Auditors' response to different reporting environments: experimental evidence from the quantity and quality of auditors' evidence demands in China
Auditors' response to different reporting environments: experimental evidence from the quantity and quality of auditors' evidence demands in China
There has been a significant worldwide movement to adopt International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), which are more principles-based compared to many of the more rules-based national accounting standards that they replaced. The majority of previous studies focus on how this financial reporting environment change influences earnings quality, while there has been limited research on how auditors respond to IFRS. We perform an experiment using Chinese professional auditors to test the joint effects of the type of accounting standards and the strength of the financial regulatory regime on both the quantity and quality of auditors' evidence demands. We find that auditors are likely to have more evidence demands and, particularly, more diagnostic evidence demands under principles-based accounting standards. This influence is more pronounced under the stronger financial regulatory regime. The effect of the institutional environment on IFRS standards is an important international reporting topic particularly for emerging markets like China where there is strong economic growth with an increased focus on reporting standards and regulation. China is an ideal environment to examine this topic because it is the largest country in the world to adopt IFRS, and many Chinese auditors have experienced both rules- and principles-based accounting standards.
73-89
Cao, June
af0d62ff-d54c-412f-a152-cc04c63c7290
Coram, Paul J.
25d139e2-91f2-4f6c-b511-4f7402b9ebd3
6 February 2020
Cao, June
af0d62ff-d54c-412f-a152-cc04c63c7290
Coram, Paul J.
25d139e2-91f2-4f6c-b511-4f7402b9ebd3
Cao, June and Coram, Paul J.
(2020)
Auditors' response to different reporting environments: experimental evidence from the quantity and quality of auditors' evidence demands in China.
International Journal of Auditing, 24 (1), .
(doi:10.1111/ijau.12179).
Abstract
There has been a significant worldwide movement to adopt International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), which are more principles-based compared to many of the more rules-based national accounting standards that they replaced. The majority of previous studies focus on how this financial reporting environment change influences earnings quality, while there has been limited research on how auditors respond to IFRS. We perform an experiment using Chinese professional auditors to test the joint effects of the type of accounting standards and the strength of the financial regulatory regime on both the quantity and quality of auditors' evidence demands. We find that auditors are likely to have more evidence demands and, particularly, more diagnostic evidence demands under principles-based accounting standards. This influence is more pronounced under the stronger financial regulatory regime. The effect of the institutional environment on IFRS standards is an important international reporting topic particularly for emerging markets like China where there is strong economic growth with an increased focus on reporting standards and regulation. China is an ideal environment to examine this topic because it is the largest country in the world to adopt IFRS, and many Chinese auditors have experienced both rules- and principles-based accounting standards.
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Accepted/In Press date: 29 October 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 6 February 2020
Published date: 6 February 2020
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Local EPrints ID: 500769
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/500769
PURE UUID: f03209b3-0bb7-49cb-9715-792cec7a07aa
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Date deposited: 13 May 2025 16:34
Last modified: 23 Oct 2025 02:27
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Author:
June Cao
Author:
Paul J. Coram
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