6533b7d8fe1ef96bd126a2b9

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Corporate governance and firm performance: A comparative analysis of auditing problems

Sabrina Auci

subject

Corporate governancebusiness.industryCorporate governancePrincipal–agent problemStakeholderAuditingAccountingAuditFirm performanceCompany lawGeneral Business Management and AccountingDummy variableCivil law (legal system)Corporate lawSarbanes–Oxley ActBusinessMarket structure

description

The recent financial crises have created a new debate about comparison and convergence of different systems of corporate governance. In particular, they have underlined poor efficiency of rule structures to achieve a good relationship between different stakeholder’s rights. In line with many studies of corporate governance that emphasize the manager-stakeholders relationship as explained by agency theory, in this paper, I analyse the role of auditing as an incentive device to reduce contractual or transaction costs related to asymmetric information.Considering as a benchmark the recent US Sarbanes Oxley Act of July 2002. I describe a set of auditing principles by comparing common and civil corporate laws. First, by using multiple correspondence analysis on six countries and twenty-seven dummy variables on auditing rules, I identify the main variables that form the auditing index. Second, I test the hypothesis that a suitable rule structure can improve the capability of financial markets to estimate the fair value of firms. In particular, I analyse the problem of the effects of direct and indirect monitoring rules for managers on the market value of public companies. The results obtained highlight a different relationship between auditing principles and firm performance from that expected on the basis of the legal framework

https://doi.org/10.22495/cocv4i1c1p2