TY - JOUR
T1 - Trust and Professional Skepticism in the Relationship between Auditrors and Clients: Overcoming the Dichotomy Myth
AU - Aschauer, Ewald
AU - Fink, Matthias
AU - Moro, Andrea
AU - van Bakel-Auer, Katharina
AU - Warming-Rasmussen, Bent
PY - 2017
Y1 - 2017
N2 - This study empirically investigates the relationship between auditors' identification-based trust in client firms' managers (CEOs/CFOs) and their perceptions of auditors' professional skepticism. We employ a multimethod approach broken down into two studies. First, in Study 1, we approached auditors and clients using narrative interviews in order to identify the working definitions of interpersonal trust and professional skepticism and also to develop an empirical and testable hypothesis against the backdrop of the current literature. Second, in Study 2, an ordinary least squares regression based on data collected from 233 real auditor-client dyads in Germany reveals that auditors' identification-based trust is positively associated with their clients' perception of the auditors' professional skepticism. The identified coexistence of trust and professional skepticism in auditor-client dyads implies that regulatory measures that impede the evolution of trust between auditors and their clients will fail to enhance professional skepticism. Instead, regulations should give auditors and their clients sufficient leeway to establish identification-based trust.
AB - This study empirically investigates the relationship between auditors' identification-based trust in client firms' managers (CEOs/CFOs) and their perceptions of auditors' professional skepticism. We employ a multimethod approach broken down into two studies. First, in Study 1, we approached auditors and clients using narrative interviews in order to identify the working definitions of interpersonal trust and professional skepticism and also to develop an empirical and testable hypothesis against the backdrop of the current literature. Second, in Study 2, an ordinary least squares regression based on data collected from 233 real auditor-client dyads in Germany reveals that auditors' identification-based trust is positively associated with their clients' perception of the auditors' professional skepticism. The identified coexistence of trust and professional skepticism in auditor-client dyads implies that regulatory measures that impede the evolution of trust between auditors and their clients will fail to enhance professional skepticism. Instead, regulations should give auditors and their clients sufficient leeway to establish identification-based trust.
UR - https://meridian.allenpress.com/bria/article-abstract/29/1/19/67255/Trust-and-Professional-Skepticism-in-the?redirectedFrom=fulltext
U2 - 10.2308/bria-51654
DO - 10.2308/bria-51654
M3 - Journal article
SN - 1050-4753
VL - 29
SP - 19
EP - 42
JO - Behavioral Research in Accounting
JF - Behavioral Research in Accounting
IS - 1
ER -