Faisal Khan
Faisal Khan
Faisal Khan
https://www.emerald.com/insight/1985-2517.htm
Moderating
Organizational complexity and role of audit
audit report lag in GCC economies: quality
Abstract
Purpose – This study aims to investigate whether organizational complexity (hereafter firm complexity)
increases audit report lag (ARL) in a unique environment of GCC countries.
Design/methodology/approach – The research study uses a panel data set of 6,084 firm-year
observations of nonfinancial firms from GCC economies from 2009 to 2022. First, the study uses an ordinary
least square estimator to examine the association of firm complexity with ARL. Second, for robustness
purposes, the study applies the propensity score matching technique.
Findings – This research study finds that the firms’ complexity increases ARL. Supporting the argument
that auditors respond to firm complexity with increased effort, the authors find a positive relation of firm
complexity with ARL. This relationship is augmented by auditor change, auditors’ tenure, auditor-qualified
opinion and adoption of IFRS. In addition, the authors also find that Big-4 and audit firm industry
specialization curtail the positive impact of firm complexity on ARL.
Research limitations/implications – Firms in the GCC have less time to complete their audit and
complex firms are likelier to have bigger ARLs. This study provided evidence regarding the curtailing effect
of audit quality in GCC. Our findings suggest policymakers and reformers choose improved audit quality to
reduce the possibility of larger ARL.
Originality/value – This study enriches the scholarship by presenting a mechanism for reducing the ARL
of complex firms through higher audit quality. This study contributes to agency theory by emphasizing audit
quality’s important role in emerging markets.
Keywords Firm complexity, Firm industry specialization, Big-4, ARL, GCC economies
Paper type Research paper
Journal of Financial Reporting and
Accounting
© Emerald Publishing Limited
1985-2517
JEL classification – M41, M42, M48 DOI 10.1108/JFRA-03-2023-0113
JFRA 1. Introduction
Recently, Abernathy et al. (2017) pointed out the importance of timely audit reports for
stakeholders, including managers, regulators, shareholders, creditors and academics. As a
critical regulator, the Securities and Exchange Commission regulates specific conditions
requiring firms to file timely reports (Bryant-Kutcher et al., 2013). Likewise, academics have
produced results indicating the negative consequences of audit report lag (ARL) (Ashton
et al., 1987). As ARL is viewed as one of the most critical drivers of the credibility of financial
reporting (Abernathy et al., 2017), earlier research has sought to identify its determinants. So
far, studies have found that ARL is affected by firm-specific factors. These include
profitability (Abernathy et al., 2017), firm’s complexity, auditor characteristics (Bryan and
Mason, 2020) and nonaudit fees. This study extends this streak of empirics by studying the
relationship between firm complexity and ARL. Empirics have suggested that ARL is a
crucial measure of audit efforts. We argue that auditors view firm complexity as audit risk
and adjust efforts in response to risk; we expect a positive relation between firm complexity
and ARL. Auditors could perceive firm complexity as increasing risk. Moreover, studies
have pointed out that the sheer length and complexity of firms’ operations can lead to
auditors being misunderstood and misapplied (Bryan and Mason, 2020). Therefore, we
contend that the complexity of firm operations may delay publishing financial reports.
There is good reason to believe that firm complexity may increase ARL in GCC. The firms
must publish their financial report earlier (within 60 days) than most other economies (Baatwah
et al., 2023). This puts extra pressure on the auditor to conduct an audit within a specified time
and additional pressure added by the operation’s complexity makes the process more complex
and challenging (Naser and Hassan, 2016). The complexity may have an inherent risk
associated with difficult accounting estimates; complex firms may be willing to pay a premium
for undertaking such additional risk. If true, we would expect a more robust effort response to
the risk associated with complexity – the risk of timely audit, suggesting a negative
relationship between complexity and ARL. In a counterargument, auditors may perceive a
firm’s complexity as an audit risk and any material misjudgment may put their reputation at
risk; they are likely to exercise more efforts that may take additional time to complete the entire
process (Habib et al., 2019). This implies that complexity increases ARL.
