Auditor Going Concern Reporting

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A01=Anna Gold
A01=Marshall A. Geiger
A01=Philip Wallage
Audit Committee Members
Audit Firm Size
Audit Firm Tenure
Audit Firms
audit opinion research
Audit opinions
Audit Partner
Audit policy
audit practice
Audit Practitioners
Audit Quality
audit regulation impact
audit regulators
Audit Report Lag
Auditor Dismissals
Auditor Going Concern Reporting
auditor responsibility
Author_Anna Gold
Author_Marshall A. Geiger
Author_Philip Wallage
Bankruptcy Prediction Models
Business failure
business failure warning
Category=KFCM
Category=KFCR
Client Audit Committees
Client's Supply Chain
Client’s Supply Chain
COVID-19 audit challenges
COVID-19 pandemic
empirical studies on going concern reporting
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
external auditor judgement
external auditors
financial distress prediction
Financial Reporting Quality
Future Research Opportunities
GCO
GFC Period
going concern
going concern opinion
IAASB
Impaired Auditor Independence
Increased Audit Quality
Modified Audit Opinions
NAS Fee
NAS Feis
PCAOB
PCAOB Inspection
post-GFC Period
post-SOX Period

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367649494
  • Weight: 280g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 09 Jan 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Auditor reporting on going-concern-related uncertainties remains one of the most challenging issues faced by external auditors. Business owners, market participants and audit regulators want an early warning of impending business failure. However, companies typically do not welcome audit opinions indicating uncertainty regarding their future viability. Thus, the auditor’s decision to issue a "going concern opinion" (GCO) is a complex and multi-layered one, facing a great deal of tension. Given such a rich context, academic researchers have examined many facets related to an auditor’s decision to issue a GCO. This monograph reviews and synthesizes 182 recent GCO studies that have appeared since the last significant review published in 2013 through the end of 2019.

The authors categorize studies into the three broad areas of GCO: (1) determinants, (2) accuracy and (3) consequences. As an integral part of their synthesis, they summarize the details of each study in several user-friendly tables. After discussing and synthesizing the research, they present a discussion of opportunities for future research, including issues created or exacerbated as a result of the global COVID-19 pandemic.

This monograph will be of assistance to researchers interested in exploring this area of auditor responsibility. It will also be of interest to auditing firms and individual practitioners wanting to learn what academic research has examined and found regarding this challenging aspect of audit practice. Auditing standard-setters and regulators will find it of interest as the authors review numerous studies examining issues related to audit policy and regulation, and their effects on GCO decisions. The examination of GCO research is extremely timely given the financial and business disruption caused by the worldwide COVID-19 pandemic. This unprecedented global event has caused companies, auditors and professional bodies to revisit and reassess their approach to going concern, and to think even more deeply about this fundamental business imperative.

Marshall A. Geiger is the CSX Chair in Management and Accounting and Professor of Accounting at the University of Richmond.

Anna Gold is Professor at the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam (VU), adjunct professor at NHH and Editor at The Accounting Review.

Philip Wallage is Professor at the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam (VU) and at the Universiteit van Amsterdam (UvA).

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