The Disclosure of Material Weaknesses in Internal Control after the Sarbanes-Oxley Act
Top Cited Papers
- 1 September 2005
- journal article
- Published by American Accounting Association in Accounting Horizons
- Vol. 19 (3) , 137-158
- https://doi.org/10.2308/acch.2005.19.3.137
Abstract
This paper focuses on a sample of 261 companies that disclosed at least one material weakness in internal control in their SEC filings after the effective date of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. Based on the descriptive material weakness disclosures provided by management, we find that poor internal control is usually related to an insufficient commitment of resources for accounting controls. Material weaknesses in internal control tend to be related to deficient revenue-recognition policies, lack of segregation of duties, deficiencies in the period-end reporting process and accounting policies, and inappropriate account reconciliation. The most common account-specific material weaknesses occur in the current accrual accounts, such as the accounts receivable and inventory accounts. Material weakness disclosures by management also frequently describe internal control problems in complex accounts, such as the derivative and income tax accounts. In our statistical analysis, we find that disclosing a material weakness is positively associated with business complexity (e.g., multiple segments and foreign currency), negatively associated with firm size (e.g., market capitalization), and negatively associated with firm profitability (e.g., return on assets).Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Audit Committee Quality and Internal Control: An Empirical AnalysisThe Accounting Review, 2005
- Determinants of Weaknesses in Internal Control over Financial Reporting and the Implications for Earnings QualitySSRN Electronic Journal, 2005
- CEO and CFO Certifications of Financial InformationAccounting Horizons, 2003
- The Relation between Auditors' Fees for Nonaudit Services and Earnings ManagementThe Accounting Review, 2002
- An examination of executive stock option repricingJournal of Financial Economics, 2001
- Accounting Scholarship: What Is Uniquely Ours?The Accounting Review, 2001
- Fraudulent Financial Reporting: Consideration of Industry Traits and Corporate Governance MechanismsAccounting Horizons, 2000
- An Analysis of the Demand for Reporting on Internal ControlAccounting Horizons, 2000
- Characteristics of firms correcting previously reported quarterly earningsJournal of Accounting and Economics, 1989