TY - JOUR
T1 - A Matter of Appearances
T2 - How Does Auditing Expertise Benefit Audit Committees When Selecting Auditors?†‡
AU - Baugh, Matthew
AU - Hallman, Nicholas J.
AU - Kachelmeier, Steven J.
N1 - Funding Information: *Accepted by Linda Myers. An earlier version of this paper was presented at the 2020 Contemporary Accounting Research Conference, generously supported by the Chartered Professional Accountants of Canada. Earlier versions were also circulated under the title “Looking the Part: Does Audit Committee Expertise Reduce the Influence of Superficial Appearances in Auditor Selection and Compensation Decisions?” We are grateful to Dan Rimkus for research assistance. We are also grateful for helpful comments on earlier versions from Tim Bauer, Robert Bloomfield, Lukas Helikum, Ying (Julie) Huang, Kathryn Kadous (discussant), Lisa Koonce, Lisa LaViers, Justin Leiby, Bob Libby, Elaine Mauldin, Bill Mayew, Linda Myers (editor), Mark Peecher, Kristina Rennekamp, Dan Rimkus, Marcy Shepardson, Blake Steenhoven, Hun Tong Tan, Kim Westermann, Han Yan, Yachang Zeng, two anonymous reviewers, workshop participants at Cornell University, Emory University, Nanyang Technological University, the University of Texas at Austin, and Washington State University, and participants at the 2018 International Symposium on Audit Research, the 2018 American Accounting Association Annual Meeting, and the 23rd University of Illinois Symposium on Audit Research. The third author expresses appreciation for financial support from the Randal B. McDonald Chair in Accounting. †Discussion by Kathryn Kadous (see Appendix 5). ‡ Corresponding author. Funding Information: Accepted by Linda Myers. An earlier version of this paper was presented at the 2020 Contemporary Accounting Research Conference, generously supported by the Chartered Professional Accountants of Canada. Earlier versions were also circulated under the title “Looking the Part: Does Audit Committee Expertise Reduce the Influence of Superficial Appearances in Auditor Selection and Compensation Decisions?” We are grateful to Dan Rimkus for research assistance. We are also grateful for helpful comments on earlier versions from Tim Bauer, Robert Bloomfield, Lukas Helikum, Ying (Julie) Huang, Kathryn Kadous (discussant), Lisa Koonce, Lisa LaViers, Justin Leiby, Bob Libby, Elaine Mauldin, Bill Mayew, Linda Myers (editor), Mark Peecher, Kristina Rennekamp, Dan Rimkus, Marcy Shepardson, Blake Steenhoven, Hun Tong Tan, Kim Westermann, Han Yan, Yachang Zeng, two anonymous reviewers, workshop participants at Cornell University, Emory University, Nanyang Technological University, the University of Texas at Austin, and Washington State University, and participants at the 2018 International Symposium on Audit Research, the 2018 American Accounting Association Annual Meeting, and the 23rd University of Illinois Symposium on Audit Research. The third author expresses appreciation for financial support from the Randal B. McDonald Chair in Accounting. Publisher Copyright: © CAAA
PY - 2022/3/1
Y1 - 2022/3/1
N2 - Literature to date reveals relatively little about the role of expertise in auditor selection beyond basic preferences for Big 4 and industry specialist auditors. We hypothesize that audit committees whose members have no Big 4 auditing experience are likely to struggle when interviewing prospective Big 4 partners, leading such committees to draw on superficial, heuristic cues in lieu of conducting more substantive evaluations. To test this prediction, we obtain independent ratings of the facial attractiveness of audit partners identified from Form AP filings recently mandated by the US PCAOB. Our primary finding is that audit committees with no Big 4–experienced members are more likely to favor partners whose photographs raters view to be highly attractive. We characterize attractiveness as a superficial attribute for auditor selection because we detect no relation between attractiveness and accruals- or restatement-based measures of financial reporting quality for audit committees with one or more Big 4–experienced members. We do find an inverse association between attractiveness and financial reporting quality for committees without this experience, likely reflecting the statistical implication of a selection bias. We conclude that auditing expertise mitigates the influence of superficial considerations in auditor selection, enabling audit committees to fulfill their stewardship role more effectively.
AB - Literature to date reveals relatively little about the role of expertise in auditor selection beyond basic preferences for Big 4 and industry specialist auditors. We hypothesize that audit committees whose members have no Big 4 auditing experience are likely to struggle when interviewing prospective Big 4 partners, leading such committees to draw on superficial, heuristic cues in lieu of conducting more substantive evaluations. To test this prediction, we obtain independent ratings of the facial attractiveness of audit partners identified from Form AP filings recently mandated by the US PCAOB. Our primary finding is that audit committees with no Big 4–experienced members are more likely to favor partners whose photographs raters view to be highly attractive. We characterize attractiveness as a superficial attribute for auditor selection because we detect no relation between attractiveness and accruals- or restatement-based measures of financial reporting quality for audit committees with one or more Big 4–experienced members. We do find an inverse association between attractiveness and financial reporting quality for committees without this experience, likely reflecting the statistical implication of a selection bias. We conclude that auditing expertise mitigates the influence of superficial considerations in auditor selection, enabling audit committees to fulfill their stewardship role more effectively.
KW - attractiveness
KW - audit committees
KW - auditor selection
KW - dual-processing theory
KW - elaboration likelihood model
KW - expertise
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U2 - 10.1111/1911-3846.12736
DO - 10.1111/1911-3846.12736
M3 - Article
SN - 0823-9150
VL - 39
SP - 234
EP - 270
JO - Contemporary Accounting Research
JF - Contemporary Accounting Research
IS - 1
ER -