Using a sample of 6,084 firm-year observations of nonfinancial from 2009 to 2022, we find a
positive relation between firm complexity and ARL. However, the association is not strong as we
find a 10% significance level. For further clarity, we examined whether auditor change, auditors’
tenure, audit qualified opinion and adoption of IFRS affect the relation between firm complexity
and ARL. For this purpose, we used interaction terms between firm complexity and auditor
change, auditors’ tenure, audit-qualified opinion and adoption of IFRS. As auditors change,
auditors’ tenure, audit-qualified opinion and adoption of IFRS require more effort to complete the
audit process; thus, there is a higher likelihood of larger ARL. We find audit change, auditors’
tenure and audit-qualified opinion augments the positive association between complexity and
ARL. In contrast, IFRS adoption curtails the relation. With a relatively less established accounting
and regulatory framework, GCC firms have adopted IFRS due to institutional pressures.
We also tested the curtailing effect of audit quality proxied by industrial auditor
specialization and Big-4 for in-depth analyses. We contend that audit quality may improve
the quality and timeliness of financial reports. We confer that audit firms pursue to
specialize in specific industries for some motives. These include enhancing the quality of
audits and minimizing costs by transferring knowledge about audit risks and processes
across similar clients (Dutillieux et al., 2013; Sun et al., 2020). In line with our argument,
industrial specialization curtails the positive association between complexity and ARL.
Similarly, Big-4 audit firms curtail the positive association between firm complexity and
ARL. In our additional analysis, we find that Big-4 and industrial specialization complement Moderating
each other in their association with ARL. Therefore, hiring an audit firm with both role of audit
attributes improves the timeliness of audit reports in GCC economies.
Our research adds to the body of knowledge on ARL by investigating the impact of firms’
quality
complexity on ARL. This is significant because concluding such a relation from studies focusing
on a specific market is limited in scope (Abernathy et al., 2017; Lai, 2019). Therefore, we explored
the role of firm complexity in determining ARL in a unique setting where the timeline of the audit
reports is relatively shorter. Specifically, complex firms are under scrutiny and the likelihood of a
delay in the audit process is more pronounced (Durand, 2019; Toumi et al., 2022). Consistent with
our expectations, we find complexity increases ARL. In addition, the role of associated factors
(auditor change, auditor tenure, audit-qualified opinion and adoption of IFRS) is also explored as
these factors may significantly impact ARL. Unlike previous studies, we examined the moderating
role of these factors in the association between firms’ complexity and ARL. Finally, we investigate
the curtailing effect of audit quality for a positive association between complexity and ARL. We
used audit firm industry specialization and Big-4 as proxies for audit quality (Durand, 2019;
Toumi et al., 2022). Our findings strongly support the curtailing effect of audit quality for a
positive association between complexity and ARL. Finally, we also find that audit quality
attributes (firm industry specialization and Big-4) complement their association with ARL.
Hence, our findings may be interesting for boards and audit committees of client
companies and investors because they may better understand the role of firm complexity in
determining ARL and the motivations to take measures to curtail longer ARL. This is
essential to discussing ARL and its causes in the GCC context. Our research can also help
authorities determine the causes of longer ARL. In contrast, the general findings of studies
on the relationship between firm complexity and ARL remain apparent. Our findings also
have policy implications. The paper also contributes to the agency theory by exploring the
positive role of audit quality proxied by industry specialization and Big-4. Firms with high
agency conflicts are likely to opt for better audit quality as audit quality improves the
timeliness of audit reposts. Therefore, regulators need to ensure better audit quality for
complex firms. In this way, we contribute to the lines of literature investigating the
curtailing effect of audit quality for the positive association between complexity and ARL.
We organize our paper as follows. In Section 2, we summarize audit quality studies and
present our hypotheses. Section 3 covers our methodology, sample selection and data
collection. We offer our empirical data in Section 4 and our conclusions in Section 5.
H2a. Big-4 audit firm curtails the relationship between firm complexity and ARL in
nonfinancial-listed firms in GCC.
Our second audit quality proxy is audit firm industry specialization. Empirical information
on audit firm industry specialization and ARL is sparse. Notably, the limiting effect of audit
firm industry specialization has not been examined in complex business environments and
GCC economies. Our study is particularly significant in GCC economies as firms must report
financial reports on schedule. Considering the direct effect of audit company industry
specialization on ARL, it may reduce the positive relationship between firm complexity and
ARL. Research shows that firm and auditor factors affect ARL (Bryan and Mason, 2020;
JFRA Lai, 2019). The curtailing effect of audit firm industry specialization needs more research as
firm complexity may limit its efficiency in the GCC.
