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  • IFAC Response to IIRC on the Consultation Draft of the International Integrated Reporting Framework

    IFAC believes that high-quality reporting lies at the heart of strong and sustainable organizations, financial markets, and economies, as the disclosure of useful information is crucial for the various internal and external stakeholders who need to make informed decisions regarding an organization’s capacity to create and preserve value. As organizations depend on their stakeholders for their sustainable success, it is in their interest to provide high-quality reports.

    IFAC
    English
  • Boosting the Quality and Efficiency of Smaller Entity Audits

    Phil Cowperthwaite
    Member, IFAC SMP Committee
    Article for Member Bodies English

    The pace of change and increased complexity in audit and financial reporting standards over the past few years has been dramatic and may weigh disproportionately on smaller accounting practices who typically audit smaller entities. This burden is being exacerbated by the difficult economic environment, which is prompting clients to put pressure on their accountants to lower fees. As a result, it is getting harder for practices to maintain sufficient profitability from audit work.

    The good news is that automation, made possible by recent developments in technology and by process improvements, can help practices simultaneously boost the quality and efficiency of their audit work—in turn, lowering costs and ensuring its profitability. 

    Increasing Audit Quality          

    Automating your micro-entity audit practice provides an opportunity to improve audit quality at both firm-wide and individual engagement levels. At the firm level, setting up standardized templates helps ensure that all phases have been completed in every audit. Customized checklists can be updated as needed and incorporated into individual engagement files at the beginning of every engagement.

    File automation can significantly increase quality at the engagement level as well. If you import data from one application program to another, data conversion errors should be eliminated and grouping and arithmetical errors can be minimized.

    A word of caution: as every audit is unique, make sure you customize each and every file. The generic firm template is a great place to start but it is only a start. Customization for things such as industry characteristics and internal controls are as essential as fully automating the underlying file structure.

    Boosting Engagement Efficiency

    Much of the tangible output of auditing is very similar from file to file: individual practitioners typically use common file structures and similar checklists and forms. In addition, commercial audit file, spreadsheet, word processing, and database platforms often allow for seamless and rapid data sharing between applications and client files. None of these features are new, but are you using them to maximum advantage? There are many easy-to-implement ways to increase the efficiency of every micro-entity audit. The trick is to be creative and use your imagination. Here are a few suggestions.

    Pre-Engagement Phase

    When using commercially available software for micro-entity audit engagements, you can:

    • Roll forward last year’s electronic file almost instantly;
    • Call the client, or send an email, to discuss timing, and ask if there were significant events/changes over the past year; and
    • Assuming not, email an engagement letter, an audit strategy letter, and a list of the materials you will need when you visit the client to begin the audit. All of these documents should have been already prepared as part of the file update.

    Engagement Processing and Assembly

    Following the pre-engagement phase, ask your client to email you a trial balance in a format you can import into the audit file.

    Fieldwork Phase

    An efficient automated audit of a micro-entity might progress as follows:

    Arrive at the client’s office with the rolled-forward audit file. After an initial discussion with the client, update your rolled-forward schedules, documenting your knowledge of the client’s business for any industry, environment, and entity control changes since last year.

    Program the engagement and performance materiality calculations and sample size calculations, based on the imported trial balance.

    Review the multi-year account analyses (e.g., key ratio analysis such as gross profit percentage), all of which can be pre-programmed.

    Print confirmations required and have them signed at your client’s office.

    Review for relevance and complete the rolled-forward engagement checklists. (Again, a word of caution: avoid falling into the trap of simply repeating last year’s procedures without having first used your professional judgment).

    Draft key points for communication to management and those charged with governance as required by International Standard on Auditing (ISA) 260, Communication with Those Charged with Governance, and ISA 265, Communicating Deficiencies in Internal Control to Those Charged with Governance and Management, at the client’s office as they arise and review them with the client to ensure you have your facts right.

    Forming an Opinion Phase

    Review the post-fieldwork analytical review automatically updated for your audit adjustment.

