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  • Linda de Beer Appointed Chairman of IAASB Consultative Advisory Group

    New York English

    Prof. Linda de Beer has been appointed chairman of the Consultative Advisory Group (CAG) to the International Auditing and Assurance Standards Board (IAASB). The IAASB CAG** is an independent body and provides the forum in which the representatives of its various member organizations—including regulators, preparers, and others with an interest in international auditing and assurance—provide advice on technical and public interest matters relating to the drafts of IAASB standards and strategy. The IAASB is an independent standard-setting board that establishes in the public interest International Standards on Auditing (ISAs) and other pronouncements for use by professional accountants around the world.

    As a representative of the Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE), Prof. de Beer currently represents the World Federation of Exchanges on the CAG. She was elected by the CAG membership to succeed the current CAG chairman, David Damant, who since June 2004 has served as the first independent IAASB CAG chairman. Prof. de Beer’s appointment—a three-year term effective October 1, 2010—has been approved by the International Public Interest Oversight Board (PIOB).*

    The chairman of the IAASB CAG provides leadership direction to the CAG, overseeing the achievement of the CAG's objectives and liaising with the PIOB and the IAASB. The PIOB oversees the activities of the IAASB and of the CAG.

    “Linda brings a wealth of expertise to her current role as a member of the IAASB CAG,” said IFAC Chief Executive Officer Ian Ball. “I’m extremely pleased that she has been appointed as independent chairman, and I know that under her leadership the IAASB CAG will continue to make a highly effective contribution to audit standard setting. I would like also to acknowledge the vision, experience, and commitment David Damant brought to the role over the past six years.”

    Commenting on the appointment, Prof. Arnold Schilder, chairman of the IAASB, said: “Linda’s experience as a professional advisor will serve her well as she works to enhance the CAG’s public interest input to the development of our standards and guidance. I very much look forward to working with her as IAASB CAG chairman.”

    Prof. de Beer is an independent financial reporting and corporate governance advisor, and visiting professor at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg. She serves as an independent non-executive director on the boards of Afgri Holding Ltd (listed on the JSE) and Royal Bafokeng Platinum Ltd. She is a member of the King Committee on Corporate Governance, the Issuers’ Services Advisory Committee of the JSE, and the Committee for Auditing Standards of the Independent Regulatory Board for Auditors in South Africa.

    Prof. de Beer stated: “The IAASB CAG plays a vital role in ensuring that the recipients of assurance services—namely the preparers and users of financial information, regulators, and other participants in the financial reporting supply chain—have an influence on ISAs and the other standards of the IAASB, as well as on the strategic direction of the IAASB. It is critical for the credibility of financial reporting to have these constituents involved in the standard-setting process. I am honored and humbled by my colleagues’ decision to elect me to lead them in this role. I am very much looking forward to the challenge.”

    About the IAASB
    The IAASB (www.iaasb.org) develops auditing and assurance standards and guidance for use by all professional accountants under a shared standard-setting process involving the PIOB, which oversees the activities of the IAASB, and the IAASB CAG, which provides public interest input into the development of the standards and guidance. The structures and processes that support the operations of the IAASB are facilitated by IFAC.

    About IFAC
    IFAC (www.ifac.org) 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. It is comprised of 159 members and associates in 124 countries and jurisdictions, representing more than 2.5 million accountants in public practice, education, government service, industry, and commerce.

    * The Public Interest Oversight Board (PIOB)
    Established in 2005 as the oversight board for the global accountancy profession, the PIOB oversees IFAC's public interest activities with the objective of increasing the confidence of investors and others that such activities, including the setting of standards, are properly responsive to the public interest. The PIOB oversees the activities of the IAASB and of the CAG and, as one element of this oversight, establishes the criteria for their due processes and working procedures. PIOB members are nominated by international institutions and regulatory bodies.

    ** IAASB CAG Members (As at September 1, 2010)

    • Asian Financial Executives Institutes
    • Associação Brasileira de Instituições Financeiras de Desenvolvimento
    • Basel Committee on Banking Supervision
    • BUSINESSEUROPE
    • CFA Institute
    • Dean of the Graduate School of Financial Management, Moscow
    • European Commission
    • European Federation of Accountants and Auditors for SMEs
    • European Financial Executives Institutes
    • Fédération des Experts Comptables Européens
    • Gulf States Regulatory Authorities
    • Information Systems Audit and Control Association
    • Institute of Internal Auditors
    • International Accounting Standards Board
    • International Actuarial Association
    • International Association of Insurance Supervisors
    • International Bar Association
    • International Corporate Governance Network
    • International Organization of Securities Commissions
    • International Organization of Supreme Audit Institutions
    • International Valuation Standards Council
    • Islamic Financial Services Board
    • Japan Securities Dealers Association
    • National Association of State Boards of Accountancy
    • North American Financial Executives Institutes
    • Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development
    • Sri Lanka Accounting and Auditing Standards Monitoring Board
    • United Nations Conference on Trade & Development
    • World Bank
    • World Federation of Exchanges