Prior studies show that audit firm industry specialization enhances its expertise and
experience in detecting errors within its domain (Geiger et al., 2022). Industry-specialized
auditors have dealt with the issues that are more common in nature and their procedural
alignments. They are likely to meet the industry’s competence requirements (Hegazy and
Hegazy, 2018). They possess the necessary skills and competence to have clients in a
particular sector (Liao et al., 2022). They also take steps to develop competency, for instance,
through proper staff training (Chen et al., 2022).
Nevertheless, an audit firm with industry specialization properly considers competence
(Habib et al., 2019). Providing workers with additional help and direction should make these
audits easier to organize and execute. An audit firm’s sector specialization can give timely
audit evidence in complex ARL situations (Bryan and Mason, 2020). We predict audit firm
industry specialization to reduce the favorable correlation between company complexity and
ARL. Thus, audit firm industry specialization reduces the favorable effect of complexity on
ARL. Thus, we hypothesize:
H2b. Audit firm industry specialization curtails the relationship between firm
complexity and ARL in nonfinancial-listed firms in GCC.
Notes: The table includes the country-wise description of firms included in the main sample. Only listed Table 1.
firms are included in the sample Data description
Source: Authors’ own creation (country-wise)
AUDIT QUALITY
H2a H2b
FIRM
COMPLEXITY ARL
H1
Control factors
Figure 1.
Conceptual
framework
Source: Authors’ own creation
Variables Mean S/D VIF 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19
Notes: Table 2 provides descriptive statistics, variance inflation factors and correlation. We only provided the variables’ means and standard deviation (s/d) for brevity. ***p < 0.01; **p < 0.05
Source: Authors’ own creation
matrix
role of audit
In Model 1, we used three proxies of ARL (AR, LnARL and AdjARL). For each proxy, we
used separate regression. For H2a and H2b, the following regression is used:
In equation (2), two interaction terms between firm complexity and audit quality (i.e. firm
complexity*Big-4 and firm complexity*audit firm industry specialization) are used to test
the moderation effect. All other variables are the same as mentioned in equation (1).
4. Results
The results are in Table 3. Data analysis was done with E-views. Using the Hausman test
(also known as the Hausman specification test), Garcia-Castro et al. (2010) find endogenous
regressors in regression models. Model variables influence endogenous variables. The value
of Durbin–Wu–Hausman F-statistics is statistically insignificant, reflecting that our model
has no concern for endogeneity.
As we have used three different constructs of ARL, we used three models to empirically
explore the association between firm complexity and ARL. Consistent with our H1, we find
positive effects of firms’ complexity on ARL in GCC countries (p < 0.10: refer to Models 1–3 in
Table 3). Our H1 is supported, implying that firm complexity [1] increases ARL. This also
aligns with earlier studies that supported the positive association between firm complexity and
ARL (Coffie and Bedi, 2019). Complex firms also have multiple business divisions and auditing
for these segments complicates the auditor’s job, resulting in a larger ARL. Furthermore, the
size effect is constant regardless of the ARL proxies used in models. Our thesis also holds that
larger firms are more complicated, with more apparent agency conflicts (Yeboah et al., 2023).
As a result, our findings hold for all three ARL proxies in GCC economies.
Among CEO control factors, CEO duality and tenure increase ARL (p < 0.05; refer to
Models 1–3). CEOs with a dual role have the power to impair board effectiveness and the
dual role empowers them to influence the audit process, resulting in audit delay. In emerging
markets, CEO duality is associated with a high level of agency conflicts (Oradi, 2021). Our
findings align with the argument that CEO duality and tenure increase agency conflicts
(Al-Ebel et al., 2020) as we find a positive impact of CEO duality and tenure on ARL.
Nevertheless, CEO age does not have any significant impact on ARL. In addition, both
governance measures (board independence and gender diversity) do not impact ARL. This
shows the ineffectiveness of corporate governance in GCC economies (Oradi, 2021; Shehata,
2015). We also control for audit committee diligence and size. We discovered that audit
committee diligence and size negatively and statistically significantly affect ARL (Models
1–3 in Table 3). In comparison, audit committee size has a higher level of significance (p <
0.05), which implies that audit committee size has a comparatively more prominent role in
reducing ARL than audit committee diligence (p < 0.10).
