Audit quality and audit report lag: Case of Indonesian listed companies

Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to empirically examine the relation between two dimensions of auditor quality, namely, auditor industry specialization and auditor reputation and the audit report lag. Design/methodology/approach: The data collection focuses on companies listed on the Indonesia...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Rusmin, Rusmin, Evans, John
Format: Journal Article
Published: Emerald Group Publishing Limited 2017
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/53185
_version_ 1848759085792493568
author Rusmin, Rusmin
Evans, John
author_facet Rusmin, Rusmin
Evans, John
author_sort Rusmin, Rusmin
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to empirically examine the relation between two dimensions of auditor quality, namely, auditor industry specialization and auditor reputation and the audit report lag. Design/methodology/approach: The data collection focuses on companies listed on the Indonesia Stock Exchange for the financial year of 2010 and 2011. To ensure data homogeneity and reduce industry bias, this study focuses solely on manufacturing companies identified by the Indonesian Capital Market Directory. Findings: This study finds a negative and significant association between industry-specialist auditors and audit report timeliness. Companies audited by industry-specialist auditors have shorter audit delays. The authors also find evidence that Big 4 auditors perform significantly faster audit work than their non-Big 4 counterparts. In addition, this study reports a statistical and significant relationship between auditing complexity, companies' profitability, auditors' business risk, and industry classification and audit report lag. The results show that firms with a large number of subsidiaries and firms experiencing poorer financial performance are found to be associated with longer reporting delays. Moreover, audit report timeliness is found to be faster for companies in the low-profile industry sector and owned by family members. Research limitations/implications: Similar to other empirical investigations, this study is not without certain caveats. First, the period of audit report lag in this study reflects the audit work from the year-end to the audit report date. The authors do not consider audit work conducted outside this period in the analysis. Second, there are numerous control variables and although the authors have attempted to capture those variables to maintain the integrity of the research there are likely other excluded variables that may be important in explaining audit report timeliness. Finally, there are other factors, for example, an administrative approval process with the audit firm home office, which can affect audit report lags but have not been included in the model analysis. Future studies can seek to focus on refinements to the proxy measures for dependent and experimental variables. Practical implications: Insights drawn from this study may be of assistance to policy makers as they consider the costs and benefits associated with varying levels of audit market concentration as well as providing a snapshot of the level of non-compliance on audit timeliness in Indonesia. Originality/value: This study provides further empirical evidence on the relation between auditor quality and audit report lag using data from a different domestic setting. This study also enriches the auditor quality literature by employing industry-specialist and Big 4 auditors as a predictor for the timeliness of audit reports.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T09:54:17Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-53185
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T09:54:17Z
publishDate 2017
publisher Emerald Group Publishing Limited
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-531852017-10-12T08:13:03Z Audit quality and audit report lag: Case of Indonesian listed companies Rusmin, Rusmin Evans, John Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to empirically examine the relation between two dimensions of auditor quality, namely, auditor industry specialization and auditor reputation and the audit report lag. Design/methodology/approach: The data collection focuses on companies listed on the Indonesia Stock Exchange for the financial year of 2010 and 2011. To ensure data homogeneity and reduce industry bias, this study focuses solely on manufacturing companies identified by the Indonesian Capital Market Directory. Findings: This study finds a negative and significant association between industry-specialist auditors and audit report timeliness. Companies audited by industry-specialist auditors have shorter audit delays. The authors also find evidence that Big 4 auditors perform significantly faster audit work than their non-Big 4 counterparts. In addition, this study reports a statistical and significant relationship between auditing complexity, companies' profitability, auditors' business risk, and industry classification and audit report lag. The results show that firms with a large number of subsidiaries and firms experiencing poorer financial performance are found to be associated with longer reporting delays. Moreover, audit report timeliness is found to be faster for companies in the low-profile industry sector and owned by family members. Research limitations/implications: Similar to other empirical investigations, this study is not without certain caveats. First, the period of audit report lag in this study reflects the audit work from the year-end to the audit report date. The authors do not consider audit work conducted outside this period in the analysis. Second, there are numerous control variables and although the authors have attempted to capture those variables to maintain the integrity of the research there are likely other excluded variables that may be important in explaining audit report timeliness. Finally, there are other factors, for example, an administrative approval process with the audit firm home office, which can affect audit report lags but have not been included in the model analysis. Future studies can seek to focus on refinements to the proxy measures for dependent and experimental variables. Practical implications: Insights drawn from this study may be of assistance to policy makers as they consider the costs and benefits associated with varying levels of audit market concentration as well as providing a snapshot of the level of non-compliance on audit timeliness in Indonesia. Originality/value: This study provides further empirical evidence on the relation between auditor quality and audit report lag using data from a different domestic setting. This study also enriches the auditor quality literature by employing industry-specialist and Big 4 auditors as a predictor for the timeliness of audit reports. 2017 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/53185 10.1108/ARA-06-2015-0062 Emerald Group Publishing Limited restricted
spellingShingle Rusmin, Rusmin
Evans, John
Audit quality and audit report lag: Case of Indonesian listed companies
title Audit quality and audit report lag: Case of Indonesian listed companies
title_full Audit quality and audit report lag: Case of Indonesian listed companies
title_fullStr Audit quality and audit report lag: Case of Indonesian listed companies
title_full_unstemmed Audit quality and audit report lag: Case of Indonesian listed companies
title_short Audit quality and audit report lag: Case of Indonesian listed companies
title_sort audit quality and audit report lag: case of indonesian listed companies
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/53185