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Investigating ISA adaptation in a developing country context: the selective influence of Big Four affiliates

Investigating ISA adaptation in a developing country context: the selective influence of Big Four affiliates
Investigating ISA adaptation in a developing country context: the selective influence of Big Four affiliates
This paper examines how the national process of adapting the International Standards on Auditing (ISAs) unfolds in developing countries, focusing on the case of Egypt. The study relies on data gathered from 33 semi-structured interviews with government officials and senior auditors alongside documentary evidence. Our findings show how legacy state institutions that were involved in the national standard-setting committee have largely fallen short of their aspirations to align local auditing standards with the expectations set out in the ISAs. The lack of a coherent approach to developing state policy objectives, resources, and public consultation, together with technical demands and translation difficulties, hampered the process. Such weaknesses provided an opportunity for the local Big Four affiliates to become deeply involved. The firms’ strategic manoeuvres were driven not only by a material desire to protect their market position/status but also by a commitment to a perceived national duty to support government attempts at national standard-setting. Importantly, our findings reveal the selectivity of such interventions and the differential impact of ISA adaptation on the diverse constituency of audit firms. Theoretically, we propose the institutional void perspective to conceptualise the intervention of private actors as well as to articulate the elements of a void in an audit regulatory process. While Big Four firms typically seek to position themselves in such processes, we argue that international reforms and policies should focus on fostering a more inclusive, accountable, and deliberative system that promotes the presence of diverse, independent and representative local audit actors.
International Standards on Auditing (ISA); adaptation; Egypt; audit regulation; institutional void, International Standards on Auditing (ISA), Egypt, adaptation, institutional void, audit regulation
0155-9982
Ghattas, Peter Brince Mikhail
0ff7e000-becc-4287-8fd7-d5b0da4d3cf4
Soobaroyen, Teerooven
472f8c06-08fb-456d-8262-1261c800b73f
Marnet, Oliver
6840910e-2e26-4e63-aa84-76c5c8d27877
Ghattas, Peter Brince Mikhail
0ff7e000-becc-4287-8fd7-d5b0da4d3cf4
Soobaroyen, Teerooven
472f8c06-08fb-456d-8262-1261c800b73f
Marnet, Oliver
6840910e-2e26-4e63-aa84-76c5c8d27877

Ghattas, Peter Brince Mikhail, Soobaroyen, Teerooven and Marnet, Oliver (2024) Investigating ISA adaptation in a developing country context: the selective influence of Big Four affiliates. Accounting Forum. (doi:10.1080/01559982.2024.2365102).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This paper examines how the national process of adapting the International Standards on Auditing (ISAs) unfolds in developing countries, focusing on the case of Egypt. The study relies on data gathered from 33 semi-structured interviews with government officials and senior auditors alongside documentary evidence. Our findings show how legacy state institutions that were involved in the national standard-setting committee have largely fallen short of their aspirations to align local auditing standards with the expectations set out in the ISAs. The lack of a coherent approach to developing state policy objectives, resources, and public consultation, together with technical demands and translation difficulties, hampered the process. Such weaknesses provided an opportunity for the local Big Four affiliates to become deeply involved. The firms’ strategic manoeuvres were driven not only by a material desire to protect their market position/status but also by a commitment to a perceived national duty to support government attempts at national standard-setting. Importantly, our findings reveal the selectivity of such interventions and the differential impact of ISA adaptation on the diverse constituency of audit firms. Theoretically, we propose the institutional void perspective to conceptualise the intervention of private actors as well as to articulate the elements of a void in an audit regulatory process. While Big Four firms typically seek to position themselves in such processes, we argue that international reforms and policies should focus on fostering a more inclusive, accountable, and deliberative system that promotes the presence of diverse, independent and representative local audit actors.

Text
Final Investigating ISA Adaptation_23 May 2024 (edited) - Accepted Manuscript
Restricted to Repository staff only until 3 December 2025.
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 3 June 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 25 June 2024
Published date: 25 June 2024
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © 2024 University of South Australia.
Keywords: International Standards on Auditing (ISA); adaptation; Egypt; audit regulation; institutional void, International Standards on Auditing (ISA), Egypt, adaptation, institutional void, audit regulation

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 491019
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/491019
ISSN: 0155-9982
PURE UUID: 2d85bccb-30f7-40a2-9ace-8172cdbc01e2
ORCID for Oliver Marnet: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9450-2332

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 11 Jun 2024 16:39
Last modified: 12 Jul 2024 01:51

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Contributors

Author: Peter Brince Mikhail Ghattas
Author: Teerooven Soobaroyen
Author: Oliver Marnet ORCID iD

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