    Email the adjusted trial balance and proposed audit adjustments to your client.

    Email the client the letter of representation and an updated ISA 260 audit summary document.

    Email/mail a copy of the signed auditor’s report and an invoice once appropriate personnel have accepted responsibility for the statements.

    The above assumes you have taken time to standardize data fields across all your client files. Client names and address fields, year-end and other dates, and other standard documentation can all be programmed into a master file containing individual templates for correspondence, planning lists, etc. Firm-wide standardization is essential if you want to maximize efficiency with automation.

    Be Smart About the Automation Process

    There are a number of cautions to heed before embarking on even a modest automation project.

    1) Be realistic. The initial automation process will likely take longer than you think.

    2) Spend time up-front to get it right. If you have an error in your template, you will have to fix it each time you use it. That significantly increases the cost of automation.

    3) Aim for consistency across clients. Using standardized templates for analytical schedules, financial statements, statement coding, and file indexing avoids having to reinvent the wheel on every micro-entity audit engagement.

    Summary

    Automation of your practice is an exacting process requiring project management skills and a significant time commitment from senior members of the firm. If you have the discipline to make it happen, automation will pay off over the long term many times over.

    IFAC Resources

    IFAC hosts a range of resources and tools, including guides and articles, to help implement audit and quality control standards: See Resources and Tools at www.ifac.org/SMP

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    Phil Cowperthwaite, Member, IFAC SMP Committee
  • Kristian Koktvedgaard Appointed Chair of Ethics Board Consultative Advisory Group

    New York, New York English

    Kristian Koktvedgaard has been appointed chair of the Consultative Advisory Group (CAG) to the International Ethics Standards Board for Accountants (IESBA or the Ethics Board). The Ethics Board is an independent standard-setting board that develops and issues, in the public interest, the Code of Ethics for Professional Accountants for global application by professional accountants operating both in business and in practice.

    The IESBA CAG* is an independent body that provides the forum in which the representatives of its various member organizations—including regulators, preparers, and others with an interest in international ethics standards for professional accountants, including auditor independence—provide advice on technical and public interest matters relating to the drafts of the Ethics Board’s standards and strategy.

    As a senior advisor focusing on auditing and accounting with the Confederation of Danish Industry, Kristian Koktvedgaard currently represents BUSINESSEUROPE on the IESBA CAG and the CAG of the International Auditing and Assurance Standards Board. He was elected by the IESBA CAG membership to succeed the current chair, Richard Fleck, who has served as the first independent chair of the IESBA CAG since May 2006. Kristian Koktvedgaard’s appointment—a three-year term effective July 1, 2013—has been approved by the Public Interest Oversight Board (PIOB), which oversees the activities of the Ethics Board and of the CAG.

    The chair of the CAG acts as the primary representative of those who use or rely on the Ethics Board’s standards and guidance and encourages a deeper understanding by the Ethics Board of the public's needs and expectations. The chair of the IESBA CAG provides leadership direction to the CAG, overseeing the achievement of the CAG's objectives. As the CAG’s liaison with the PIOB, the Ethics Board, and identified key stakeholders, the chair is also responsible for communicating the views of the CAG to these bodies and conveying the views of these bodies to the CAG.

    “I congratulate Mr. Koktvedgaard on his appointment to this important role,” said Mr. Fleck. “His broad knowledge and experience working on ethics, audit, and accounting issues will be great assets to the CAG as it provides public interest input to the Ethics Board.”

    Commenting on the appointment, Jörgen Holmquist, chair of the Ethics Board, said, “Kristian’s experience and expertise as a senior advisor on policy matters relating to the accountancy profession will serve him well in leading the CAG to provide effective public interest input to the development of our standards and guidance. I very much look forward to working with him in his role as chair of the CAG.”

    Kristian Koktvedgaard is a member of the Danish Accounting Council and the Danish disciplinary tribunal for State Authorized and Certified Public Accountants. He is also actively involved in the Danish Accounting Forum, a body that brings together Danish stakeholders to discuss accounting issues. In addition, he is a member of the BUSINESSEUROPE Accounting Sounding Board and has represented BUSINESSEUROPE in audit matters on numerous occasions. Previously, he served on the Danish Supervisory Authority on Auditing.

