The Influence of Management's Internal Audit Experience on Earnings Management Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • ABSTRACTWe examine whether firms with managers that have prior internal audit experience are less likely to manage earnings. This examination is important because the internal audit function (IAF) is uniquely positioned to provide experiences that could influence future managerial behavior, including limiting the potential negative repercussions of earnings management. We find that firms with managers that have internal audit experience are associated with lower real earnings management (REM) but not accrualsbased earnings management. Effects are strongest when managers with internal audit experience have greater power or currently hold financial roles, or when there are a greater number of managers with internal audit experience. The results are robust to including firm fixed effects, using entropybalancing and performancematching approaches, using a subsample of firmyears required to have an IAF, using a subsample of firms for which we can measure IAF quality, and measuring internal audit experience at a previous employer. These results point to an important benefit of manager internal audit experience, as research suggests that REM is common, difficult to detect, not always within the scope of financial reporting regulators, and detrimental to future performance.

published proceedings

  • CONTEMPORARY ACCOUNTING RESEARCH

altmetric score

  • 0.5

author list (cited authors)

  • Ege, M., Seidel, T. A., Sterin, M., & Wood, D. A.

citation count

  • 4

complete list of authors

  • Ege, Matthew||Seidel, Timothy A||Sterin, Mikhail||Wood, David A

publication date

  • September 2022

publisher