Heliyon (Feb 2024)

The effect of environmental credit rating on audit fees: A quasi-natural experiment from China

  • Jianghan Wang,
  • Haiyan Zhong,
  • Minxin Li

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 4
p. e26670

Abstract

Read online

Environmental credit rating (ECR) is a new policy that deeply integrates the construction of ecological civilisation and the social credit system in China; however, there is a paucity of research on the response of external auditors to the ECR. This study takes the environmental credit evaluation policy implementation as a quasi-natural experiment, using China's A-share listed companies in heavily polluting industries from 2008 to 2019 as samples. We construct a heterogeneous timing difference-in-differences model to empirically explore the impact of ECR on audit fees. The results show that the ECR significantly reduces companies' audit fees. Importantly, our analysis suggests that the ECR improves environmental information transparency and enhances sustainable operation ability, thereby reducing audit fees. Further analysis shows that the negative correlation between the ECR and audit fees is more obvious in non-state enterprises, in poor legal environments and low levels of trust. Our study provides scientific evidence for the economic consequences of the environmental credit evaluation policy and enriches the literature on the factors affecting audit fees. It has revelatory significance for China and other developing countries to implement and improve the environmental credit evaluation policies and better guide enterprises to fulfil their environmental responsibilities.

Keywords