    Kristian Koktvedgaard stated, “The IESBA CAG plays a vital role in enabling all those concerned in the work of, or services provided by, professional accountants—regulators, preparers, users of financial information, and other participants in the financial reporting supply chain—to have a voice in the development and maintenance of standards that ensure a high level of ethical conduct by professional accountants. It is critical for the credibility of professional accountants to have these constituents involved in the setting of high-quality ethics standards for the profession. I am truly honored that my colleagues on the CAG have appointed me to lead the CAG in this role, and I look forward to the challenge. I also would like to take this opportunity to recognize the vision, leadership, and commitment that Richard Fleck brought to the CAG over the past seven years.”

    About the IESBA

    The International Ethics Standards Board for Accountants (IESBA) is an independent standard-setting board that develops and issues, in the public interest, high-quality ethical standards and other pronouncements for professional accountants worldwide. Through its activities, the IESBA develops the Code of Ethics for Professional Accountants, which establishes ethical requirements for professional accountants. The structures and processes that support the operations of the IESBA are facilitated by IFAC. Please visit www.ethicsboard.org for more information.

    About IFAC

    IFAC is the global organization for the accountancy profession dedicated to serving the public interest by strengthening the profession and contributing to the development of strong international economies. IFAC is comprised of 173 members and associates in 129 countries and jurisdictions, representing approximately 2.5 million accountants in public practice, education, government service, industry, and commerce.

     

    *IESBA CAG Members (As at July 1, 2013)

    Asian Financial Executives Institutes

    Basel Committee on Banking Supervision

    BUSINESSEUROPE

    CFA Institute

    European Commission

    European Federation of Accountants and Auditors for SMEs

    European Financial Executives Institutes

    Fédération des Experts-Comptables Européens

    Gulf States Regulatory Authorities

    Institute of Internal Auditors

    International Association of Insurance Supervisors

    International Corporate Governance Network

    International Organization of Securities Commissions

    International Organization of Supreme Audit Institutions

    National Association of State Boards of Accountancy

    North American Financial Executives Institutes

    Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development

    Sri Lanka Accounting and Auditing Standards Monitoring Board

    UK Financial Reporting Council

    World Bank

    World Federation of Exchanges

    IESBA CAG Observers (As at July 1, 2013)

    IFAC Small and Medium Practices Committee

    US Public Company Accounting Oversight Board

  • 2014–2016 IAESB Strategy and Work Plan

    This Exposure Draft, 2014–2016 IAESB Strategy and Work Plan, was developed and approved by the International Accounting Education Standards Board (IAESB) and focuses on projects and activities aimed at providing adoption and implementation guidance on the revised IESs to interested stakeholders in professional accounting education. 

    Published:
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  • IPSASB June 2013 Meeting Highlights

    Toronto English

    Podcast: IPSASB Chair Andreas Bergmann discusses highlights of the June 17-20, 2013, meeting in Toronto

    :32 Chair's Overview
    1:36 Update on Conceptual Framework elements
    2:55 Recommended Practice Guidelines (RPG), Reporting on Long-term Sustainability of Public Finances
    4:50 RPG, Financial Statement Discussion and Analysis
    6:50 Other Key IPSASB Actions and Discussions
    8:37 Chair's Closing Thoughts 

    Meeting Highlights Listen & Subscribe in iTunes
  • IESBA eNews: June 2013 Meeting Summary

    New York, New York English

    Thank you for signing up to receive eNews from the International Ethics Standards Board for Accountants (IESBA, the Ethics Board). This edition of IESBA eNews provides a summary of decisions made at the board’s meeting held June 10-12, 2013, in New York, USA. See the Meeting Page for the meeting highlights podcast, meeting summary, and agenda papers.

