Taxes and Audit Quality
Marcel Steller/Erich Pummerer, Auditor’s Income Taxation and Audit Quality, SageOpen 2021 https://doi.org/10.1177/21582440211040833
23 Pages Posted: 22 Feb 2014 Last revised: 18 Jan 2023
Date Written: August 25, 2021
Abstract
The effects of taxes have been discussed in almost every decision context in the extant literature, but the relationship between taxes and auditing has amazingly merited little attention. We explore the relationship between audit effort, audit quality and taxes from the perspective of both auditors and the public using an analytical research model. The analysis provides evidence that even symmetric taxes significantly influence audit effort and audit quality when auditors’ risk aversion is considered. While taxes do not influence audit effort monotonically, audit quality generally increases with decreasing tax rates. Hence, taxes may interfere with legislators’ efforts to improve audit quality. Additionally, we show that high quality audits should be a matter of public concern because the public is damaged whenever a party unfairly remains untaxed. Therefore, a socially optimal amount of audit effort exists. We derive a mandate- and auditor-specific liability limitation to achieve a socially optimal level of audit effort.
Keywords: Taxes, Audit Quality, Risk-aversion, Auditing
JEL Classification: M42, M48
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation