Citation:
López Puertas-Lamy, M., Desender, K., & Epure, M. (2017). Corporate social responsibility and the assessment by auditors of the risk of material misstatement. Journal of Business Finance & Accounting, 44 (9-10), pp. 1276-1314
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-contributor-funder:
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España) Comunidad de Madrid
Sponsor:
The authors also acknowledge support from the Fundación Ramon Areces, Projects ECO2013-48328-C03-3-P, ECO2013-45864-P, ECO2014-57131-R, ECO2016-75961-R and ECO2016-77579-C3-2-P financed by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation and project INNCOMCON-CM(S2015/HUM-3417).
Project:
Gobierno de España. ECO2013-45864-P Gobierno de España. ECO2016-75961-R Gobierno de España. ECO2013-48328-C03-3-P Gobierno de España. ECO2014-57131-R Gobierno de España. TEC-2010-21619-C04-01 Comunidad de Madrid.S2015/HUM-3417
Keywords:
Audit fees
,
Corporate social responsibility (CSR)
,
CSR performance
,
Risk of material misstatement
This paper investigates whether, and how, firms’ corporate social responsibility (CSR) performance influences the auditor's assessment of the risk of material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error, at the financial statement level by analysing their pricThis paper investigates whether, and how, firms’ corporate social responsibility (CSR) performance influences the auditor's assessment of the risk of material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error, at the financial statement level by analysing their pricing decision (i.e., audit fees). Using a panel data set of 12,330 firms from 28 countries over the period 2003–2012 and different measures of CSR performance, we find a U-shaped relationship between firms’ CSR performance and audit fees. This result suggests that there is an optimal level of CSR performance that minimizes the auditor's assessment of the risk of material misstatement, which in turn lowers the need for greater auditor effort; that is why auditors charge firms significantly less when their CSR performance is at the optimal level. Finally, we also show that the optimal level of CSR performance varies with the degree of environmental dynamism, ownership concentration and leverage.[+][-]