    IN THIS ISSUE:

    1. Responding to a Suspected Illegal Act
    2. Definition of Those Charged with Governance
    3. Structure of the Code
    4. Future Strategy and Work Plan
    5. Review of Part C of the Code
    6. Provision of Non-Assurance Services to an Audit Client
    7. Long Association of Senior Personnel (Including Partner Rotation) with an Audit Client
    8. Emerging Issues and Outreach
    9. Next Meetings
    10. Ethics Board is Hiring
    11. 2013 IESBA Handbook
    12. Registration Now Open for World Congress of Accountants 2014; Sponsorship Opportunities Available

     

    1. Responding to a Suspected Illegal Act

    The Ethics Board considered a proposed alternative to the approach set out in the Exposure Draft, Responding to a Suspected Illegal Act, regarding a professional accountant’s responsibilities when encountering a suspected illegal act. Among other matters, the Ethics Board discussed the concept of a permission in the Code of Ethics for Professional Accountants (the Code) for both professional accountants in public practice and professional accountants in business to override confidentiality in specific circumstances when responding to a suspected illegal act. In addition to considering the various elements of the proposed alternative approach, the Ethics Board discussed the thresholds for actions, the types of suspected illegal acts to disclose, and documentation. The Ethics Board will continue its deliberation of the proposed alternative approach at its September 2013 meeting.

     

    2. Definition of Those Charged with Governance

    The Ethics Board approved for issuance, subject to confirmation by the Public Interest Oversight Board (PIOB) in September 2013 that due process has been followed, a revised definition of “those charged with governance” and related changes to the Code. The changes will be effective on July 1, 2014.

     

    3. Structure of the Code

    The Ethics Board approved the terms of reference for the working group formed to advise the board on ways to improve the usability of the Code. The board also supported the working group’s research plan and proposed timeline for the initiative, and provided suggestions for the working group to consider as it begins research. The Ethics Board will receive an update on the research at its September 2013 meeting.

     

    4. Future Strategy and Work Plan

    The Ethics Board considered the responses to its survey on the 2014-2016 IESBA Strategy and Work Plan. It also considered the Planning Committee’s preliminary analysis of the survey results and recommendations for the way forward. Among other matters, the Ethics Board agreed to extend its 2011-2012 Strategy and Work Plan through the end of 2014. The Ethics Board also identified a short list of topics for possible inclusion in its next Strategy and Work Plan (2015-2017) for further consideration. The board will continue its deliberation on these topics at its September 2013 meeting.

     

    5. Review of Part C of the Code
    Discussion around the project to review Part C of the Code, which addresses professional accountants in business (PAIBs), included the application of Part C to all professional accountants and pressure by superiors and others to engage in unethical or illegal acts. Consideration of matters relevant to professional accountants in public practice has been deferred until after PAIB-specific issues have been addressed. The Ethics Board will continue its consideration of pressure issues at its September 2013 meeting.

     

    6. Provision of Non-Assurance Services to an Audit Client

    The Ethics Board considered the findings from a survey of a number of jurisdictions, conducted by the project Task Force, to narrow the scope of the project on non-assurance services. The Ethics Board also considered the Task Force’s recommendations and agreed that the project proposal should be refined to focus on the following:

    • Clarification of the provisions in Section 290, Independence—Audit and Review Engagements, addressing management responsibilities;
    • Clarification of the concept of “routine and mechanical” services relating to the preparation of accounting records and financial statements; and
    • A review of the emergency exception provisions in the Code pertaining to both accounting and bookkeeping services, and taxation services.

    The Ethics Board also supported the development of a paper with the aim of, among other matters: raising awareness of the Code’s approach to non-assurance services and of the robustness of the related provisions in the Code; highlighting supplementary ways by which the threats and safeguards approach to independence in the Code may be enhanced; and generally increasing the visibility and transparency of the relevant provisions in the Code. The Ethics Board will receive an update on the project at its September 2013 meeting.

