Dimensions of pressures faced by auditors and its impact on auditors’ independence: A comparative study of the USA and Australia
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2004
Abstract
Research has focused on factors causing pressure and impairing auditor independence. These include competition, opinion shopping, client and auditor size, and client financial health. No study has examined the characteristics of the pressures. Responses to case studies sent to auditors in the USA and Australia were analysed via factor analysis. The objective was, first, to increase understanding of the underlying dimensions of pressures faced by these auditors; and second, to examine any similarities between these two countries, similar in culture, but significantly different in such respects as the legal environment. The results indicate two dimensions: pressure to retain the client, and to conform. The first is a more pervasive but subtle pressure while, in the second, the auditor is asked to follow a certain course of action. Pressure to retain the client appears to be greater for auditors in both countries, relative to the pressure to conform. So the underlying dimensions of the pressures in these countries are similar. © 2004, Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Identifier
84993008455 (Scopus)
Publication Title
Managerial Auditing Journal
External Full Text Location
https://doi.org/10.1108/02686900410509848
ISSN
02686902
First Page
99
Last Page
116
Issue
1
Volume
19
Recommended Citation
Umar, Ahson and Anandarajan, Asokan, "Dimensions of pressures faced by auditors and its impact on auditors’ independence: A comparative study of the USA and Australia" (2004). Faculty Publications. 20546.
https://digitalcommons.njit.edu/fac_pubs/20546
