Article
Reassessing Audit Report Quality In Emerging Markets: A Thematic Review From The Jordanian Context
Audit reports play a critical role in enhancing financial transparency and stakeholder confidence, particularly in emerging markets like Jordan where institutional enforcement and audit maturity are still evolving. This review article synthesizes global and regional literature to evaluate the key determinants, challenges, and emerging issues related to audit report quality in Jordan. The analysis spans six core dimensions: the classification and interpretation of audit opinions, structural and ethical factors affecting audit quality, linkages between audit opinion and financial performance, the timeliness and credibility of audit reports, audit failures and fraud detection mechanisms, and the role of technology and information systems in auditing. Despite Jordan’s formal adoption of International Standards on Auditing (ISA 700/701), gaps remain in implementation due to constraints in auditor independence, ethical skepticism, audit lag, and limited use of digital tools. The literature also reveals that factors such as firm size, audit fees, audit tenure, and AIS adoption significantly affect the reliability and timeliness of audit outputs. Furthermore, behavioral and institutional challenges such as lack of professional skepticism and fraud detection capabilities undermine audit effectiveness. The study identifies several research gaps, including the need for empirical, behavioral, and comparative audit studies in Jordan, especially in the post-pandemic context. Recommendations are proposed to improve audit reporting through enhanced training, regulatory reforms, and the integration of advanced technology. Overall, this review emphasizes the importance of strengthening audit report quality to uphold financial accountability and align Jordan’s audit practices with international expectations.



