MODULE 5
THE AUDIT PROFESSION – ORGANISING THE PROFESSION
THE ROLE OF THE PROFESSIONAL INSTITUTE
PRE-READING MATERIAL
1
The FinancialReportingCouncil
Corporate Governance
Developing Financial Reporting Standards, reviewing compliance
DevelopingD audit standards
and reviewing compliance &
audit quality
Investigation & Discipline
Statutory and non statutory oversight of accountancy and audit
Developing audit standards and reviewing compliance & audit quality
Developing audit standards
and reviewing compliance &
audit quality
2
FRRP
• Ensures financial information provided
by companies complies with relevant
reporting requirements.
Now proactive, previously reactive
- Risk based approach
- Extended remit
3
Accountancy Investigation and
Discipline Board
- Independent investigation and disciplinary
body for accountants in the UK
- All members not just auditors
- Participating bodies are ICAEW, ACCA,
CIMA, CIPFA
- Takes over from the Joint Disciplinary
Scheme (JDS)
- Focus on Public Interest cases
4
Auditing Practices Board
- Previously part of the old Accountancy
Foundation
- Remit now extended to developing
ethical standards for auditors on
independence, objectivity and
independence
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Professional Oversight Board
In relation to audit
- Recognition of accountancy bodies to act as
supervisory bodies and offer professional
qualifications
- Reviewing compliance of supervisory and
qualifying bodies with statutory requirements
- Through the AIU monitoring the quality of the
auditing function of economically significant
entities
With regard to the accountancy profession
- Reviewing the regulatory activities of the
accountancy bodies in relation to their members
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SELF-regulation, not delegated
regulation
- Statute governs the mechanism, not the
operations of audit regulation
- Opportunity to define self-regulation, not
merely operate to a Government
prescription
- How to make it work best?
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How to make it work best?
- Monitoring audit firms for audit quality,competence, and ethical behaviour is a
statutory requirement
- How monitoring is carried out is up to the
professional body
- The professional body should use that
discretion to best advantage
8
How to make it work best?
- The first key is - do as much `desktop` monitoring
as possible
- Have a reliable risk management & business
information system
- Information about the audit firm and its audit
engagements
- Identify firms with the riskiest engagements
(investment trust audits, property development
companies)
- Monitor those firms first
9
The rules of natural justice in
operation
- Two contexts - regulatory (licensing) and
disciplinary (professional conduct), which should
be kept several and distinct: regulation is forward
looking, dealing with entitlements to practise;
discipline is retrospective and retributive in
character
- As much freedom of action in the regulatory sense
as possible needs to be retained
- Keep the licensing system simple - make
decisions with the firm fully informed, able to make
representations (written and oral), and have an
appeal forum available
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- Misconduct (conflict of interest, wilful misrepresentation of
accounts, `wilful blindness'
- Elements of Investigation of Complaints
Quality
Speed
- Fairness
- the Adversarial System is common (but not necessarily
best)
- Investigation Committee
- Discipline Tribunal
Appeal Committee
Investigation Committee11
- comprises CA and non CAs (Public Interest Members)
- Responsible for investigations of allegations that member
or CA Student is (i) guilty of professional misconduct or (ii)
has performed his professional work in such a way as to
bring the Institute into disrepute or (iii) has committed a
breach of the Rules.
- Power to delegate to sub-Committee
∎ Where Investigation Committee of opinion12
that case of misconduct made out it may:
Determine that no further action should be
taken on the complaint
or
Prefer a formal complaint to the Institute's
Discipline Tribunal (APP or Full Hearing)
Discipline tribunal13
- Right to an impartial tribunal
- Right to adequate notification of charge
- Right to answer charges
- Ultimate right to appeal to Appeal Committee or
Judicial Review (court intervention)
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THE
INSTITUTE OF
CHARTERED
ACCOUNTANTS
OF SCOTLAND
Where is the Regulation of Audit
going?
Governmental interest in the
liberal professions takes on a
more proactive form
15
Government's objective ---> create a
new, single, independent regulator
to strengthen the foundations of the UK's
capital markets for the long term
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The function of FRC
- Set accounting and auditing standards
- Proactively enforce them
- Oversee the self-regulatory professional
bodies
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From systemic adequacy to
`credibility review'
∎ First phase of public oversight (from 1992 2004)
saw audit monitoring concentrate on the systemic
capabilities of audit firms - to ensure that they had
conflict of interest avoidance mechanisms and
review mechanisms in place
∎ The new phase (2005- ) will be to introduce
`credibility-review' = ensuring that firms reach
sustainable professional judgements and
conclusions
18
New UK legislation
∎ The first year of the FRC's operations will be
governed by bilateral, contractual arrangements
between FRC and the self-regulating bodies, to
give government time to introduce legislation
underpinning FRC as a `designated person' under
the Companies (Audit, Investigations,...) Act 2004
∎ The new statutory framework under the Act will
ensure a balance between the legitimate private
interests of the auditing profession and the
oversight `overlay'
Government prescription still leaves19
important role for the self-regulating
bodies
- Public oversight is in partnership with and
complementary to the private auditing and
accounting institutions, not substitutive of them
- Government lays emphasis on a stricter regime for
audit but still relies on the private self-regulating
bodies for standard-setting in every aspect of
accountancy practice, includingaudit
Inter-relationship of URlaw and 20
practice with European Community
norms
∎ Introduction of `from cradle to grave' audit
practice oversight, not just an emphasis on
competence and `fitness and propriety' of
auditors at the point of registration by the
audit regulation
The phenomenon of extra 21
territoriality
∎ The effect of foreign legislation like the US
Sarbanes-Oxley Act and its new Public
Company Accounting Oversight Board
extends the geographical outreach of
national oversight norms
∎ International auditing standards need to
keep pace with national legislative
techniques
22
The legal obligation becomes ethical
∎The bare statutory obligation has, since 1989, been translated as an ethical one by the audit self-regulating bodies, lie the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Scotland
∎Obligations like independence and integrity constitute absolutes of professional behaviour
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The ethical obligations
• The rules of professional conduct have
traditionally been written in ethereal clothing,
rather than prescriptive regulations and
prohibitions
- Those days are gone
- Whereas new `ethical rules' have been
called `ethical guidance', they are virtually
prescriptive in nature and look far more like
professional laws than guidance
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The ethical obligations (continued)
∎ The prescriptive nature of these new
obligations is no accident but another echo
of government's intention that the audit (as
opposed to the rest of public practice)
environment is, by design, to be much
tougher and exacting
∎ The APB is promulgating the new guidance,
covering the following topic