Centre for Economic Policy Research
partnership organizational structure meant that the non-audit partners also
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partnership organizational structure meant that the non-audit partners also incurred a share in the audit risk with little ability to exert any control over it. Nowhere was this conflict more extreme than at Arthur Andersen, where the audit and consulting partners fought publicly about power and profit sharing. It was clear from anecdotal evidence and press reports of infighting that a split was inevitable and that significant amounts of management effort were focused on trying to deal with the internal battles. 33 The internal conflicts moved to a difficult court battle leading to the final split of Arthur Andersen and Andersen Consulting in 2000. During this contentious period, Andersen’s audit partners were pushed to focus on revenue generation and profitability as these were the focus of the ‘battle’. Other firms had less contention between the audit and consulting services, with different routes taken to eliminate related conflicts of interest. KPMG spun off its consulting entity into a public company; PricewaterhouseCoopers and Ernst & Young sold their consulting businesses to other firms; while Deloitte and Touche recently decided to retain the consulting business. There was, however, another very important dimension to the Andersen case. Many of the largest recent corporate failures that were Arthur Andersen clients – Enron, Worldcom, Qwest and Global Crossing – were also the largest companies in their local regions. 34 With an incentive structure that puts pressure on man- agers to deliver audit revenue and profit at every unit, the manager of a regional or city office would be wary of taking a negative stance on an audit that would risk the client selecting an alternative audit firm in that region. The loss of an Enron or Worldcom account would have been devastating to a local office and its partners, even if it was only a small part of firm-wide revenues and profits. 35 This pressure on any branch office would have been exacerbated by the competition withconsulting for power and profits within Arthur Andersen. Thus, the conflicts of interest may not necessarily have been linked to pressure to sell non-audit services to the audit client. The point is not to minimize the potential conflicts from the existence of non-audit services to a client but to emphasize that the elimination of conflict by separation of audit and non-audit services is unlikely to solve the problem if the incentive structures for the audit partners are focused on local short-term profitability, rather than sustainable quality that provides reputational value for the whole firm. From a strict economic perspective the firm-wide reputational cost of an audit failure has to outweigh any short-term benefits from avoiding a qualified audit. It is difficult, however, for local office performance measurement and incentive systems to capture such long-run costs. In principle, in the United Kingdom, the United States and increasingly in other countries, firms have an audit committee of the Board of Directors that is supposed to monitor auditing to prevent any conflict of interest between the auditors and managers. Audit committees are, however, rarely in complete charge in practice, and it is the executive officers who are the primary decision-makers. If both the fees and the decision of which audit firm is engaged rests with the 36 Conflicts of Interest in the Financial Services Industry senior managers being audited, there is a conflict of interest that can only be remedied by a change in the governance structures. The dependence on local office auditors by managers probably became more acute over the last twenty years because of changes in the industry. The role of the audit committees including board of directors and governance structures in the United States is under review as part of the Sarbanes-Oxley legislation. The United Kingdom has taken a slightly different approach. The Financial Reporting Council (FRC) appointed a committee chaired by Sir Robert Smith to prepare a report summarizing the guidance under existing codes and rules. The Smith Report entitled ‘Audit Committees – Combined Code Guidance’ includes specific guidance on reviewing auditor independence (ICAEW, 2003a). The approach recommended has three broad elements for the audit committee to consider: 1. fundamental principles to be followed by the auditor with objectivity being primary; 2. identification and consideration of threats to independence; and 3. consideration of safeguards. The threats and safeguards are considered in some detail and as such a clear framework is set out for audit committees to evaluate and control auditor independence. The interesting point of the Smith Report is that it provides a framework for a governance-based supervisory process to control auditor conflicts of interest. The 1980s and 1990s were a period of increased competition among audit firms and possibly excess capacity in the audit profession, especially as growth in corporate mergers and acquisitions reduced demand for audit services by reducing the number of firms. An audit firm became easily replaceable in the 1990s, as each firm was actively engaged in seeking out competitors’ clients. This was a relatively new phenomenon beginning in the 1970s when the Federal Trade Commission, worried about an oligopoly of large audit firms, required the profession to change its standards and permit audit firms to advertise and compete for clients (Healy and Palepu, 2003). During this period of competition for audit clients, combined with pressures to compete with non-audit partners, the ‘cost’ of losing a client appeared to be steep. Contracting profit in audit activities contributed to the consolidation of the large accounting firms from the Big 8 to the Big 5 (and now the Big 4) as the firms sought to exploit scale economies. With competition for revenue intense, it was natural for audit firm Download 1.95 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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