    IAASB CAG Observers (As at September 1, 2010)

    • Financial Services Agency, Japan
    • U.S. Public Company Accounting Oversight Board
  • Staff Questions & Answers - Auditor Considerations Regarding Significant Unusual or Highly Complex Transactions

    This IAASB Staff Q&A highlights considerations in the International Standards on Auditing (ISAs) that are relevant to auditing transactions that are significant unusual or highly complex, judged in the light of the auditor's understanding of the entity and its environment and other information obtained during the audit. Because of their nature, these transactions may give rise to risks of material misstatement of the financial statements and, accordingly, may merit heightened attention by auditors.

    IAASB
    English
  • IFAC Consultation Paper Highlights Changing Roles and Employer Expectations of Professional Accountants in Business

    New York English

    The Professional Accountants in Business (PAIB) Committee of the International Federation of Accountants (IFAC) today released for comment a Consultation Paper, Competent and Versatile: How Professional Accountants in Business Drive Sustainable Organizational Success, that highlights how employer expectations of professional accountants in business are expected to change in light of global trends and evolving organizational needs.

    The paper analyzes these expectations in relation to eight drivers of sustainable organizational success—what companies need to do to achieve and sustain success in the changing global economic landscape. The drivers were defined based on an analysis of three long-term trends influencing organizations: globalization, complexity, and technology. The drivers provide the framework for key activities that professional accountants will be expected to perform. These activities are highlighted under the following four roles that form the cornerstones of the services provided by professional accountants: creators, enablers, preservers, and reporters of sustainable value. Previously defined in the proposed PAIB Strategy and Work Plan 2010-12, these roles have received wide support so far.

    IFAC PAIB Committee Chair Roger Tabor commented, “This employer-based view of the expectations of professional accountants in business will help accountants prepare for the roles they will be expected to fill in the future. The world is changing, organizational needs are evolving, and professional accountants need to adapt their skills and competences to these changing requirements and circumstances. Our demand-driven approach will enable the global accountancy profession to ensure that its members are positioned to help drive their organization’s sustainable performance.”

    The discussion questions that precede the Consultation Paper ask for feedback on, for example, the usefulness of developing an international competency framework that would cover the roles and domain of professional accountants in business, among other key topics.

    Comments on the Consultation Paper are requested by November 30, 2010.

    About IFAC
    IFAC (www.ifac.org) 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 159 members and associates in 124 countries and jurisdictions, representing more than 2.5 million accountants in public practice, education, government service, industry, and commerce.

  • The Flying Dutchman

    Anthony O'Brien
    In the Black, CPA Australia English

    CPA Australia's monthly magazine In the Black features a profile of IAASB Chairman Arnold Schilder. Read the full article here.

  • Preparing a Winning Loan Package

    Elizabeth Wasserman
    AmEx Inside Edge English

    IFAC President Robert Bunting speaks about the strategies that small- and medium-sized entities can use to secure financing during the credit crunch. Read the article here.



  • Two IFAC Nominees Selected as Members of IFRS SME Implementation Group

    New York English

    The International Federation of Accountants (IFAC), the global organization for the accountancy profession, welcomes the announcement by the International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) Foundation of the membership of the newly-created SME Implementation Group (SME IG). IFAC is pleased to note the appointment to the SME IG of two of its nominees—Robin Jarvis and Ricardo Rodil.

    The group’s mission is to support the adoption and implementation of the IFRS for Small and Medium-sized Entities (IFRS for SMEs) around the world. As such, it will develop non-mandatory guidance for implementing the IFRS for SMEs in the form of questions and answers that will be made publicly available on a timely basis and make recommendations to the International Accounting Standards Board if and when needed regarding amendments to the IFRS for SMEs. The members of the group will serve a renewable term of two years from July 2010. The full list of members is available here.

    “We are gratified that two of our nominees were selected to join the SME IG,” said Ian Ball, CEO of IFAC. “Both small- and medium-sized practices (SMPs) and SMEs are vital parts of the global economy. IFAC provides support to SMPs, in collaboration with our member bodies, so that they can provide high-quality services to their SME clients. We also support professional accountants in business, many of whom work in SMEs and will use the IFRS for SMEs. Providing input into international standard-setting—including auditing and assurance, ethics, and accounting standards— to help ensure that they are relevant to SMPs and SMEs is a key part of our work. Robin and Ricardo will help the SME IG fulfill its mandate by bringing invaluable insights from their professional experience, along with that drawn from their experience with IFAC’s Small and Medium Practices Committee.”

