Table of Contents

Share this Article

Share |


Changes in the Audit Environment and Auditors’ Propensity to Issue Going-Concern Opinions

Neil L. Fargher, Liwei Jiang

SUMMARY: The high-profile collapses during the period 2000 to 2002 resulted in increased litigation against auditors, higher insurance costs, increased media scrutiny, and increased regulatory review of the auditing profession. Prior research suggests that auditors’ decisions were more conservative after this period. We compare auditors’ propensity to issue going-concern opinions before and after 2000–2002. Consistent with increased auditor conservatism, we find that auditors were more likely to issue going-concern opinions to financially stressed companies immediately after the crisis period. The increase in going-concern modifications issued resulted in a few less companies observed to fail without a going-concern modification, but only at the cost of more modifications issued to companies that did not fail. The results do not, however, support continued auditor conservatism beyond 2003.

Received: August 2006; Accepted: May 2008

Cited by

Samer K. Khalil, Jeffrey R. Cohen and Kenneth B. Schwartz. (2011) Client Engagement Risks and the Auditor Search Period. Accounting Horizons 25:4, 685-702
Online publication date: 1-Dec-2011.
Abstract | Full Text | PDF (377 KB) 
Dorothy A. Feldmann, William J. Read. (2010) Auditor Conservatism after Enron. AUDITING: A Journal of Practice & Theory 29:1, 267-278
Online publication date: 1-May-2010.
Abstract | Enhanced Abstract | PDF (113 KB) 

Announcements

Welcome to the online journal website for AAA Journals.

Visitors to the site will be able to:
  • save favorite articles
  • more search options
  • save searches
  • much, much more!

Register for a Profile

Not Yet Registered?

Welcome to our new, improved website!

AAA Members

You received an email with a link to register on this site.

If you followed that link, then you're already registered, and you can log in with your email address (NOT your AAA login) and the password you created for this site.

If you don't have that email, you still need to register.


Not an AAA Member?

Please register on this site when you first use it by clicking the link above.

After you complete this process once, you will be able to log in with your email address and the password of your choice.

Library access?

Institutional subscribers' access via IP ranges is unchanged.


For more information, please click here.