An economic analysis of audit and nonaudit services: The trade-off between competition crossovers and knowledge spillovers
成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Wu, Martin G. H.
署名单位:
University of Illinois System; University of Illinois Chicago; University of Illinois Chicago Hospital
刊物名称:
CONTEMPORARY ACCOUNTING RESEARCH
ISSN/ISSBN:
0823-9150
DOI:
10.1506/4DA7-D9YU-P9HQ-PX82
发表日期:
2006
页码:
527-554
关键词:
post-big 8
industry specialization
MARKET
Reputations
assessments
expertise
demand
RISK
摘要:
In this paper, I present a model in which both markets for audit services and nonaudit services (NAS) are oligopolistic. Accounting firms providing both audit services and NAS will employ oligopolistic competition in each of these markets. In addition to auditors' gaining knowledge spillovers from auditing to consulting or vice versa, oligopolistic competition in one market will influence the counterpart in the other market - what I call competition crossovers. Although scope economies due to knowledge spillovers (for example, cost savings) are always beneficial to auditors, such benefits can entice accounting firms to adopt strategies (for example, price reductions) to compete aggressively in the audit market so that some, or all, firms become worse off. A trade-off arises between these two economic forces in the two oligopolistic markets. Given the trade-off between competition crossovers and knowledge spillovers, accounting firms may not reduce their audit prices, even though supplying NAS enables firms to decrease auditing costs - a nontrivial impact of oligopolistic competition in two markets on audit pricing. The empirical implication of my results is that because of competition-crossover effects between the auditing and consulting service markets, finding empirical evidence for knowledge-spillover benefits is likely to be difficult. Control variables for audit-market concentration concerned with competition-crossover effects and auditor expertise concerned with know ledge-spillover benefits should be included in audit-fee regressions to increase the power of empirical tests. With regard to policy implications, my analyses help explain the impact of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act on market segmentation and, hence, the profitability of accounting firms.