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The Economic Consequences of Financial Audit Regulation in the Charitable Sector

Raphael DuguayAccounting税务研究UTD24
Journal of Accounting Research2021-12-16Center for Interuniversity Research and Analysis on OrganizationsDOI
Citations27

ABSTRACT I provide evidence on the effects of financial audit mandates in the charitable sector, in particular their influence on donor behavior. My empirical strategy relies on variation in size‐based exemption thresholds across states and differences in size driven by the nature of charities’ activities. Consistent with audit mandates reducing donors’ reliance on charity reputation, I find audit mandates are associated with a lower concentration of donations on the largest, most well‐known charities. I show this reallocation of resources allows the charitable sector to serve more diverse geographic areas and social needs. In terms of the effect on willingness to give, I document that audit mandates are associated with a higher proportion of taxpayers who donate. However, I only observe a sizable impact on total contributions in dollars for charities with high inherent information asymmetry. Collectively, these results suggest financial audit regulation reduces information frictions and thereby affects resource allocation in the market for charitable giving.

AuditReputationBusinessAccountingPublic economicsEmpirical evidenceInformation asymmetryFinanceEconomicsLawNonprofit Sector and VolunteeringTaxation and Compliance Studies