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Does Audit Quality Affect Firms’ Debt Structure?

Research output: Journal article publicationJournal articleAcademic researchpeer-review

Abstract

Using a large sample of US firms, we show that high audit quality is associated with a higher
proportion of public debt and correspondingly a lower proportion of bank debt in firms’ debt
financing. The findings are robust to endogeneity issues, alternative measures of audit quality,
and alternative model specifications. We also find that the effect of audit quality on the debt
mix is stronger in firms with high information asymmetry and poor governance. The results
suggest that high audit quality improves firms’ transparency, alleviating the concerns of public
lenders and thereby enabling firms to borrow more information-sensitive public debt.
Particularly, the results suggest that high audit quality mitigates the post-contract moral hazard
between public debtholders and managers, which in turn reduces the advantage of bank loans
arising from bank monitoring. Last, we show that audit quality is incrementally effective and
has a substitutive effect over accruals quality (i.e. audit quality is more effective in shifting
the debt preference towards public debt when accruals quality is lower).
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)34-69
JournalChina Accounting and Finance Review
Volume23
Issue number1
Publication statusPublished - 1 Mar 2021

Keywords

  • Audit Quality
  • Debt Financing Choice
  • Information Asymmetry
  • Corporate Governance

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