     

    7. Long Association of Senior Personnel (Including Partner Rotation) with an Audit Client

    The Ethics Board received an update on the project to review the long association provisions in Section 290 of the Code to ensure that they continue to provide robust and appropriate safeguards against the familiarity and self-interest threats arising from long association with an audit client. The Ethics Board will consider the findings from the survey and other research being undertaken for this project at its September 2013 meeting.

     

    8. Emerging Issues and Outreach

    The Ethics Board approved the terms of reference for the working group formed to advise the board in relation to emerging issues and international developments of relevance to the board’s work and outreach to stakeholders. The Ethics Board will consider at its September 2013 meeting preliminary recommendations from the working group with respect to processes by which the board may consider emerging issues and its strategy for outreach.

     

    9. Next Meetings

    Meetings of the IESBA and the IESBA Consultative Advisory Group (CAG) are open to the public. The IESBA CAG will next meet in New York, USA, on September 11, 2013. The next meeting of the IESBA will be in Sydney, Australia, September 16–18, 2013.

    For more information and to register to attend an IESBA or IESBA CAG meeting as an observer, visit IESBA Meetings  and IESBA CAG Meetings respectively.

     

    10. Ethics Board is Hiring

    The Ethics Board is seeking a technical manager to join its staff team based in New York. Qualified candidates will currently be, or have had experience, at the manager or senior manager level in professional practice, a professional accounting body, the office of a public sector auditor, or similarFor a complete job description and required skills and experience, see Working at IFAC. Qualified candidates should send a resume to jobs@ifac.org

     

    11. 2013 IESBA Handbook

    The 2013 Handbook of the Code of Ethics for Professional Accountants is now available to download or purchase. The 2013 edition contains the final revised pronouncements addressing breaches of provisions in the Code and conflicts of interest, and the revised definition of “engagement team.” These changes will be effective in 2014; see the individual pronouncements for details. To place an order for this, in addition to the 2013 handbooks for public sector accounting and auditing and assurance standards, visit Handbook of the Code of Ethics for Professional Accountants.   

     

    12. Registration Now Open for World Congress of Accountants 2014; Sponsorship Opportunities Available

    The next World Congress of Accountants (WCOA) will be hosted by the Consiglio Nazionale dei Dottori Commercialisti e degli Esperti Contabili (CNDCEC) in Rome, Italy in 2014. Themed 2020 Vision: Learning from the Past, Building the Future, the 2014 WCOA will be held November 10-13 at the Auditorium Parco della Musica. More than 4,000 professionals from around the world will convene at this quadrennial IFAC event. WCOA 2014 will look back to explore the evolution of the accountancy profession and forward to showcase the innovations that will shape the future of the profession. Register Now.

    The WCOA also provides a global platform for organizations and firms to share their projects and visions via various sponsorship opportunities.

  • IFAC Response to BCBS Consultation External Audits of Banks

    IFAC welcomes the opportunity to comment on the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS) consultative document, External audit of banks. IFAC recognizes the importance of high-quality auditing and acts to promote and enhance audit quality around the globe. This includes supporting the development, adoption, and implementation of high quality, internationally accepted auditing and quality control standards; promoting the need for global regulatory convergence; and supporting the development of strong professional accountancy organizations and accountancy firms.

    IFAC
    English
  • ICJCE Interview with IESBA Chair Jörgen Holmquist

    Tatiana Nogueras and Paloma Bravo
    Auditores English

    This article first appeared in Auditores, the magazine of the Instituto de Censores Jurados de Cuentas de España (ICJCE), the professional body in Spain and a member of IFAC.

    Why is the IESBA considering a review of the structure of its Code of Ethics for Professional Accountants (the Code)?

    Well, we have heard from a number of stakeholders, particularly small- and medium-sized practices (SMPs) and professional accountants working in small- and medium-sized entities (SMEs), about the challenges they face in understanding and applying the requirements in the Code. Let’s be clear—the Code contains robust standards on ethics for the accounting profession. But after years of evolution, the Code has become a complex set of standards, with sections that contain long paragraphs and sentences that many find difficult to understand and translate. At the same time, we have heard from our regulatory stakeholders about the need to increase the visibility of the requirements and prohibitions in the Code, and to clarify who is responsible for meeting them, in order to facilitate enforcement. So we are responding to the concerns by taking a fresh look at the structure of the Code to see if there are ways to enhance its readability, understandability, and accessibility, and assist in its enforcement. So, in essence, it is an effort at modernizing the Code.

