European Journal of Accounting, Auditing and Finance Research (EJAAFR)

audit input

Audit Quality Characteristics and the Likelihood of Financial Statement Fraud in Nigerian Listed Firms (Published)

This study examines audit quality characteristics’ impact on financial statement fraud likelihood in Nigerian listed firms, using input-process-output factors and controlling for firm size and profitability. Panel design was adopted with a population of 151 firms listed on Nigerian exchange group as at 31st December, 2024. A sample of 110 firms was selected using Yamane formula and stratified random sampling was employed with System GMM applied as the estimation technique. The findings showed that from Audit Input angle, Audit tenure and firm size negatively but insignificantly affect fraud likelihood; audit independence positively insignificant. From Audit Process, Board size negatively affects fraud; board independence negative but insignificant; board meetings significantly positive. Lastly, Audit Output revealed that Audit committee independence and financial expertise significantly negative; committee meetings positively insignificant. It was recommended among others that financial regulators (ICAN, ANAN, FRCN) should standardize audit fees by company size and sector to ensure independence. Increase independent non-executive directors on boards and audit committees; raise financial/accounting experts in audit committees to enhance oversight and reduce fraud risk.

Keywords: Audit Quality, audit input, audit output, audit process, financial statement fraud

Audit Input and Accounting Conservatism Among Listed Firms in Nigeria (Published)

This study investigated the effects of audit quality characteristics in areas of audit independence, audit firm size and audit tenure on accounting conservatism among listed firms in Nigeria. The study used longitudinal and correlation research designs. The population of the study consists 151 firms listed on the Nigerian Exchange Group as at 31st December, 2022. Statistics was analyzed using descriptive in addition to inferential statistics and panel data regression analysis. The results revealed that audit independence had significant positive effect {0.138(0.004)} on accounting conservatism, audit firm size had significant negative effect {-0.0623(0.050)}, while audit tenure had a positive but insignificant effect {0.110(0.494)}. The study recommended that firms in Nigeria should be conscious of the quality of the mechanism imputed into audit engagement in order to ensure audit quality as it has implication on quality of output. Firms should also not compromise audit independence in order to present globally accepted financial reports.

Keywords: Audit Firm Size, audit independence, audit input, audit tenure and accounting conservatism.

Scroll to Top

Don't miss any Call For Paper update from EA Journals

Fill up the form below and get notified everytime we call for new submissions for our journals.