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AUDITING: A Journal of Practice & Theory
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Audit Fees at U.S. Non-Profit Organizations
Auditing: A Journal of Practice & Theory 28 (2), 289 (2009);
doi: 10.2308/aud.2009.28.2.289
SUMMARY: Non-profit organizations account for a significant share of the U.S. national economy. Some recent scandals and governance failures in non-profits have led to increased scrutiny of non-profits, including new state laws related to external audits. In this paper, we extend audit fee research by developing a model that seeks to explain non-profit audit fees. Results from data provided by 125 of the largest non-profits indicate that auditee size, complexity, liquidity, and resource dependency are associated with audit fees; in addition, audit fees are higher for non-profits with a Big 4 auditor. The results also suggest that alternative monitoring mechanisms, such as a good audit committee and internal auditing, are complements rather than substitutes for monitoring by external auditors. Our results can be useful for researchers examining non-profit auditing-related issues and for non-profit organizations seeking to benchmark their audit fees.
©2009 American Accounting Association
| History: | Submitted September 2006; accepted September 2008; published November 2009 |
| Permalink: |
http://link.aip.org/link/AJPTXX/v28/i2/p289/s1 |
PUBLICATION DATA
0278-0380 (print)
1558-7991 (online)







