欺诈的战略审计

Strategic Auditing for Fraud.

Accounting Review · 1993
被引 48
人大 A+FT50UTD24ABS 4*

中文导读

研究一个审计报告博弈,经理报告公司价值,可能低报以谋私利。最优审计策略是概率性的且依赖于报告:报告足够大时不审计,否则以小于1的概率审计。模型得出精确解,可用于比较静态分析。

Abstract

Abstract Two features of current audit practice are striking. First, auditors often use sampling methods to audit probabilistically. Second, the probability of auditing is usually contingent on information about that item. This essay studies an audit-reporting game in which a manager reports on the privately observed value of the firm. The report may be understated if some of this value is appropriated to the manager's own use. Only a costly audit can directly verify the report and impose penalties on the manager when fraud is discovered. The optimal audit policy for the owner of the firm is completely characterized and is shown to be both probabilistic and contingent: a report is never audited if it is sufficiently large, and is audited with a probability that is strictly less than one, otherwise. The optimal audit policy is contingent on the manager's report because the report depends on, and so provides some signal of, the firm's value. In contrast to optimal strategies in variance investigation models, the audit policy is also probabilistic. Variance investigation models are based on moral hazard problems, and efficient monitoring is deterministic because the agent has imperfect control over the outcome. In the adverse selection model studied here, the agent has perfect control over the report and would never choose a fraudulent report that will certainly be discovered. This makes probabilistic monitoring efficient. Because the model yields an exact solution, it can generate some useful comparative statics. As the audit cost decreases, the audit region expands and the amount of misreporting declines. The model also shows how the auditor's information affects the audit strategy and suggests how additional information can be efficiently incorporated into the audit policy.

审计策略舞弊审计审计报告博弈最优审计概率