    However, I must make clear that our initiative to review the structure of the Code is not intended to introduce changes to the basic principles and rules in the Code. While we are considering the feasibility of making the requirements and content of the Code more accessible, by different means, we are NOT planning any changes to the Code itself in the short term. The changes in the structure of the Code will be for the long term, after we have launched a full consultation and achieved buy-in from our stakeholders.

    In difficult times such as these, is the auditor providing enough assurance on the veracity of financial information supplied by companies? Is the audit profession helping to restore confidence?

    The role of the audit profession has really never changed, in times of economic boom or bust—the profession has always been, and will continue to be, a watchdog protecting the public interest. That is why, in most jurisdictions, auditors are granted a statutory mandate to carry out audits. The essential responsibility of auditors is to express an independent opinion on the truth and fairness of a company’s financial statements. It is the independence with which auditors fulfill their role that gives credibility and adds value to their audit opinions. But in the difficult times we live in, there are continual challenges (or threats, to use our jargon) to auditors’ independence. The Code demands that auditors implement appropriate safeguards to protect their independence against such challenges. So, yes, the audit profession absolutely has a critical role to play in restoring confidence in the financial markets—and the public has a right to expect that it fulfills this role in full compliance with ethical requirements, including independence.

    But let’s not forget that the environment in which auditors operate is dynamic, so new threats to their independence can always arise. That is why we must be on our guard and make sure that the Code is capable of evolving to address new challenges.

    What are the main conflicts of interest that may be encountered by auditors during the planning stage?

    First, let’s be clear that a conflict of interest creates a threat to the auditor’s objectivity and may create threats to other fundamental ethical principles. Conflicts of interest may arise in various circumstances, and I would not say that there are some types of conflicts that are necessarily more common than others. But in an audit context, some of the conflicts one might encounter include, for example, auditing royalties payable by the audit client to a licensor owned by the engagement partner’s immediate family, or using confidential information obtained when planning the audit of the client for purposes of a due diligence service for another client that is considering acquiring the audit client.

    One of the main recent changes to the Code was better identification of the circumstances in which a professional accountant may encounter potential conflicts of interest. Are these circumstances newly identified or were they in need of better definition?

    I would say it is closer to the latter. The Ethics Board concluded that it would be difficult to develop a definition that would be sufficiently broad to encompass the diverse activities of professional accountants but that would be sufficiently precise to avoid capturing situations that are not conflicts of interest. Accordingly, it determined that it would be more appropriate to provide a more comprehensive description of circumstances that might create a conflict of interest, together with supporting examples to facilitate implementation.

    Issues related to auditors’ insider information are detailed in the Code. What are the improvements on this matter?

    Quite apart from the strict laws that exist in most jurisdictions regarding insider trading, the Code has always taken a strong position regarding the inappropriate use of insider information. In particular, paragraph 140.1(b) of the Code prohibits auditors from using confidential information acquired as a result of professional and business relationships to their personal advantage or the advantage of third parties. Equally, paragraph 340.3 of the Code prohibits professional accountants in business from using confidential information for personal gain. So the Code’s position on this matter is unequivocal, and that must be right. Insider trading, however, defined in national laws and regulations, is unethical and harmful to society, and must be rigorously sanctioned when it occurs.

    Audit regulation is currently being discussed at different international strata, with particular focus on the question of independence. Don’t you think that compliance with the Code is enough to curtail the potential risks?

