Audit Committees and Voluntary External Auditor Involvement in UK Interim Reporting.

Mangena, M. and Tauringana, V., 2008. Audit Committees and Voluntary External Auditor Involvement in UK Interim Reporting. International Journal of Auditing, 12 (1), pp. 45-63.

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Official URL: http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/1194142...

DOI: 10.1111/j.1099-1123.2008.00369.x

Abstract

The study investigates the relationship between audit committee characteristics and the decision to engage external auditors to review published interim reports. The motivation for the study derives from the consensus notion that the audit committee enhances the quality of financial reporting. Using interim reports of 258 UK listed companies published in the period 2001–2002, the results of logistic regression analyses show that the likelihood of engaging an external auditor to review interim reports increases with audit committee independence and financial expertise and decreases with share ownership by audit committee members. The results show that audit committee size and the number of audit committee meetings are not significantly associated with the decision to engage auditors in interim reporting. Taken overall, these findings suggest that an effective audit committee is associated with a review of interim reports by external auditors.

Item Type:Article
ISSN:1090-6738
Subjects:Social Sciences > Finance and Financial Economics
Group:Business School > Centre for Finance and Risk
ID Code:9097
Deposited By:INVALID USER
Deposited On:15 Jan 2009 10:55
Last Modified:07 Mar 2013 15:04
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