Does Status Equal Substance? The Effects of Specialist Social Status on Auditor Assessments of Complex Estimates

A. Gold, Kathryn Kadous, J. Leiby
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Abstract

Auditors rely on specialists in auditing complex estimates, but do they rely on specialists for the right reasons? We examine whether specialists’ high social status influences auditor assessments of specialists’ competence and, in turn, auditors’ conclusions about the reasonableness of client estimates. We argue that specialist social status most likely affects auditor conclusions under conditions of heightened ambiguity, specifically when (1) the specialist disagrees with the client or (2) when the specialist agrees with the client but offers poor justification for the conclusion. We first conduct a survey with highly experienced auditors to distinguish characteristics that are diagnostic of high social status but not of competence. We then conduct two experiments in which we vary status characteristics of the specialist and hold competence constant. Encouragingly, we find that auditors are more willing to disagree with the client's estimate when a high (as opposed to moderate) social status specialist disagrees with it. Contrary to expectations, auditors seem to ignore the quality of specialists' justifications and instead anchor on specialists' conclusions. Moreover, supplemental analyses suggest that auditors unintentionally mistake social status for competence, but intentionally use social status to guide their reliance on the specialist in forming a conclusion about the client’s estimate. That is, auditors know that high social status is not a valid signal of competence, but use this signal in their judgments anyway. Our evidence suggests that this stems from beliefs that a high social status specialist’s clout and social influence is necessary to push back on an aggressive client estimate. We discuss practical and theoretical implications, including that it may be advantageous to separate competence assessments from determinations of how to use the specialist’s input. It may also be advantageous for firms, regulators, and standard setters to recognize that auditors are influenced by specialist attributes other than competence, including the specialist’s social status.
地位等于物质吗?专家社会地位对审计人员复杂评估的影响
审计人员在审计复杂的估计时依赖专家,但是他们依赖专家的原因正确吗?我们研究了专家的高社会地位是否会影响审计师对专家能力的评估,进而影响审计师对客户估计合理性的结论。我们认为,专家的社会地位最有可能在高度模糊的情况下影响审计师的结论,特别是当(1)专家不同意客户的意见,或(2)专家同意客户的意见,但不能为结论提供充分的理由。我们首先与经验丰富的审计师进行调查,以区分高社会地位而不是能力的诊断特征。然后我们进行了两个实验,其中我们改变了专家的地位特征,并保持能力不变。令人鼓舞的是,我们发现,当高(而不是中等)社会地位的专家不同意客户的估计时,审计师更愿意不同意客户的估计。与预期相反,审核员似乎忽略了专家论证的质量,而是依赖专家的结论。此外,补充分析表明,审计师无意中将社会地位误认为能力,而是有意地利用社会地位来指导他们对专家的依赖,以形成关于客户估计的结论。也就是说,审核员知道高的社会地位并不是一个有效的能力信号,但无论如何他们都会在判断中使用这个信号。我们的证据表明,这源于这样一种信念,即高社会地位专家的影响力和社会影响力是击退咄咄逼人的客户评估所必需的。我们讨论了实践和理论意义,包括将能力评估与如何使用专家意见的决定分开可能是有利的。公司、监管机构和标准制定者认识到,审计师受能力以外的专家属性(包括专家的社会地位)的影响,也可能是有利的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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