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CEO power, audit committee effectiveness and earnings quality

Dorcus Kalembe (Department of Accounting, Makerere University Business School, Kampala, Uganda)
Twaha Kigongo Kaawaase (Department of Accounting, Makerere University Business School, Kampala, Uganda) (Department of Audit and Assurance, Sejjaaka, Kaawaase and Co., Kampala, Uganda)
Stephen Korutaro Nkundabanyanga (Department of Accounting, Makerere University Business School, Kampala, Uganda)
Isaac Newton Kayongo (Department of Finance, Makerere University Business School, Kampala, Uganda)

Journal of Accounting in Emerging Economies

ISSN: 2042-1168

Article publication date: 14 July 2023

422

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this study is to establish the relationship between chief executive officer (CEO) power, audit committee effectiveness and earnings quality in regulated firms in Uganda.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors employed cross-sectional and correlational research designs, based on a sample of 136 regulated firms in Uganda. Data were collected using a questionnaire survey from Chief Finance Officers and Chief Audit Executives. Data were analyzed using a Statistical Package for Social Sciences and Partial Least Squares Structural Equation Modeling.

Findings

Results indicate that CEO power causes negative variances in earnings quality. The results also reveal that audit committee effectiveness positively relates relatively similarly with earnings quality. In addition, CEO power and audit committee effectiveness are negative and significantly related. The results further indicate that CEO power and earnings quality are mediated by audit committee effectiveness.

Research limitations/implications

CEO power creates an opaque accounting environment which may leave the stakeholders unable to evaluate the true economic reality of the firm. Audit committee effectiveness is an important enabler for reporting high-quality earnings even in the presence of a powerful CEO.

Originality/value

This study contributes toward a methodological stance of using perceptions to understand earnings quality in regulated firms in Uganda. This is probably the first study that has specifically explored earnings quality using only the fundamental qualitative characteristics of accounting information (as proxies) as enshrined in the Conceptual Framework for Financial Reporting 2018 particularly in Uganda since Her adoption of International Financial Reporting Standards in 1998. Second, the indirect effect of audit committee effectiveness and CEO power is tested.

Keywords

Citation

Kalembe, D., Kaawaase, T.K., Nkundabanyanga, S.K. and Kayongo, I.N. (2023), "CEO power, audit committee effectiveness and earnings quality", Journal of Accounting in Emerging Economies, Vol. ahead-of-print No. ahead-of-print. https://doi.org/10.1108/JAEE-09-2022-0277

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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