audit Participant 
of PRAXITY,  AISBL,
a Global Alliance
of Independent Firms
    ua  ru     Home Search Site map Send a message

28.09.2011: “Big Four” business model under attack

The business model of the “Big Four” accounting firms is under attack from the European Commission, which is pushing for tough rules that would force the firms to abandon their consultancy businesses and share audit work with smaller rivals.

A draft regulation aims to transform the accounting sector in the wake of the financial crisis and restore “trust” in financial reporting. It has the backing of Michel Barnier, internal market commissioner, whose officials have decided the audit world is in the grip of an oligopoly.

Under the plans, which are to be unveiled in November, companies with balance sheets greater than €1 billion would be forced to hire two auditors to conduct a “joint audit” of their books, including at least one firm outside the “Big Four” of Deloitte, PricewaterhouseCoopers, Ernst & Young and KPMG.

Auditors will also be outlawed from working for a big company for more than nine years – a policy of “mandatory rotation” that Mr Barnier thinks will bolster independence and stimulate competition.

Some big multinationals have had the same auditor for more than a century.

Non-audit work is described by the commission as “a source of conflict of interest”. The draft says: “Audit firms of significant dimension should...not be allowed to undertake other services unconnected to their statutory audit function such as consultancy and advisory services.”

The ban strikes at the heart of the business model for big audit groups and goes much further than expected in restructuring the industry. Audit is a steady but slow-growing business, while non-audit operations, including consulting, make up about two-thirds of the revenues of the Big Four in Britain – the biggest in the European networks.

A spokesman for Deloitte said the measures would “harm audit quality” and drive up costs for companies using auditors. The second-tier firms, such as BDO and Grant Thornton, have long campaigned for regulators to help reduce barriers to entry. But the Big Four have deflected many of the proposals.

Mr Barnier will face an uphill battle winning approval of EU member states and the European parliament, required for the regulation to be enacted.

Mr Barnier’s team believe the conflicting commercial interests of the big firms have eroded trust, stifled competition and compromised the scepticism of the accounting profession.

“Auditors play an essential role in financial markets: financial actors need to be able to trust their statements,” Mr Barnier said.


Source: Irish Times

Also in the news
[23.12.2024]
Season's greeting from Kyiv Audit Group!

[28.04.2023]
Kyiv Audit Group prepared The Transparency Report for 2022

[07.07.2022]
Praxity Global Alliance Awarded Highly Commended for Association of the Year 2022

[29.04.2022]
Kyiv Audit Group prepared The Transparency Report for 2021

[23.12.2021]
Season's greeting from Kyiv Audit Group!

[11.11.2021]
It's a hat-trick! Praxity Global Alliance has regained its crown as the Association of the Year and gets triple award

[17.09.2021]
Kyiv Audit Group awarded Leader of the Branch 2021

[16.07.2021]
Happy Accountant's and Auditor's Day

[12.05.2021]
Happy Birthday - Kyiv Audit Group - 25th Anniversary

[21.04.2021]
Kyiv Audit Group prepared The Transparency Report for 2020