The role and the professionalism of the financial auditor in the context of corporate governance.
Manolescu, Maria ; Roman, Aureliana-Geta ; Roman, Costantin 等
1. INTRODUCTION
There is a variety of academic contributions on the topic of
corporate governance. This concept is dealt with from an array of
perspectives: narrow and broad perspectives (Solomon, 2010), managerial
perspectives (Huse, 2007), but also finance, legal and compliance
perspectives. Here, corporate governance is understood as the way a
company is directed and controlled, and, as Sison (2008) notes, as
"he system of checks and balances, both internal and external to
companies, which ensure that companies discharge their accountability to
all their stakeholders [...]". One of these accountability
mechanisms is financial audit. This type of external auditing has been
previously researched in connection with ethics and professionalism. The
present paper builds upon the existing research and has the purpose to
explore the relationship between auditor independence, professional
judgment and professionalism in the context of corporate governance.
2. RESEARCH DESIGN
The research methodology is analytical and argumentative in nature:
first, the concept and mechanisms of corporate governance are discussed;
second, the auditor's role is analyzed and arguments in favor of
the existence of interdependencies between external auditors, internal
auditors and audit committee are brought; third, the main pressures
exerted on the financial auditor are analyzed, with reference to auditor
independence; and last but not least, authors argue there is a strong
relationship between auditor independence, professional judgement and
professionalism on one hand and corporate governance on the other hand.
Thus, the paper has the structure of an argumentative essay, whereas all
arguments converge to the main concluding idea.
3. CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
Generally, corporate governance represents a set of relationships
between the entity's management, its shareholders and other
stakeholders. From the perspective of agency theory, the owners of the
resources (entity's shareholders) play the role of principles, who
entrust their resources to the entity's managers (agents), for them
to manage those resources and create added value. In order to ensure an
honest, efficient and effective administration of resources, the
entity's shareholders, in particular and all stakeholders, in
general, establish a group of mechanisms that build up the governance
system.
Mainly, these corporate governance mechanisms are: the board, the
audit committee, the internal audit function and the external audit.
4. FINANCIAL AUDITOR'S ROLE
The auditor's explicit role is to issue an opinion on the
financial statements of an economic entity. He concludes on whether they
present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position and
performance of the audited company. The auditor's implicit role, on
the other hand, is to offer credibility to the financial statements.
This need for trust belongs to investors and other stakeholders due to
the fact that the preparation of the financial statements is the
responsibility of the managers entrusted with financial resources. These
managers might be tempted to pursue their own interests and not those of
the company's shareholders. Thus, from the perspective of agency
theory, auditor's role is of monitoring and bonding in the contract
between agent (manager) and principle (investor). Auditor's work
reduces the information asymmetries between shareholders and managers,
who cannot be directly controlled.
However, financial audit cannot fulfill its role without
interacting with other corporate governance mechanisms, among which the
most relevant are the internal audit function and the audit committee.
On one hand, internal auditors support financial auditor's work in
several ways. First, they can enable external auditors a better
understanding of the internal control system. Second, they may assist in
choosing a sample to be tested and in sending confirmation letters to
debtors and banks. On the other hand, the audit committee has the task
to monitor the activity of the financial auditor. It is essential for
the auditor and the audit committee to communicate in an accurate and
timely manner. Additionally, the audit committee monitors an important
professional trait of the auditor: independence.
5. AUDITOR INDEPENDENCE AND PRESSURES
Audit and auditor's work are intrinsically linked to the
concept of accountability. It is generally accepted that one of the more
important roles of an audit is that of monitoring and securing
accountability. In fact, this is why audit is so important, mainly
because it is a critical element in achieving accountability. However, a
central point of audit and accountability is that of independence. The
argument is that credibility can only be associated with persons seen to
be independent of both the subject of the audit and of any interested
stakeholders. Therefore, auditor independence clearly adds value to the
financial statements by transforming them from unaudited information to
credible information. In view of the importance of auditor independence,
research done by scholars has identified possible areas of conflict
between different groups of stakeholders. It suggested that, where
conflict existed, pressures affecting auditor independence might arise.
Therefore, the pressures the financial auditor must deal with are
numerous. On one hand, the auditor-auditee contract leads to pressures
related to the time budget, the negotiated fee or the existing
competition (Arnold et al., 2001, pp. 326).
First, time pressures originate in the limited time resources
allocated to performing certain tasks during audit engagements
(Liyanarachchi and McNamara, 2007, pp. 62). Second, fee pressure acts in
two different ways: (1) stimulated by the high level of fees, auditors
may exert increased effort in the auditing work and thus they can offer
higher quality audit services; (2) fees can create the appearance of an
economic dependency on the client. Last but not least, auditors face
competition-driven pressures. The client company may refuse their
services, and chose another supplier of audit services (Mocanu, 2009,
pp. 12).
