Moderating “Cry Wolf” Events with Excess MAD in Benford's Law Research and Practice

Document Type

Article

Department

School of Accountancy

Publication Date

12-1-2016

Abstract

False positives or “Type I errors,” wherein test results indicate fraud where none actually exists, have been described as a costly “cry wolf problem” in auditing practice. Benford's Law, which is used as one tool among many in screening for financial statement manipulation, is especially prone to false positives when applied to small and moderately sized datasets. Relying in part on Monte Carlo simulations, we describe with greater precision than extant literature the mathematical correlation between N and Mean Absolute Deviation (MAD), a statistic increasingly used for assessing deviation from Benford's Law. We recommend replacing MAD with an alternative, Excess MAD, which explicitly adjusts for N in estimating deviation from Benford's Law. Applying nonparametric, generalized additive modeling to public company financial statement numbers, we demonstrate the differing outcomes expected from Excess MAD and MAD and produce evidence suggesting that, despite Sarbanes-Oxley and Dodd-Frank legislation, Benford's Law conformity of public company financial statement numbers remained relatively stable across four decades beginning in 1970.

Journal

Journal of Forensic Accounting Research

Volume

1

Issue

1

First Page

A66

Last Page

A90

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

10.2308/jfar-51622

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