Brad Cripe (Northern Illinois University) Brian McAllister (University of Colorado at Colorado Springs)
Abstract
This study examines companies that separated or integrated the tax and audit functions subsequent to the passage of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act (SARBOX). While the provision of tax services is not currently prohibited by SARBOX, some companies have separated these two functions. An examination of the relationship between tax function separation (integration) and proxies for audit quality, tax advocacy and audit fee is performed for a matched sample of companies that made the decision to separate or integrate during the period following the passage of SARBOX. In addition, we survey CFOs of both types of companies to determine the motivations behind the separation/integration decision. Our results indicate separation firm CFOs perceive benefits associated with auditor independence as their main reason for separating, while integration firm CFOs perceive cost savings and knowledge spillover as benefits of integration. The matched-pair analysis suggests that both cost-savings and tax-savings are present in the year the tax and audit function is integrated, a benefit not enjoyed by their separation firm peers.
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Publisher Info
Article provided by American Journal of Business (Formerly Named "Mid-American Journal of Business") in its journal American Journal of Business.