Abstract
PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to provide a comprehensive analysis of the audit services market in Bangladesh. It explores the trend in audit fees over a period of 14 years and shows that in real terms audit fees have actually been declining although in nominal terms it appears otherwise. The study aims to expand the domain of audit fee literature by determining audit concentration in the market and thereby showing how the market is not dominated by the so‐called Big Four firms. The paper also examines the degree of inside ownership as a possible determinant of audit fees.Design/methodology/approachThe paper employs a multivariate analysis of estimating audit fees against mainly client‐specific attributes. It computes Helfindahl Index to measure audit concentration in the market.FindingsResults from the multivariate analysis show that the degree of inside ownership inversely affects audit fees. Client size and their multinational affiliation have a significant positive effect on audit fees. Firms in the financial sector also tend to pay significantly higher audit fees in Bangladesh. The reported inverse relationship between the audit fee and proportion of inside‐ownership in the auditee firm indicates, per agency theory prediction, that firms with more diverse ownership in Bangladesh pay more in audit fees. However, contrary to the findings in prior empirical studies, audit fee was reported to be significantly negatively related to audit complexity. As the audit complexity measure is revised, the variable ceases to be a significant driver of audit fees. This could be attributable to a methodological flaw in the traditional method of measuring audit fees as the ratio of inventory and receivables to total assets or to increased efficiency achieved by auditors via scale economies while auditing companies owned essentially by the same group of people.Research limitations/implicationsThe main limitation of the paper is that the closing period of the data is 2003, although there is no evidence to believe that the general determinants of audit fees have changed in Bangladesh since 2003.Practical implicationsA decline in real audit fees is a matter of concern for the quality of audit services because it may impede audit firms to invest in talent and other forms of audit technology essential to delivering a high quality audit. It may also have wider implications on the quality of financial reporting in the country.Social implicationsIf the audit fees do not increase keeping pace with general power, the profession would struggle to recruit talented individuals to the auditing profession. This may have longer‐term social implications as it may drive away potential graduates with little or no parental resources to support them to develop an accounting career with substantial dependence on family funds.Originality/valueThe current study is the first to introduce ownership structure based perspective, in a multivariate format, to explain what drives audit fees in a developing country setting. It also is the first to compute audit concentration in a developing country context. This is the first paper to present audit fee trend in real terms, i.e. inflation adjusted, client size adjusted, and so on.
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