    Well, the Ethics Board certainly believes the Code provides a robust set of independence rules for global application. We completed two significant projects four to five years ago that led to further strengthening of the independence requirements in the Code. So, many countries around the world, ranging from Australia, Brazil, and China to Japan and South Africa, have benchmarked or aligned their independence requirements with those in the Code. Even with respect to the EU, a February 2013 study from the Fédération des Experts Comptables Européens (FEE) revealed that the independence provisions in the Code are more robust with respect to audits of public interest entities (PIEs) than those in the current EU frameworks on auditor independence. So I believe the Code will stand up to scrutiny.

    But of course, we have to respect the sovereignty of nations to review their independence frameworks as they consider necessary, particularly in the aftermath of the global financial crisis, to satisfy themselves that these continue to safeguard auditor independence. So I welcome the debates on independence in the various forums, and that can only be in the public interest. This is not to suggest that the Ethics Board is content with the status quo as far as the Code is concerned. Far from it, we have commenced projects to review the provisions in the Code, addressing long association of senior personnel with an audit client, and the provision of non-assurance services to audit clients. But let me be clear that we are not prejudging from these projects that changes will be needed in these areas. However, we want to make sure that our requirements continue to support auditor independence in a robust and appropriate way.

    Do you consider it necessary for IESBA to open a debate on issues related to the independence of the auditor and on the provision of services other than audit, precisely now that these issues are being reviewed by other regulatory entities on an international basis?

    It is important to remember that the Ethics Board does not set standards in a vacuum. We recognize that the external environment may evolve very rapidly and we must be prepared to take action as needed. So, we carefully monitor emerging issues or developments internationally that may be of relevance to our work, and discuss the implications of the most significant ones for our strategy and work program. We may decide after careful analysis of environmental developments and discussions with our stakeholders that adjustments to our strategy are necessary, as we did last year when we added four new work streams to our current strategy. But this doesn’t mean we commence a project to respond to every emerging issue or development—our resources are finite after all and must be carefully managed. However, as I noted above, we have already started projects in the areas of long association and non-assurance services to determine whether changes to the Code are needed to further strengthen auditor independence.

    Do you deem it necessary for audit companies to strengthen their Chinese walls (professional confidentiality both for employees as well as a physical separation of the technologies or the working teams) among their different divisions? Please, could you detail any necessary procedures?

    The Code’s provisions addressing the fundamental principle of confidentiality are clear. Paragraph 140.4 requires a professional accountant to maintain confidentiality of information within the firm. Paragraph 140.5 requires a professional accountant to take reasonable steps to ensure that staff under the professional accountant’s control and persons from whom advice and assistance is obtained respect the professional accountant’s duty of confidentiality. It is the responsibility of the audit firms to take whatever actions are necessary to comply with these requirements, including segregating teams on different engagements as needed, and protecting the confidentiality of documentation containing client information.

    Do you think that setting a cap on the percentage of revenues that may derive from one single client as a general rule, both for public interest entities (PIEs) and small- and medium-sized entities (SMEs), resolves the independence problem? Or would it rather be desirable in the case of SMEs, so as to avoid this problem, to apply the safeguards of the IESBA Code, such as increasing quality controls?

    The tool has to fit the purpose. The level of public interest in the audit of a PIE will of course be different from the audit of an SME. So a one-size-fits-all approach may not necessarily be the right answer in every case. That is why I believe the threats and safeguards approach in the Code with respect to evaluating the impact of fees from a given client on independence is the right one. In particular, paragraph 290.220 of the Code states that when the total fees from an audit client represent a large proportion of the total fees of the firm expressing the audit opinion, the dependence on that client and concern about losing the client creates a self-interest or intimidation threat. The Code explains that the significance of the threat will depend on various factors such as the operating structure of the firm and the significance of the client qualitatively and/or quantitatively to the firm. The Code in this case requires the firm to evaluate the significance of the threat and apply appropriate safeguards to eliminate the threat or reduce it to an acceptable level. Among a number of possible safeguards could be to use external quality control reviews.

    Of course, for PIEs, the Code already imposes a 15% cap on total fees from an audit client and its related entities relative to the total fees received by the firm as a whole. That is a position that the board believes is appropriate with respect to PIE audits.