    For more information about IFAC’s Small and Medium Practices Committee, see www.ifac.org/smp.

    About IFAC
    IFAC (www.ifac.org) 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 159 members and associates in 124 countries and jurisdictions, representing more than 2.5 million accountants in public practice, education, government service, industry, and commerce.

  • A4S and GRI Announce Formation of the IIRC

    New York English

    The Prince’s Accounting for Sustainability Project (A4S) and the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) announced today the formation of the International Integrated Reporting Committee (IIRC). The IIRC brings together a cross section of representatives from the corporate, accounting, securities, regulatory, NGO, and standard-setting sectors. Ian Ball, CEO of IFAC, will serve as co-chairman of the Working Group.

    The objective of the IIRC is to create a globally accepted framework for accounting for sustainability that brings together financial, environmental, social, and governance information in a clear, concise, consistent, and comparable format. The intention is to help with the development of more comprehensive and comprehensible information about an organization’s total performance, prospective as well as retrospective, to meet the needs of the emerging, more sustainable, global economic model.

    Please see the attached press release issued and briefing notes. For further information regarding the IIRC, please see www.integratedreporting.org.

  • Arnold Schilder Reappointed to Chair the IAASB from 2012 to 2014

    New York English

    The Board of the International Federation of Accountants (IFAC) has reappointed Prof. Arnold Schilder to lead the International Auditing and Assurance Standards Board (IAASB), an independent standard-setting board supported by IFAC, for the period 2012–2014.

    As chairman, Prof. Schilder will continue to lead the IAASB as it works to set high-quality auditing and assurance standards and to facilitate the convergence to international standards. He will play a key role in guiding the IAASB as it strives to enhance the quality and uniformity of audit practice throughout the world by promoting the adoption and implementation of its International Standards on Auditing (ISAs). And, he will steer the board into the future as it works to build public confidence in financial reporting by developing new standards addressing assurance services such as on greenhouse gas statements and pro forma financial information.

    “I am delighted to announce that Arnold Schilder will continue to serve as chairman, which will provide for stability and ongoing leadership of IAASB operations well into the future,” said IFAC Chief Executive Officer Ian Ball. "Arnold has been a superb chairman of the IAASB as it implements its first strategy and work program after the Clarity Project. His leadership has enabled the IAASB to make significant progress on standards for review and compilation engagements, which are particularly relevant to small- and medium-sized practices (SMPs).”

    "It has been my great pleasure to chair the IAASB for the past 18 months, and I am honored to have been reappointed to lead the board through 2014,” said Prof. Schilder. “I look forward to continuing the Board’s work to achieve global adoption of the clarified ISAs and to helping practitioners around the world successfully implement these high-quality international auditing standards.”

    Prof. Schilder's appointment to a second three-year term as IAASB Chairman begins on January 1, 2012. The appointment was approved by the Public Interest Oversight Board (PIOB)*—an independent body that oversees IAASB activities—at its latest meeting in Madrid, Spain on June 28–29, 2010.

    From 1998 to 2008, Prof. Schilder was a member of the Managing Board of the Dutch Central Bank, responsible in particular for banking regulation and supervision. He served as the chairman of the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision's Accounting Task Force from 1999–2006, and from 2005–2008 as a member of the PIOB. During 1994 and 1995 he served also as President of Royal NIVRA. From 1972 to 1998 he worked with PricewaterhouseCoopers, serving since 1985 as an international audit partner.

    For more information about the work of the IAASB, visit its homepage at www.iaasb.org.

    About the IAASB
    The IAASB (www.iaasb.org) develops auditing and assurance standards and guidance for use by all professional accountants under a shared standard-setting process involving the PIOB, which oversees the activities of the IAASB, and the IAASB Consultative Advisory Group, which provides public interest input into the development of the standards and guidance. The structures and processes that support the operations of the IAASB are facilitated by IFAC.

    About IFAC
    IFAC (www.ifac.org) 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. It is comprised of 159 members and associates in 124 countries and jurisdictions, representing more than 2.5 million accountants in public practice, education, government service, industry, and commerce.

