Ethics is a crucial and topical area for auditors and accountants and is constantly under scrutiny by both the industry and the press. The ethical codes of auditors are particularly debated each time there is a significant corporate failure and these guidelines change in response to a dynamic business environment. For students, ethics feature as a key part of the entire ACCA professional syllabus and are examined in many ways in many papers. A good understanding of ethical issues is therefore required in order to qualify as a chartered certified accountant. It is also important to be able to apply this ethical stance and the codes by which accountants are governed to the particular exam you are sitting.
In the Paper P7, Advanced Audit and Assurance, the ethical focus is on auditor behaviour and the rules and principles that auditors must abide by. Contrast this to the focus in Paper P2, Corporate Reporting, where the focus is on the directors choosing the ethically appropriate presentation of the accounts and wider information published, or Paper P1, Governance, Risk and Ethics and Paper P3, Business Analysis, where it is ethical business practices and strategies that come under scrutiny. This means that when answering the questions in the audit paper on ethics the focus must remain on considerations, the consequences and the actions to be taken by the auditor rather than the client or business that is being audited.
Within the exam, ethical issues are commonly examined alongside practice management issues as the implications of ethical guidelines will interlink with the processes and procedures that an audit or advisory firm must put in place to ensure compliance. This means that answers may need to cover both areas and will need to suggest actions required by the firm in order to remain compliant with the ethical rules.
From a technique point of view, the starting point is to learn the basic ethical principles that auditors must abide by. These are fundamental principles of Integrity; Objectivity; Professional competence and due care; Confidentiality; and Professional behaviour. This is the start point for assessing issues within a scenario and is also for when there is no specific guidance on an area. These principles sit within a conceptual ethical framework that requires ACCA members to consider and identify threats, evaluate those threats and respond to them. Where significant threats are identified, appropriate safeguards must be implemented to eliminate or reduce such threats to an acceptable level (ACCA code of Ethics and Conduct and the IESBA Code).
Beyond this general guidance, there are specific rules within auditing and industry ethical standards that should be applied in specific situations. For adapted paper variants these codes may be different but they all contain similar principles even where the exact requirements differ. More details can be found in any approved study text. This however will only be a starting place. These rules have been examined already in the initial audit paper and any question at the advanced level will require an ability to deal with these in more complex scenarios or judgemental areas.
Requirements from recent exams show how the issues may be interlinked. For example, in June 2013 there was a question where a new audit client requested advice on the acquisition of an existing audit client while also wanting financing advice on the potential purchase. This scenario requires consideration of the issues involved in offering advice on acquisitions (such as competence and several independence threats) and takes this further as the target financial statements have been audited by the firm itself. It also extends to dealing with a conflict of interest between clients, and confidentiality issues along with further advocacy threats to independence, and the appropriateness of providing financing advice.
Questions may also require competency judgements to be made regarding staff seniority and different aspects of individual assignments such as Question 2 of the June 2013 exam. This question required discussion of which tasks are appropriate for which team members in specific audit situations. Each situation presented may have subtle considerations which mean that the basic rules must be examined more closely. For example, in the December 2013 exam one scenario presented a request for valuation services by a listed client. Marks were available for saying that provision of material valuation services to listed clients are not permitted but additional marks were available for spotting that in this case the amount was immaterial therefore, subject to other considerations such as competence and availability of time and resources, that this was permitted.
In order to tackle these requirements there is a need to identify each relevant issue and show how it relates to the rules. For example in the case of the acquisition above there is a self-review threat. Identifying that self-review is an issue may score a half mark. In order to score well, the risk of self-review must be explained in relation to the scenario. So here an answer may go on to say that in examining the accounts of the target company the firm will be reviewing figures it has already audited and may be reluctant to highlight errors in those figures. Further when auditing the acquisition in the purchasing company, the goodwill and fair value figures will be based on work the audit firm did on the acquisition and hence a further self-review threat emerges where again the firm may be unwilling to highlight errors or unable to identify its own errors of judgement.
This is a common area where students who have identified the right issue go on to score badly through a lack of specific explanation in relation to the scenario or through the use of circular explanations such as 'there is a self-review threat because the auditors will be reviewing their own work'. Such an answer does not explain what happens as a consequence of self-review, hence why it is a threat, nor does it apply the issue to the scenario. Each ethical threat must be expanded on in order to explain how it arises. The table below shows examples of how identification points for specific threats to independence can be converted into explanations.