A laboratory market investigation of low balling in audit pricing
Article Abstract:
Six controlled laboratory experiments were conducted to examine auditors' behavior in the low-balling of audit prices, in which auditors charges fees that are lower than cost to attract clients. Some analysts have hypothesized the practice negatively affects auditors' independence. The research tests economic concepts of auditing through the use of experimental economics and provides a framework for examining auditor pricing behavior. The experiments assumed competitive markets were extant, and hypothesized that where transaction costs are positive, there are cost advantages accrued to incumbent audits. Research results collaborate the hypotheses and suggest that positive transaction costs may be the cause of low-balling behavior. The results also suggest Low-balling does not occur in markets that lack positive transaction costs.
Publication Name: Accounting Review
Subject: Business, general
ISSN: 0001-4826
Year: 1990
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
An examination of the effects of experience and task complexity on audit judgments
Article Abstract:
The experience effect is important in decision-making when task complexity is given explicit consideration. The results of a group of experiments is reported in which structured, semi-structured, and unstructured tasks are examined for subjects pooled into experienced and inexperienced groups of auditors. A separate study of 88 managers and partners was used to establish independently the appropriate staff level for each task and complexity. Significant decision differences were shown between experimental groups on each task. Only an isolated significant experience effect was found when all the subjects were pooled together, demonstrating the need for explicit consideration, control for task complexity, and appropriate normative skills in researching the nature of expertise.
Publication Name: Accounting Review
Subject: Business, general
ISSN: 0001-4826
Year: 1987
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
Consistency exceptions: materiality judgments and audit firm structure
Article Abstract:
Three elements of auditor materiality judgments are examined: their relationship with publicly available financial data, whether across Big Eight firms there are differences in materiality judgment consensus, and whether there is a correlation between audit firm structure and judgment consensus. Results indicate that nine publicly accessible financial measures explain a substantial part of the variability in auditor materiality judgments. This raises a query about potential data in auditors' interest-capitalization consistency exceptions.
Publication Name: Accounting Review
Subject: Business, general
ISSN: 0001-4826
Year: 1988
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
- Abstracts: Selectivity and selective perception: an investigation of managers' belief structures and information processing
- Abstracts: A laboratory market examination of the consumer price response to information about producers' costs and profits
- Abstracts: A cybernetic theory of stress, coping, and well-being in organizations. Alternative information-processing models and their implications for theory, research, and practice
- Abstracts: The paradox of independent relations in the field of social issues in management. Convergence-divergence: a temporal review of the Japanese enterprise and its management
- Abstracts: The two cultures in business education. Left brain-right brain mythology and implications for management and training