    * Note to Editors
    The Public Interest Oversight Board (PIOB) was formally established in February 2005 to oversee IFAC's auditing and assurance, ethics, and education standard-setting activities as well as the IFAC Member Body Compliance Program. The objective of the PIOB is to increase confidence of investors and others that such activities, including the setting of standards by the IAASB, are properly responsive to the public interest. PIOB members are nominated by international institutions and regulatory bodies.

  • IFAC SMP Committee Publishes Quality Control Implementation Guide

    New York English

    The Small and Medium Practices (SMP) Committee of the International Federation of Accountants (IFAC) today issued the second edition of its Guide to Quality Control for Small- and Medium-Sized Practices (QC Guide) The implementation guide is intended to help SMPs understand and efficiently apply the redrafted International Standard on Quality Control (ISQC) 1, Quality Control for Firms that Perform Audits and Reviews of Financial Statements, and Other Assurance and Related Services Engagements.


    The first edition of the QC Guide was issued in March 2009 and went on to become IFAC’s second most downloaded publication after the Handbook of International Auditing, Assurance, and Ethics Pronouncements last year. The new edition conforms to the revised and redrafted Code of Ethics for Professional Accountants and includes various improvements based on feedback from users of the first edition. It features an integrated case study, practical checklists and forms, and two sample quality control manuals.

    IFAC wishes to thank the Certified General Accountants Association of Canada (CGA-Canada) for producing the QC Guide for free and the global panel of reviewers for volunteering their time and effort to helping with its development.

    “This guide will help SMPs to cost effectively implement ISQC 1 and ensure that they can provide high-quality assurance and related services to their clients,” said SMP Committee Chair Sylvie Voghel.

    The PDF version of the QC Guide can be downloaded from the Publications and Resources section of the IFAC website. In addition, CGA-Canada is currently working on developing a French translation of the QC Guide. It will be available on the Translations Database of the IFAC website in September.

    About IFAC

    IFAC (www.ifac.org) 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. It is comprised of 159 members and associates in 124 countries and jurisdictions, representing more than 2.5 million accountants in public practice, education, government service, industry, and commerce.

  • IAASB Proposes Enhanced Standard on Using the Work of Internal Auditors

    New York English

    Recognizing developments in the internal auditing environment and the evolving relationship between internal and external auditors, the International Auditing and Assurance Standards Board (IAASB) today released an exposure draft on a proposed revised standard that addresses the external auditor’s responsibilities relating to using internal auditors’ work during an audit.


    The proposed International Standard on Auditing (ISA) 610 (Revised), Using the Work of Internal Auditors, aims to enhance the external auditor’s performance by providing a stronger framework for evaluating and using the work and assistance of an entity’s internal auditors. Related enhancements to the external auditor’s required considerations of the internal audit function are also proposed in ISA 315 (Revised), Identifying and Assessing the Risks of Material Misstatement through Understanding the Entity and Its Environment.

    “Internal auditing standards and practices continue to evolve, as does the relationship between external and internal auditors,” said Prof. Arnold Schilder, IAASB Chairman. “Ensuring that global audit practices take account of these changes benefits both auditors and preparers. Through our revision of ISA 610, we believe external auditors will be better equipped to evaluate opportunities for effective coordination with internal auditors.”

    Analyzing Benefits and Impacts of the Proposals
    In addition to setting out the main proposals of the IAASB, the explanatory memorandum to the exposure draft pilots an approach for analyzing the benefits and impacts of the IAASB’s proposals. The approach provides a structured and transparent means for communicating the effects of proposals to stakeholders.

    “Understanding the potential benefits and impacts of proposed changes is an integral part of developing high-quality standards,” said James Gunn, IAASB Technical Director. “This pilot will help inform the IAASB and further integrate the analysis of benefits and impacts into the standards-setting process.”

    Matters on which the IAASB would like stakeholders’ input are set out in the explanatory memorandum to the exposure draft.

    How to Comment
    The IAASB invites all stakeholders to comment on its proposals. To access the exposure draft or submit a comment, visit the IAASB's website at www.iaasb.org/ExposureDrafts.php. Comments on the exposure draft are requested by November 15, 2010.

    About the IAASB
    The IAASB (www.iaasb.org) develops auditing and assurance standards and guidance for use by all professional accountants under a shared standard-setting process involving the Public Interest Oversight Board, which oversees the activities of the IAASB, and the IAASB Consultative Advisory Group, which provides public interest input into the development of the standards and guidance. The structures and processes that support the operations of the IAASB are facilitated by IFAC.

    About IFAC
    IFAC (www.ifac.org) 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. It is comprised of 159 members and associates in 124 countries and jurisdictions, representing more than 2.5 million accountants in public practice, education, government service, industry, and commerce.