Are auditors
becoming too big to fail? For over a decade, there have been articles
and op-eds in the popular and business press arguing that the auditing
industry, currently dominated by Deloitte & Touche, Ernst &
Young, KPMG, and PwC, is a tightening oligopoly, increasingly insulated
from the risks of failure.
Adding
to this concern is that even as the number of mega audit firms has
contracted from eight in the 1980s to four today, their combined market
share
remains formidable, especially in the United States. The Government
Accountability Office, the investigative arm of Congress, periodically
raises concerns about audit-industry concentration and suggests ways to
boost growth of smaller firms. The consolidation raises the issue of how
the surviving big auditors and the nation's accounting regulators will
manage their relationship and what the effects will be on accounting
rules and thus on capital markets, observes Karthik Ramanna, an
associate professor and Henry B. Arthur Fellow in the Accounting and
Management unit at Harvard Business School, where he studies the
political economy of corporate accountability and financial reporting.
Several scenarios are possible.
"There are important implications for the quality of accounting information in corporations and in capital markets"
"We
could imagine that as the audit industry becomes more concentrated, the
big auditors would become increasingly secure in their position
vis-à-vis regulators," Ramanna says. "Thus, they may become more
negligent in their duties or more prone to enabling big risks in
accounting. They wouldn't be as worried about the consequences. This is
basically the argument behind concerns that the Big Four are too big to
fail. "
On the other hand, they could become less likely
to take risks. The audit giants might decide that their dwindling
numbers make them increasingly visible targets for regulatory
interventions and litigation, and they might become more risk averse.
Additionally, with just a few major players in the market, the big firms
might feel less need to compete with each other to satisfy client
demands; this could reinforce their focus on playing it safe by
mitigating potential regulatory and litigation costs.
"In
either case," Ramanna says, "there are important implications for the
quality of accounting information in corporations and in capital
markets, and thus for the ability of managers and markets to effectively
allocate resources across competing projects."
What they say
To
determine which of these possibilities have actually borne out during
the audit industry consolidation over the last few decades, Ramanna and
colleagues measured how the big firms lobbied on proposed accounting
regulations. His paper, coauthored with HBS doctoral student Abigail M.
Allen and Boston College accounting professor Sugata Roychowdhury,
As
it happens, new standards are proposed fairly often by the Financial
Accounting Standards Board. The researchers made the first year of their
study 1973 because that is when
the FASB came into operation. They looked at four distinct eras of
contraction: the Big Eight era (1973-1989), the Big Six era (1990-1998),
the Big Five era (1999-2002), and the Big Four era (2003-2006). All but
the final consolidation were due to mergers and acquisitions; the last
contraction was due to the collapse of Arthur Andersen.
The
researchers studied how often and in what contexts over time the
decreasing number of big audit firms expressed concerns about decreased
"reliability" (a key component of "verifiability," auditing's
touchstone) in proposed standards. To benchmark the auditors'
assessments of decreased accounting reliability, the researchers relied
on independent evaluations of the proposed standards by two experienced
accounting professionals who were blind to the study's
objectives.
Overall,
the results fail to support the proposition that the biggest auditors
increasingly consider themselves too big to fail. Rather, the data show
firms in the tightening oligopoly are more concerned about decreased
reliability over time and sensitive to their growing visibility to
regulators and to potential litigation. This result is robust to
numerous alternative explanations such as the changing composition of
regulators, the growth of fair-value-based accounting, broad
macroeconomic trends, and aggregate stock market performance.
"What this study tell us is that contrary to the claims made in the press that the big auditors are too
big or too few to fail, there is evidence of the audit firms becoming more concerned about taking risks," says Ramanna.
It
makes sense that firms in an oligopoly would not want to make waves.
There is an argument in the political science literature, Ramanna
explains, about the "political costs" from size—that larger firms bear
greater regulatory scrutiny. "It is easier for a politician or
prosecutor to go after 'big fish' because voters know who the big fish
are. That is why when there are fewer audit firms there could be a
greater concern on the firms' part about such political costs."
Good for the industry?
There
is a potential danger in this approach, Ramanna cautions. If audit
firms' focus on reporting verifiability over flexibility goes too far,
it could stifle innovation in accounting methodologies. This would have a
negative impact on the ability of accounting information to facilitate
effective capital allocation decisions in the economy.
"What
we are seeing could also suggest that auditors are socializing or
collectivizing the potential costs of exercising their professional
judgment. Some risk-taking is needed in any professional activity; it is
from such risks that innovation and growth emerge."
For
client-managers, this means that the biggest audit firms are less
likely to strive to meet their preferences for reporting flexibility,
such as customized accounting methods that best reflect clients'
business models. Instead audit firms are playing it safe by
concentrating on verifiability.
A 'thin' world
Mindful
of this tension amid concerns about too big to fail, Ramanna is also
intrigued by the unusually esoteric world of accounting
standard-setting.
Unlike
major government programs such as Social Security and
Medicare, which attract large, general-interest groups to rally,
debate, and participate in the political process whenever changes are
proposed, accounting regulation involves a relatively small pool of big
participants.
For
a start, few people understand the complexities underlying accounting
measurements. Further, the most influential participants are usually
powerful players—major audit firms, large industrial companies, big
investment banks, and top investment management firms. Among this
assemblage, the audit giants are the only group to systematically and
consistently participate across various accounting issues.
Given
the "thin" nature of this
political process, it is particularly important to understand how
increasing concentration in the audit firms affects the nature of
accounting regulation, Ramanna says.
Future
research, the authors hope, will continue to probe the changing audit
oligopoly and its consequences amid increasing globalization,
improvements in information technology, and the rise of the financial
services sector in the US economy.
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