Contingent economic rents: Insidious threats to audit independence
- 19 May 2004
- book chapter
- Published by Emerald Publishing in Advances in Accounting Behavioral Research
Abstract
The primary purpose of this study is to examine how and why contingent economic rents can lead to biased audit judgment via a cognitive processing phenomenon known as predecisional distortion of information. The secondary research objective is to develop a more refined measure of predecisional distortion, thereby yielding a more robust and predictive metric. A total of 73 audit partners representing four of the Big Five CPA firms participated in a two (low-balling: present or absent) by two (non-audit revenue: present or absent) between-subjects experiment. Research findings indicate that contingent economic rents can potentially impair audit independence, as such rents heighten an initial desire to maintain a long-term relationship with the client, trigger favorable predecisional distortion of client-related information, and bias audit judgment in favor of the client. Study results also reveal that the refined predecisional distortion metric is more predictive than past measurement techniques. Between-subject and within-subject debriefings suggest that predecisional distortion of information operates, at least partially, at the subconscious level.Keywords
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