Book Chapter Enron and Anderson - What Went Wrong and Why Similar Audit Failures Could Happen Again, in Enron: Corporate Fiascos and Their Implications, posits that unconscious bias, compounded by organizational flaws and a culture at Andersen that emphasized marketing non-audit services to audit clients in an effort to boost profits; significant conflicts of interest and self-interest; and greed all help explain the audit failure at Enron. Although the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 attempted to strengthen auditor independence, under the guise of increasing auditor independence, a public company\u27s management can still recommend that the audit committee hire another accounting firm to provide tax or other non-prohibited consulting services i...
Enron and other corporate financial scandals focused attention on the accounting industry in general...
Following the scandals involving Enron, WorldCom, and Qwest Communications, the accounting professio...
The accounting scandals and the demise of Andersen have increased auditors' ex ante business risk. A...
Book Chapter Enron and Anderson - What Went Wrong and Why Similar Audit Failures Could Happen Again,...
This article examines Arthur Andersen, its role with Enron, and what happened to some of its key pla...
[EN] Every time an auditing scandal has occurred, several voices pointed to the economic relationshi...
It is always pleasing when events in the ‘real world’—with heavy inverted commas—bring to prominence...
Enron’s accounting for its non-consolidated special-purpose entities (SPEs), sales of its own stock ...
The collapse of Enron and its auditor, Arthur Andersen, in 2001 marked the greatest financial scare ...
The recent bankruptcy of Enron provides many opportunities for learning in all business disciplines....
The corporate collapses of recent times, culminating with massive collapses such as those of Enron i...
In this study, the author examines the audit firms’ fees associated with audit services and au...
Auditors are regulated by both governmental agencies and professional organizations, though many now...
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to examine the effects of audit failure on Big 4 audit firm m...
Enron and other corporate financial scandals focused attention on the accounting industry in general...
Enron and other corporate financial scandals focused attention on the accounting industry in general...
Following the scandals involving Enron, WorldCom, and Qwest Communications, the accounting professio...
The accounting scandals and the demise of Andersen have increased auditors' ex ante business risk. A...
Book Chapter Enron and Anderson - What Went Wrong and Why Similar Audit Failures Could Happen Again,...
This article examines Arthur Andersen, its role with Enron, and what happened to some of its key pla...
[EN] Every time an auditing scandal has occurred, several voices pointed to the economic relationshi...
It is always pleasing when events in the ‘real world’—with heavy inverted commas—bring to prominence...
Enron’s accounting for its non-consolidated special-purpose entities (SPEs), sales of its own stock ...
The collapse of Enron and its auditor, Arthur Andersen, in 2001 marked the greatest financial scare ...
The recent bankruptcy of Enron provides many opportunities for learning in all business disciplines....
The corporate collapses of recent times, culminating with massive collapses such as those of Enron i...
In this study, the author examines the audit firms’ fees associated with audit services and au...
Auditors are regulated by both governmental agencies and professional organizations, though many now...
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to examine the effects of audit failure on Big 4 audit firm m...
Enron and other corporate financial scandals focused attention on the accounting industry in general...
Enron and other corporate financial scandals focused attention on the accounting industry in general...
Following the scandals involving Enron, WorldCom, and Qwest Communications, the accounting professio...
The accounting scandals and the demise of Andersen have increased auditors' ex ante business risk. A...