Séminaire Ahmad Hammami, John Molson School of Business, Concordia University
Date 11 avril 2019
Heure 13h30 à 15h
Lieu Salle Banque Scotia (1317)
Pavillon Palasis-Prince
2325, rue de la Terrasse
Université Laval
Québec (Québec) G1V 0A6
Événement gratuit
À propos de
l'événement
Vous êtes invités à assister à un séminaire intitulé:
Audit Committee Interlocking and Internal Controls over Financial Reporting.
Conférencier: Ahmad Hammami, John Molson School of Business, Concordia University
Résumé de la conférence (donnée en anglais)
We investigate the relationship between audit committee interlocking and the effectiveness of internal controls over financial reporting (ICFR). Interlocked audit committee members are directors that serve on multiple firms’ audit committees, and thus are able to transfer their experience and knowledge. However, currently we do not know whether this common practice is beneficial. Using public U.S. firms, we contribute to the corporate governance literature by showing that companies are more likely to have effective controls if they are the audit committee interlocked with other companies that have effective ICFR. We relate our results to the transfer of interlocked members’ positive knowledge and expertise across the firms they serve, hence, a “positive contagion” effect. Furthermore, we do not find a significant relationship between interlocking with companies with ineffective controls and control effectiveness. As such, we do not observe a “negative contagion” effect of being connected to a company with ICFR problems. We attribute this to the fact that audit committee members do not have an incentive to allow and spread control weaknesses across the firms they serve, as well as the fact that internal control weaknesses are easily visible to the public from the 10 k report, which would damage the reputation of the director. Overall, our results show that interlocked audit committee members are important elements in improving certain aspects of firms’ corporate governance.