    How is the audit affected by the new definition of “engagement team” and to what extent has this been agreed with the ISAs?

    The amendments to the definition of “engagement team” clarify the relationship between an external auditor’s use of internal auditors to provide direct assistance on the external audit in accordance with the International Auditing and Assurance Standards Board (IAASB)’s International Standard on Auditing (ISA) 610 (Revised 2013), Using the Work of Internal Auditors, and the meaning of an engagement team under the Code. The change to the definition should not affect audits because the sole purpose of the change is to eliminate a perceived inconsistency between the Code and the ISAs. In developing the change to the definition, I was pleased that the Ethics Board and the IAASB worked closely together to ensure that the amended definition would be fully consistent with the ISAs.

    But of course, jurisdictions have different views on the appropriateness of using internal auditors to provide direct assistance on the external audit; the Code is not advocating one position or the other.

    What sort of procedures will IESBA have to implement and maintain for the ISAs to be in agreement with the Code of Ethics?

    Well, we certainly maintain close contact with the IAASB, and that is by necessity given that the Code and the ISAs are so closely linked. We have regular interactions with the IAASB at various levels—at the staff level, at the task force level (as we did on our project on the definition of “engagement team” and the IAASB’s project to revise ISA 610), and at the leadership level through quarterly meetings or teleconferences. We recognize the critical importance of these interactions as we are increasingly finding that issues being addressed on each board’s agenda have implications for the standards of the other board. I would also add that both boards have the benefit of the advice from their consultative advisory groups (CAGs), which have significant overlap in their memberships. As a result, the CAGs are often able to share ethics and audit perspectives on issues of mutual relevance to the two boards. So we do have processes internally to make sure that the Code and the ISAs stay aligned with each other as they evolve.

    What are the main objectives for strengthening the Code in respect to the auditor’s actions upon encountering a breach of a requirement of the Code?

    The Ethics Board released changes to the Code addressing a breach of a requirement of the Code in March 2013. The main objective of the project was to respond to a concern that the current provisions addressing an inadvertent breach of the Code, including independence requirements, could be misread as implying that all inadvertent breaches can be corrected by applying necessary safeguards. What we have now established in the Code is a robust framework, in particular for auditors to deal with breaches to the independence requirements of the Code. The provisions include strict requirements for communicating all breaches to those charged with governance and documentation.

    What is the deadline to complete the revision of the Code of Ethics and to publish the final version?

    The 2013 edition of the Handbook of the Code of Ethics for Professional Accountants will be available in May. This edition will contain the revised pronouncements addressing conflicts of interest, a breach of a requirement of the Code, and the definition of “engagement team,” which will take effect next year.

    Do you consider that in today’s difficult financial environment, the auditor is satisfactorily fulfilling its public interest role and complying with ethics principles, such as honesty, independence, objectivity, and professional best practice?

    Even though I am not an auditor or accountant and have never worked as one, I strongly believe that the vast majority of the audit profession live up to those principles. It helps that most auditors are required, often by law or regulation as a condition of their license, to go through rigorous training and develop core competencies, including a full understanding of the fundamental ethical principles that are the bedrock of the profession and are embodied in the Code. It is a fact of life, however, that in a very small minority of cases, members of any profession succumb to pressure to act unethically. This is when I strongly feel the disciplinary and enforcement regime in the particular jurisdiction should take action to deal with these isolated cases and prevent the profession as a whole from being cast into disrepute.

    If you had to choose one single, fundamental ethics principle to rule over the professional activity of all auditors, what would it be?

    That would be a fruitless task because no one fundamental principle overrides all the others. The five fundamental principles (integrity, objectivity, professional competence and due care, confidentiality, and professional behavior) that are established in the Code constitute one body of core principles that cannot be taken apart. Auditors must comply with each and all of them in every audit engagement they perform.

    © Instituto de Censores Jurados de Cuentas de España (ICJCE). Spain. 2013.

    This material belongs to ICJCE, therefore attributed to it all rights and related operating on it in any way, method or medium.