Auditor independence has become
a major issue in today's accounting world. As large firms continue to merge and
evolve into companies offering multiple services, the necessity of independent
auditing looms over the profession. The Panel on Audit Effectiveness, created
in 1998 at the request of the Securities and Exchange Commission's chairman Arthur
Levitt, released its final report on the subject last month. Responsible for recommending
specific improvements for the industry, the Panel suggested a number of more strict
procedures to monitor and verify the effectiveness of independent audits by public
companies.
"Clearly, the conduct of audits and governance of the profession
need substantial improvement," said panel chairman and former Price Waterhouse
chairman Shaun O'Malley, in a September 8 article in Electronic
Accountant.
The report - a potentially difficult document for some
in the profession to embrace - calls for a "unified system of governance under
a strengthened, independent Public Oversight Board" that monitors standards setting,
discipline and special reviews. The Public Oversight Board is the independent
body that oversees the SEC practice section of the American Institute of CPAs.
AICPA
President Barry Melancon, in a recent Accounting Today article, noted that the
330,000-member organization welcomed the panel's report. He also mentioned that
there were a number of specific recommendations that require "more thorough study,
cost-benefit analysis, and a review of their potential impact on our successful,
long-established strategy of self-regulation and independent oversight."
The
report's additional suggestions include:
- A recommendation that auditors
perform specific, forensic-type procedures on every audit to better detect fraud.
- A
recommendation that the Auditing Standards Board create more specific and definitive
quality control standards.
- A call for stronger peer review and auditor
discipline by the SEC Practice Section.
- A request for new restrictions
on the provision of non-audit services by audit firms, which would include a pre-approval
process by audit committees for any non-audit services that exceed a pre-determined
amount.
Although many in the accounting profession are cautious of
the panel's report, the actual standards to be set by the SEC will not be finalized
until after a series of public hearings on the report, scheduled to begin September
13.
The complete report published by the Panel on Audit Effectiveness is
available at www.pobauditpanel.org.