Auditing Standards and the Persistence of the Audit Expectations Gap: Evidencing the Absence of French ‘Exceptionalism’

Imen Jedidi published her paper “Auditing Standards and the Persistence of the Audit Expectations Gap: Evidencing the Absence of French ‘Exceptionalism,” co-authored with C. Humphrey in the International Journal of Auditing (online first).

Abstract: Auditing standards have become a central feature in the world of auditing. One of the primary claims made for International Standards on Auditing (ISAs) is their capacity to reduce the audit expectations gap (AEG), but the gap persists despite the widespread adoption of ISAs. France is an intriguing case site for studying the development and impact of audit standard setting, especially given its reputation as a country for maintaining its own distinctive audit regulatory traditions. Its claimed resistance to Anglo-American influences, however, is not what stands out in our archival analysis of French audit standard-setting processes and an accompanying series of interviews with key participants. In contrast, the French audit standard setting emerges as a process that has largely aligned with the spirit of ISAs and adopted a narrow interpretation of the AEG. The presented analysis challenges the operational significance of a claimed French exceptionalism and adds to a growing questioning of the capacity of auditing standard setting to drive fundamental advancement in auditing practice and to meet public expectations.

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By |2024-10-08T20:45:02+02:0027 May 2024|Comments Off on Auditing Standards and the Persistence of the Audit Expectations Gap: Evidencing the Absence of French ‘Exceptionalism’

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