ARL LnARL AdjARL
Moderating
M-1 M-2 M-3 role of audit
Independent and control variables Coef SE Coef SE Coef SE quality
Firm complexity 0.198* 0.114 0.185* 0.101 0.179* 0.099
CEO level control
CEO age 0.006 0.005 0.007 0.005 0.006 0.005
CEO tenure 0.122* 0.063 0.105* 0.060 0.088* 0.062
CEO duality 0.188** 0.085 0.135** 0.065 0.139** 0.066
Governance control
Board independence 0.081 0.075 0.041 0.034 0.052 0.036
Board gender diversity 0.015 0.014 0.037 0.031 0.038 0.027
Audit committee characteristics
Audit committee diligence 0.099* 0.058 0.067* 0.039 0.049** 0.031
Audit committee size 0.194** 0.086 0.136** 0.062 0.122** 0.052
Firm characteristics
Financial leverage 0.261** 0.116 0.184** 0.086 0.199** 0.093
Firm age 0.059* 0.031 0.047* 0.028 0.062* 0.034
Market to book value 0.077** 0.039 0.079** 0.040 0.082** 0.041
Profitability 0.283* 0.157 0.171** 0.086 0.183** 0.097
Going concern 0.013* 0.008 0.014* 0.008 0.012* 0.007
Year fixed effect Yes Yes Yes
Industry fixed effect Yes Yes Yes
Country effect Yes Yes Yes
COVID-19 effect Yes Yes Yes
R-squared 0.411 0.420 0.417
Adjusted R-squared 0.400 0.410 0.407
Prob (F-statistic) 0.000 0.000 0.000
Durbin–Watson stat 1.833 1.812 1.822
Durbin–Wu–Hausman F-statistics 3.22 (p ¼ 0.52) 3.19 (p ¼ 0.61) 3.09 (p ¼ 0.56)
Notes: For each proxy, we used a separate model. Parenthesis shows robust standard errors. Table 3.
***, ** and *represent 1, 5 and 10% levels of significance, respectively. I-refers to the controlling factor Firm complexity
Source: Authors’ own creation and ARL
Among controls, financial leverage has a positive and statistically significant impact on
ARL (p < 0.05; refer to Models 1–3 in Table 3). Thus, the firms exposed to the problem of
high leverage often delay their audit report. On the other hand, firm age, market-to-book
value, profitability and going concern statement reduce ARL in GCC economies (Habib et al.,
2019). We also control our models’ year, industry, CIVID and country effects to reduce
estimation bias or measurement deficiency. Consistent with our expectation, we found
similar findings of control factors as reported in the literature.
One can argue on the subjectivity of our findings as the association between complexity
and ARL may rely on certain factors that augment the relation. Therefore, to strengthen our
argument, we used auditor change, auditor tenure, auditor-qualified opinion and adoption of
IFRS (Yamani and Almasarwah, 2019) as factors that may influence the association between
complexity and ARL. The interaction terms between complexity and the variables (auditor
change, auditor tenure, audit qualified opinion and adoption of IFRS) are the variables of
concern. The results are reported in Table 4. To avoid any estimation bias, we used separate
regression for each interaction term (Arifuddin and Usman, 2017). Before introducing the
ARL
JFRA
Table 4.
Subjectivity of
Firm complexity 0.187* 0.168* 0.153* 0.150* 0.153* 0.155* 0.149* 0.148* 0.153* 0.157* 0.152* 0.144*
Auditor change 0.037 0.040 0.042
Auditors’ tenure 0.371** 0.385** 0.344**
Audit qualified opinion 0.221** 0.230** 0.205**
Adoption of IFRS 0.123* 0.141* 0.135*
Interaction terms
Firm complexity*auditor change 0.170*** 0.115** 0.109**
Firm complexity*auditors’ tenure 0.128** 0.085** 0.094**
Firm complexity*auditor-qualified opinion 0.310*** 0.230*** 0.205***
Firm complexity*adoption of IFRS 0.006 0.004 0.007
D in coefficient estimates (interaction term- F¼ F¼ F¼ F¼ F¼ F¼ F¼ F¼ F¼ F¼ F¼ F¼
direct impact) 7.21** 6.08** 19.15*** 1.03 6.55** 8.14** 22.91*** 2.54 9.00** 6.18** 18.47*** 2.06
CEO level control Yes
Year, industry, COVID and country-fixed effect Yes
Notes: We used a separate model for each interaction term. For each proxy, we used a separate model. ***p < 0.01; **p < 0.05; *p < 0.1. I-represents the control
variables included in the model
Source: Authors’ own creation
interaction term, we examined these variables’ direct effects on ARL. Auditor tenure and Moderating
audit-qualified opinion improve GCC ARL with positive and statistically significant role of audit
coefficient estimations. In coefficient assessments and significance, auditor-qualified opinion
had the strongest positive association with ARL. In contrast, we find a positive association
quality
between IFRS adoption and ARL (p < 0.10; Table 4).
