










 |

Treasury Dept’s Committee on Auditing
Profession Making Progress; Report Due this SummerReliance on
complete, accurate, transparent and trusted financial statements form the
backbone of America’s capital markets – the strongest in the world. Front
and center in the process is the CPA profession, the independent auditors of
publicly held companies.
To ensure the vitality of the capital markets and the CPA profession in
today’s marketplace, the U.S. Treasury Department last October formed the
Advisory Committee on the Auditing Profession. AICPA President and CEO
Barry Melancon is one of the accounting profession’s representatives on the
21-member committee and also serves on one of its three subcommittees. A
report on the committee’s work will be published this summer.
Arthur Levitt Jr., former chairman of the SEC, and Donald T. Nicolaisen,
former chief accountant of the SEC, co-chair the committee, which will make
recommendations to Secretary of the Treasury Henry Paulson Jr. about how to
encourage a more sustainable auditing profession. Issues being examined by
the committee include audit firm concentration, financial soundness, audit
quality, liability risk, and employee recruitment and retention.
Committee members were culled from several affected groups: auditors and
investors; and small and large public companies, insurance companies,
lawyers and regulators. Official observers for U.S. and international
regulatory and policy bodies also attend the meetings.
The committee has met several times and held many public meetings where it
heard from numerous witnesses. Witness testimony is available on the
Treasury Department web site at
www.treasury.gov/offices/domestic-finance/acap/submissions-12032007.shtml.
Also active in serving as a resource to the committee is the Center for
Audit Quality, an AICPA affiliate. The CAQ submitted a letter to the
committee outlining the current state of the public company audit
environment. The letter is available on the CAQ’s web site (www.thecaq.org).
Three subcommittees were formed to focus on specific areas: Human Capital,
Concentration and Competition, and Firm Structure and Finances. Each of
these subcommittees also met several times and will share preliminary
findings with the full committee in March. Topics these subcommittees will
pursue include:
- The Human Capital Subcommittee, of which Melancon is a
member, is charged with examining the auditing profession’s ability to
cultivate, attract and retain the human capital necessary to meet
developments in the business and financial reporting environment and
ensure audit quality for investors.
- Exploring audit market competition and concentration, as well as the impact
of the independence and other professional standards on the market and
investor confidence are discussed in the Concentration and Competition Subcommittee.
- Organizational structure, financial resources and communication of
the auditing profession are being covered by the Firm Structure and
Finances Subcommittee.
The full committee will consider the subcommittees’ recommendations. For
additional developments heading to the final report, visit
www.treasury.gov.
Top |
 |

May/June 2008
Printer Friendly Version


 |