Small firm auditing using the analytical procedures (APs) in a politically challenging context
نوع المنشور
بحث أصيل
المؤلفون

Purpose

This study aims to explore the use, effectiveness, motives and obstacles of analytical procedures (APs) used by auditors in Palestine, a context characterised by a pool of small and medium enterprises (SMEs), a limited skill set, poor quality of data, political uncertainty and a community-based business culture.

Design/methodology/approach

The study considers the audit market in Palestine using a sequential mixed-methods approach combining a questionnaire survey and a series of in-depth interviews. A total of 129 Big-4 and non-Big-4 auditors were surveyed.

Findings

The use of APs is driven by the auditor size (Big-4 vs non-Big-4) and the client size (large vs SMEs). Even though the use of APs has increased over the past decade, audit objectives, know-how, and personal, family and social connections among auditors and clients influence the quality of the audit process.

Practical implications

Small firms take advantage of the lack of audit governance in Palestine. Our findings suggest that the regulators should help bridge the knowledge-sharing programmes between the small and large audit firms to help improve audit quality.

Originality/value

Studies on audit quality, particularly using APs, in the context of politically unstable cases such as Palestine are limited. The study has implications for the use of APs in the case of SMEs to prepare for the technological revolution that will modernise audit procedures and quality soon.

المجلة
العنوان
International Journal of Islamic and Middle Eastern Finance and Management
الناشر
Emerald Publishing Limited
بلد الناشر
المملكة المتحدة
Indexing
Thomson Reuters
معامل التأثير
3,1
نوع المنشور
Both (Printed and Online)
المجلد
--
السنة
2024
الصفحات
--