Factors of pressure on the financial auditor are also generated
within the social contract. The interest of the profession and its
members is to maintain their self-regulatory powers, and to offer at the
same time an accepted level of audit quality. For accomplishing this
interest, the profession issues new standards, improves the existing
ones and revises entrance requirements (Arnold et al., 2001, pp. 326).
The auditor is thus pressured to constantly adapt to such regulatory
changes.
Ideally, both contracts can be satisfied by the financial auditor,
to the content of all participants within the audit environment. For
that purpose, the financial auditor ought to identify a solution that
meets both the social contract and the auditor-auditee contracts (Arnold
et al., 2001). Identifying this solution is not possible without
exerting professional judgment and has no value without maintaining the
independence of the financial auditor, in spite of all pressures.
6. AUDITOR'S PROFESSIONAL JUDGMENT
The financial auditor, as a professional in accounting and audit,
adds credibility to the financial statements. Throughout his work,
during the audit process, the auditor uses an element which is central
and critical for its entire activity: professional judgment.
Professional judgment in auditing is the application of relevant
knowledge and experience in reaching decisions, within the context
provided by auditing and accounting standards and rules of professional
conduct. Professional judgment is the cornerstone for the audit
profession and is applied in all stages of an audit, from planning stage
to the audit opinion. Professional judgment is an integral part of audit
and cannot be dissociated from it. In audit, there is a direct
relationship between professional judgment and the financial
auditor's professionalism.
7. PROFESSIONALISM AND ITS RELATIONSHIP TO AUDITOR'S
PROFESSIONAL JUDGEMENT
Professionalism in audit can be identified with specialists that
represent complex behavioral models, persons with a spirit of duty and
accountability. Among the many characteristics of a professional there
is creative thinking, critical analysis, attentiveness, elevated
language, relentlessness and a fine overall equilibrium. But above all
these there is the professional judgment which is part of every
profession's definition. There is a close relationship between
professional judgment and professionalism because professional judgment
is present in every decision that an auditor takes during an audit and
that has direct implications on the quality of the audit. In turn, the
quality of the audit determines the level of professionalism but it has
to be recognized that professional standards also play a prominent role.
The quality of professional standards will definitely impact the
professional judgment of the auditor and both will impact the quality of
the audit work.
The professional judgment exercised by the auditor in the course of
an audit together with the quality of the audit work will, consequently,
impact the level of audit professionalism. Professional judgment takes
place in the context of professional standards that reflect the
collective judgments of the profession and the characteristics of a
particular industrial sector. Hence, the critical importance of
professional judgment in audit appears as evident.
The absence of comprehensive professional judgment affects the
financial auditor's professionalism and leads to a lower audit
quality, to a negative impact on the process of corporate governance and
to an increase in auditors' exposure to liability claims.
8. CONCLUSIONS
Corporate governance is an internationally debated
interdisciplinary concept. Given the main directions which corporate
governance covers, particularly directors, remuneration, accountability
and audit as well as relations with shareholders, auditors play an
increasingly important role within corporate governance.
The results of the present study are: (1) the clear identification
of the roles of financial audit in relation with other corporate
governance mechanisms such as internal audit and audit committee; (2)
the significance of independence for the proper fulfilment of the
auditor's roles, given the numerous factors of pressures on the
auditor; (3) the arguing of the critical importance of professional
judgement in the audit work; (4) the fact that auditor independence and
professional judgement are key elements for reaching professionalism in
financial audit; (5) the positive impact of audit professionalism on the
process of corporate governance.
This study has certain limitations: it is mostly an argumentative
and analytical work representing research at an incipient level and only
provides a basis for the hypothesis development in a future empirical
research. In fact, the research could be extended by conducting
empirical studies on: how are the financial auditor's role and
professionalism perceived by internal auditors, audit committee and
board of directors and which are the factors that influence
auditor's professionalism. Such further research would consolidate
this paper's idea that financial audit is a significant corporate
governance mechanism.
9. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This paper represents dissemination within the research project
PN-II-ID-PCE-2007-1 nr. ID-795/2007 financed by the state budget through
CNCSIS-UEFISCSU. This article is also a result of the project
"Doctoral Program and PhD Students in the education research and
innovation triangle". This project is co funded by European Social
Fund through The Sectorial Operational Programme for Human Resources Development 2007-2013, coordinated by The Bucharest Academy of Economic
Studies.
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