Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
878566 Accounting, Organizations and Society 2015 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

We examine the effect of perspective taking on auditors’ ability to evaluate managers’ reported earnings and, in turn, contribute to high-quality financial reporting. Using an experimental-economics approach, we design two experiments to investigate auditor – manager interactions. In our first experiment, we manipulate auditors’ prior experience in the manager’s role. We predict and find that role-taking experience stimulates perspective taking, which allows auditors to more readily put themselves “in the manager’s shoes,” benefitting financial-reporting quality. In our second experiment, we examine dispositional perspective taking, focusing on individuals’ propensity to spontaneously take the viewpoint of another, as a dimension of personality. We predict and find that auditors with high perspective-taking disposition are better able to judge managers’ reported earnings than auditors with low perspective-taking disposition. Taken together, the results of our two experiments highlight the importance of perspective taking as a means to enhance auditors’ performance in strategic interactions with managers.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Business, Management and Accounting Accounting
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