However, interaction terms are our variables of concern. As per the findings in Table 4,
all the interaction terms between auditor change, auditor tenure, audit qualified opinion and
ARL are positive and statistically significant (p < 0.01; refer to Table 4). Furthermore, we
calculated the difference in coefficient estimates between the direct impacts of auditor
change, auditor tenure, audit qualified opinion and their interaction terms. We used F-tests
to measure the difference in coefficient estimates and their significance level. The difference
in coefficient estimates between direct impacts of auditor change, auditor tenure, qualified
audit opinion and their interaction terms are positive and statistically significant, which
implies that auditor change, auditor tenure and audit-qualified opinion augment the positive
association between firm complexity and ARL in the GCC context. In comparative terms, the
difference in coefficient estimates of auditor-qualified opinion and its interaction term is
significantly high in terms of coefficient estimates and significance level.
However, the IFRS adoption and complexity relationship is statistically insignificant.
IFRS does not reduce the favorable relationship between corporate complexity and ARL.
According to our findings, a change in auditor, tenure or qualified opinion increases the link
between corporate complexity and ARL. However, IFRS adoption does not enhance the
relationship. We included all those control factors that are a part of our primary model. For
conciseness, we bottled up the findings of control factors.
negative and statistically significant (see Columns 2, 4 and 6 in Table 5). Based on these
findings, it is reasonable to conclude that audit firm industry specialization curtails the positive
impact of firms’ complexity on ARL in GCC economies. The results may be attributed to
designated audit firm industry specialization to improve audit efficiency, which successfully
empowers firms with industrial specialization to discriminate them from rivals (Dao and Pham,
2014). In addition, industry-specialized auditors use technological developments, facilities,
employees and firm control systems to improve their audit efficiency.
6. Additional analyses
6.1 Proxies of firm complexity and audit report lag
Business segments, overseas sales and mergers and acquisitions are external indicators of
organizational complexity (Woo and Koh, 2001). More business sectors, international sales
and a merger, acquisition or joint venture can imply increasing complexity in a firm’s
operation and a larger risk of severe blunders (Bamber et al., 1993). Thus, company
segments and foreign sales indicate corporate complexity.
We used a similar regression as in our main model. The findings are reported in Table 6. As
we have used three different constructs of ARL, we used three models to empirically explore the
association between firm complexity and ARL. In Table 6, Models 1–3 represent the association
between firms’ complexity and ARL (three proxies). Consistent with our main findings reported
in Table 3, we find positive effects of firms’ complexity on ARL in GCC countries (p < 0.10: refer
to Models 1–3 in Table 6). Similarly, the association between firm complexity (measured by the
percentage of foreign sales to total sales) is also aligned with our main findings reported in
Table 3. The association of control factors is similar, as reported in Table 3. However, we find
Business segment Export sales
Moderating
ARL LnARL AdjARL ARL LnARL AdjARL role of audit
M-1 M-2 M-3 M-4 M-5 M-6 quality
Independent and control variables ß ß ß ß ß ß
Notes: For each proxy, we used a separate model. For brevity, only coefficient estimates are provided.
***p < 0.01; **p < 0.05; *p < 0.1; Durbin–Wu–Hausman F-statistics value is 2.98 (p ¼ 0.66). I-represents Table 6.
the control variables included in the model Proxies of firm
Source: Authors’ own creation complexity and ARL
minor variations in coefficient estimates, which are negligible in the context of the current study.
In conclusion, we find a positive association between firm complexity and ARL in GCC
countries. Our findings are robust to different measures of complexity.
Notes: We created two subsamples based on PSM technique. We provided results of pre- and post-match
Table 7. samples. After matching samples, we regressed logit regression for both samples. ***p < 0.01; **p < 0.05;
Propensity score *p < 0.1
matching Source: Authors’ own creation
Table 7 shows the results of a postmatch sample t-test comparing treatment and control firms
in both panels for clarity. Postmatch analysis shows no significant variations in variables of
concern. The findings corroborate our PSM strategy. We use logit regression for pre- and
postmatch samples. We set a dummy in Panel C to 1 if Big-4 audits a firm and 0 otherwise.
