Abstract

Several serious accounting scandals have occurred in Japan in recent years (e.g., Olympus); however, the government, regulators, and auditing standard setters have struggled to identify new directions for corporate governance in listed companies, such as standard setting to address risks of fraud in an audit or the adoption of new corporate governance codes. The validity and effectiveness of monitoring by outside directors have received criticism within such a context. Nevertheless, in 2015, accounting fraud at Toshiba was discovered, which surprisingly involved upper management; the outside directors had failed to detect and prevent this fraud. Again, the monitoring function of the Japanese board of directors and outside directors was viewed with suspicion. Thus, this study examines Japanese corporations that disclose significant deficiencies (SDs) in internal controls over financial reporting (ICFR) and determines whether replacing the chief executive officer (CEO) and enhancing board members’ independence and financial expertise are followed by SD remediation. The results indicate that Japanese companies that disclose SDs in ICFR are more likely to replace their CEOs and enhance board independence. In addition, this study finds that although these actions do not affect SD remediation, upgrading the board’s accounting expertise does correlate positively with SD remediation. Moreover, if a company remediates a SD by increasing the number of accounting experts on the board, an increase in audit fees during the following term can be mitigated. These findings should be of interest to Japan’s regulators, auditing standard setters, and financial statement users when considering improvements in the quality of internal controls. In particular, these individuals must realize that the control environment is not improved in Japanese firms merely by replacing the CEO and increasing board independence, particularly because new CEOs encounter difficulties in changing the environment established by their predecessors.

Highlights

  • The Financial Instruments and Exchange Act of 2006 (J-SOX) requires that the upper management at all publicly traded Japanese companies report their assessment of the company’s internal controls over financial reporting (ICFR) and present audit reports confirming the validity of their assessments (Sections 24 and 193) (Note 1)

  • The results indicate that many chief executive officer (CEO) take up posts as chairmen after relinquishing their roles as CEOs (60% and above), and the last CEO or former CEO decides on a new CEO at one’s direction (60% and above)

  • Interactions between REMEDIATION and ΔEXPERT correlate significantly and negatively with changes in audit fees (Wald = −1.750, p = 0.084). These results show that remediating significant deficiencies (SDs) affects auditors’ assessment of the control risk and audit fees only when remediation is coupled with a change in corporate governance expertise

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Summary

Introduction

The Financial Instruments and Exchange Act of 2006 (J-SOX) requires that the upper management at all publicly traded Japanese companies report their assessment of the company’s internal controls over financial reporting (ICFR) and present audit reports confirming the validity of their assessments (Sections 24 and 193) (Note 1). J-SOX requires management to disclose all significant deficiencies (SDs) in ICFR at the fiscal year-end. After the scandals came to light, CEOs and boards of directors were replaced or reformed in each case. Within this context, a primary research question centered on whether replacing CEOs and reforming corporate governance in Japanese corporations affected the quality of financial reporting. This study examines the relation between the disclosure of SDs in ICFR and a corporation’s CEO and the independence of its board of directors

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