system of Accounting Issue Inquiry Centers under the direction and auspices of the SEC. These Centers would be designed to achieve more effectively the goal of truly independent public audits
This article examines the potential costs to Australian auditors and their clients from the issuance...
This study explores a unique setting to examine whether firms tend to change their auditors when the...
This article examines the potential costs to Australian auditors and their clients from the issuance...
This Note argues that the existing regulatory mechanism has failed to address adequately the problem...
This paper tests whether companies engage in opinion shopping and examines the role of audit committ...
This study investigates the opinion shopping behavior of SEC-registered broker-dealers (BDs) and exa...
Auditors issue going concern modified opinions when there is substantial doubt about the company’s a...
The audit industry is in a state of turmoil and there are conflicting views on what should be done. ...
This study examines whether audit clients engage in internal control opinion shopping activities and...
Separation of ownership from management creates the potential for managers to make decisions that ar...
Auditors play a major role in corporate governance and capital markets. Ex ante, auditors facilitate...
Employing Lennox’s (2000) methodology on a uniquely long time series of Spanish companies’ data, we ...
Published in Auditing, May 2019, 38 (2), 101-123. https://doi.org/10.2308/ajpt-52154.</p
Auditors are supposed to be watchdogs, but in the last decade or so, they sometimes looked like lapd...
Auditors are required to issue going concern opinion (GC opinion) to companies that are incapable to...
This article examines the potential costs to Australian auditors and their clients from the issuance...
This study explores a unique setting to examine whether firms tend to change their auditors when the...
This article examines the potential costs to Australian auditors and their clients from the issuance...
This Note argues that the existing regulatory mechanism has failed to address adequately the problem...
This paper tests whether companies engage in opinion shopping and examines the role of audit committ...
This study investigates the opinion shopping behavior of SEC-registered broker-dealers (BDs) and exa...
Auditors issue going concern modified opinions when there is substantial doubt about the company’s a...
The audit industry is in a state of turmoil and there are conflicting views on what should be done. ...
This study examines whether audit clients engage in internal control opinion shopping activities and...
Separation of ownership from management creates the potential for managers to make decisions that ar...
Auditors play a major role in corporate governance and capital markets. Ex ante, auditors facilitate...
Employing Lennox’s (2000) methodology on a uniquely long time series of Spanish companies’ data, we ...
Published in Auditing, May 2019, 38 (2), 101-123. https://doi.org/10.2308/ajpt-52154.</p
Auditors are supposed to be watchdogs, but in the last decade or so, they sometimes looked like lapd...
Auditors are required to issue going concern opinion (GC opinion) to companies that are incapable to...
This article examines the potential costs to Australian auditors and their clients from the issuance...
This study explores a unique setting to examine whether firms tend to change their auditors when the...
This article examines the potential costs to Australian auditors and their clients from the issuance...