Keywords
audit committee, audit partner, engagement partner, financial reporting quality, political ideology
Abstract
This study examines whether the ideological orientation of the audit partner and audit committee members— defined as their personal belief systems and inclinations, including their attitude toward risk, ambiguity, and novelty—has an impact on engagement partner selection and the effectiveness of oversight in the financial reporting process. Drawing on prior evidence that the two main US political parties reflect different ideologies, we hand-collect political donation data to construct ideological scores for audit partners and audit committee members. Our findings highlight several intriguing relationships. First, audit committees are more likely to select an ideologically dissimilar partner. Second, greater ideological dissimilarity between these two key monitors is associated with higher financial reporting quality. The effects of financial reporting quality are most pronounced among more effective audit committees and when audit partners have longer tenure with the client. These effects are incremental to both social connections between the audit partner and audit committee and to ideological differences between these parties and the CEO and CFO. Overall, the results support the notion that ideological dissimilarity between audit partners and audit committees can foster effective oversight of the financial reporting process. Moreover, ideological dissimilarity appears to be a useful and rational cue in audit partner selection decisions.
Original Publication Citation
“Do audit partner and audit committee member ideologies influence engagement partner selection and financial reporting oversight effectiveness?” with Robert Felix, Sattar Mansi, and Mikhail Pevzner. Contemporary Accounting Research.
BYU ScholarsArchive Citation
Felix, Robert; Mansi, Sattar; Pevzner, Mikhail; and Seidel, Timothy, "Do Audit Partner and Audit Committee Member Ideologies Influence Engagement Partner Selection and Financial Reporting Oversight Effectiveness?" (2026). Faculty Publications. 8554.
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/facpub/8554
Document Type
Peer-Reviewed Article
Publication Date
2026
Publisher
Contemporary Accounting Research
Language
English
College
Marriott School of Business
Department
Accountancy
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