Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > The determinants of audit fees
View graph of relations

The determinants of audit fees: evidence from the charity sector

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

The determinants of audit fees: evidence from the charity sector. / Beattie, Vivien; Goodacre, Alan; Pratt, Ken et al.
In: Accounting and Business Research, Vol. 31, No. 4, 2001, p. 243-274.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Beattie, V, Goodacre, A, Pratt, K & Stevenson, J 2001, 'The determinants of audit fees: evidence from the charity sector', Accounting and Business Research, vol. 31, no. 4, pp. 243-274. https://doi.org/10.1080/00014788.2001.9729619

APA

Beattie, V., Goodacre, A., Pratt, K., & Stevenson, J. (2001). The determinants of audit fees: evidence from the charity sector. Accounting and Business Research, 31(4), 243-274. https://doi.org/10.1080/00014788.2001.9729619

Vancouver

Beattie V, Goodacre A, Pratt K, Stevenson J. The determinants of audit fees: evidence from the charity sector. Accounting and Business Research. 2001;31(4):243-274. doi: 10.1080/00014788.2001.9729619

Author

Beattie, Vivien ; Goodacre, Alan ; Pratt, Ken et al. / The determinants of audit fees : evidence from the charity sector. In: Accounting and Business Research. 2001 ; Vol. 31, No. 4. pp. 243-274.

Bibtex

@article{6205fbdca2da4a6aa7609deefd35b7ab,
title = "The determinants of audit fees: evidence from the charity sector",
abstract = "Given the growing demand for accountability in the public sector, there is a need to begin to investigate audit pricing issues in this sector. This study makes three contributions. First, it develops and estimates, for the first time, a model of audit fee determinants for the charity sector. As in previous private sector company studies, size, organisational complexity and audit firm location are the major determinants. A positive association between audit fees and fees for non-audit services is also observed. Charity sector factors of empirical significance include the nature of the charity (i.e., grant-making or fund-raising), its area of activity and the importance of trading income. Separate models for grant-making and fund-raising charities reflect the relative complexity of the audit of fund-raising charities. Second, the lower auditor concentration in the charity sector market, compared to the private sector market, permits a more powerful test of whether large firms and/or auditor expertise are rewarded with a fee premium. In the more complex audit environment of fund-raising charities, the results show that Big Six audit firms receive higher audit fees (18.5%, on average) than non-Big Six firms. Also, non-Big Six audit firms with charity expertise are rewarded with a fee premium over other non-Big Six firms. Finally, the study demonstrates that the charity audit fee rate is significantly lower than that of private sector companies; in fact it is approximately half. A change in the reporting of charity audit fees is proposed to reflect any element of {\textquoteleft}charitable giving{\textquoteright} by the audit firm.",
keywords = "audit fees, auditor expertise, charity sector, fee premium, non-audit services",
author = "Vivien Beattie and Alan Goodacre and Ken Pratt and Joanna Stevenson",
year = "2001",
doi = "10.1080/00014788.2001.9729619",
language = "English",
volume = "31",
pages = "243--274",
journal = "Accounting and Business Research",
issn = "0001-4788",
publisher = "Routledge",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The determinants of audit fees

T2 - evidence from the charity sector

AU - Beattie, Vivien

AU - Goodacre, Alan

AU - Pratt, Ken

AU - Stevenson, Joanna

PY - 2001

Y1 - 2001

N2 - Given the growing demand for accountability in the public sector, there is a need to begin to investigate audit pricing issues in this sector. This study makes three contributions. First, it develops and estimates, for the first time, a model of audit fee determinants for the charity sector. As in previous private sector company studies, size, organisational complexity and audit firm location are the major determinants. A positive association between audit fees and fees for non-audit services is also observed. Charity sector factors of empirical significance include the nature of the charity (i.e., grant-making or fund-raising), its area of activity and the importance of trading income. Separate models for grant-making and fund-raising charities reflect the relative complexity of the audit of fund-raising charities. Second, the lower auditor concentration in the charity sector market, compared to the private sector market, permits a more powerful test of whether large firms and/or auditor expertise are rewarded with a fee premium. In the more complex audit environment of fund-raising charities, the results show that Big Six audit firms receive higher audit fees (18.5%, on average) than non-Big Six firms. Also, non-Big Six audit firms with charity expertise are rewarded with a fee premium over other non-Big Six firms. Finally, the study demonstrates that the charity audit fee rate is significantly lower than that of private sector companies; in fact it is approximately half. A change in the reporting of charity audit fees is proposed to reflect any element of ‘charitable giving’ by the audit firm.

AB - Given the growing demand for accountability in the public sector, there is a need to begin to investigate audit pricing issues in this sector. This study makes three contributions. First, it develops and estimates, for the first time, a model of audit fee determinants for the charity sector. As in previous private sector company studies, size, organisational complexity and audit firm location are the major determinants. A positive association between audit fees and fees for non-audit services is also observed. Charity sector factors of empirical significance include the nature of the charity (i.e., grant-making or fund-raising), its area of activity and the importance of trading income. Separate models for grant-making and fund-raising charities reflect the relative complexity of the audit of fund-raising charities. Second, the lower auditor concentration in the charity sector market, compared to the private sector market, permits a more powerful test of whether large firms and/or auditor expertise are rewarded with a fee premium. In the more complex audit environment of fund-raising charities, the results show that Big Six audit firms receive higher audit fees (18.5%, on average) than non-Big Six firms. Also, non-Big Six audit firms with charity expertise are rewarded with a fee premium over other non-Big Six firms. Finally, the study demonstrates that the charity audit fee rate is significantly lower than that of private sector companies; in fact it is approximately half. A change in the reporting of charity audit fees is proposed to reflect any element of ‘charitable giving’ by the audit firm.

KW - audit fees

KW - auditor expertise

KW - charity sector

KW - fee premium

KW - non-audit services

U2 - 10.1080/00014788.2001.9729619

DO - 10.1080/00014788.2001.9729619

M3 - Journal article

VL - 31

SP - 243

EP - 274

JO - Accounting and Business Research

JF - Accounting and Business Research

SN - 0001-4788

IS - 4

ER -