Abstract

<p>This paper intends to analyze the determinants of audit fees in Portugal and Spain at a time when the audit profession has felt increasingly strong pressures on its ethical, independence and quality posture, showing that audit fees behave differently in these two countries. The liberalization of audit services in Portugal, with the elimination in 2005 of the table setting the minimum fees based on the size standards of the audited company, arouses the interest in perceiving the factors that determine audit fees. In Spain, the various financial scandals have placed audit fees in the main focus. These countries, which form the Iberian Peninsula, have a strongly related economic and cultural history, having also joined the European Union on the same date. In addition, audit fees have not been much studied in these countries, so it is important to perceive their behavior by comparing results. The results indicate that, in Spain, audit fees are determined mainly by the size, complexity and risk of the audited company. It was also found that in Spain the big four companies charge higher fees and that companies that change their audit firm pay lower fees in the year of rotation. In Portugal, the size of the audited company was considered the only factor contributing to the determination of audit fees. The analysis includes a sample of 39 listed companies in Portugal and 104 companies listed in Spain for the period of 2013 to 2015 using the ordinary least squares.</p>

Highlights

  • The concern about the reliability of financial information has been growing over the last years

  • The analysis includes a sample of 39 listed companies in Portugal and 104 companies listed in Spain for the period of 2013 to 2015 using the ordinary least squares

  • Comparing the Portuguese audit market with the Spanish one, it can be observed that 18% of the companies listed on the Portuguese stock exchange are audited by non-big four, while in Spain this share decreases to 12%

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Summary

Introduction

The concern about the reliability of financial information has been growing over the last years. Stakeholders, in general, have become more demanding In this context, the auditing profession as an activity whose main function is to contribute to the reliability of information is experiencing a strong pressure on its ethical position, independence and quality. Audit fees can jeopardize the auditor’s independence to the extent that if they are set high they can indicate corruption between client and auditor, but if too low it can be indicative that the auditor did not take the necessary efforts to issue a proper opinion. Auditor’s work should not be limited to the amount of their fees but be based on a judgment of what is necessary to achieve an adequate opinion (Collier & Gregory, 1996)

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