Although significant attention has been given to the costs associated
with SOX there is no notable research examining the benefits derived
therefrom. The purpose of this research is to draw upon the long
established stream of agency theory literature to fill the void in the
current literature and complement its focus on costs with a serious
investigation into whether benefits are being realized from this
legislation. Investigating domestic, manufacturing firms listed on the
New York Stock Exchange, this research concludes that many governance
controls long held to temper agency conflict did not do so in a pre-SOX
environment. However, it illustrates that SOX caused these governance
mechanisms to effectively moderate agency conflict in a post-SOX
environment for this sample. Additionally, it concludes that in a model
that includes audit fees, SOX improved the effectiveness of these
governance mechanisms in the reduction of agency costs more
predominantly with more robust results. Therefore, this research is the
first to provide evidence that there are measurable benefits that flow
from the passage of SOX.