Similarly, we created a dummy in Panel D based on specialized and nonspecialized audit
firms. The results in both panels show that the variables of concern have an insignificant
impact on the dependent variable (Big-4 dummy and specialized audited dummy). Again,
our selection of PSM is strongly supported.
In addition, the value of Pseudo R2 in the logit regression is 0.668 and 0.672, which is
relatively higher than 0.091 and 0.102, respectively, in postmatch regression (refer to Table 7;
Panel C). More importantly, the sample selected on a PSM basis confirms the “equal trend” Moderating
assumption between the groups, which helps the researcher encounter the endogeneity concern. role of audit
Table 8 shows the results of rerunning Model 2 on the PSM sample. In Sample A, we
empirically examined Big-4’s curtailing role towards business complexity and ARL
quality
relationship. As shown in Table 8, the indicator signals and significant level for coefficient
estimates of explanatory factors in both subsamples (Specialist and Big 4) match our
primary findings in Table 5. However, coefficient estimates varied somewhat, which is
inconsequential in this investigation.
Similarly, we also reported findings on the curtailing effect of audit firm industry
specialization (refer to table). Again, we found robustness in our main findings. Through PSM,
we can address the following concerns. First, our findings disprove that industry specialists or
Big-4 auditors may incentivize firms by ensuring efficient and successful audits. Second, expert
and Big-4 auditors prefer customers with excellent internal control systems, strong finances
and low insolvency risk. These findings support Tables 4 and 5’s key conclusions.
Notes: For brevity, only coefficient estimates are provided. ***p < 0.01; **p < 0.05; *p < 0.1. Parentheses
Table 9. represent the robust standard errors. D represents a change in coefficient estimates. I-represents the control
Complementary or variables included in the model
substitution role Source: Authors’ own creation
the positive association between firm complexity and ARL. Therefore, one must Moderating
consider auditor change, tenure and auditor-qualified opinion while explaining the role of audit
association between complexity and ARL (Habib et al., 2019). In brief, the firm’s
complexity increases ARL in GCC economies.
quality
Next, we show that audit firms with industry specialization do audits faster than
nonindustrial specialists. Big-4 audit firms also audit faster than non-Big-4 firms. Instead
of the standard technique, we used interaction terms to examine their curtailment of the
positive connection between company complexity and ARL. We found that Big-4 reduces
the positive linkage between company complexity and ARL. Past studies show that Big-4
audit firms are more qualified, motivated and innately talented. Therefore, they execute
audits faster (Habib et al., 2019). Better audit methodology and internal control systems
improve employee performance, quality and audits. According to our findings,
complicated organizations may choose Big-4 auditors for speedy audits. Big-4 reduces
the positive connection between company complexity and ARL for all ARL proxies.
Audit report timeliness improves with audit firm industry specialization. Expert auditors
in the industry perform better audits and better client services. Our results stand up to
PSM. We control for many firm-specific characteristics. We found comparable outcomes
to previous research.
In addition, our study also has a theoretical contribution. Agency conflicts are more
pronounced in emerging markets. These are attributed to poor governance and managerial
entrenchments (Habib et al., 2019). Audit quality can be used as an effective mechanism to
reduce agency conflicts. Thus, better audit quality can reduce conflicts arising due to delays
in audit reports.
8. Policy implication
Given that firms’ complexity increases ARL in GCC economies, our findings support the
earlier argument that complex firms often have larger ARL. In GCC, firms have a
shorter period to complete their audit and the likelihood of larger ARL is more
pronounced in complex firms. After highlighting the role of firm complexity in ARL,
our study provided evidence regarding the curtailing effect of audit quality. Based on
our findings, policymakers and reformists are encouraged to opt for better audit quality
to curtail the likelihood of larger ARL. We strongly recommend particular treatment in
the regulatory framework for firms experiencing auditor change through the standard
procedures under regulatory compliance. Our audit quality proxies serve well when
firm complexity increases ARL. Similarly, the stakeholder can influence management
to hire industrial specialists or Big-4 audit firms to conduct an audit on a timely basis.
Hiring an external auditor with both qualities (audit firm industry specialization and
Big-4) curtails ARL as both attributes complement each other in their association with
ARL.
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Corresponding author
Faisal Khan can be contacted at: faisal_khan702@yahoo.com
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