AICPA urges SEC to allow auditors to perform tax work
Published on 1/10/2003
The accounting industry's main trade and lobby group in the US urged the
Securities and Exchange Commission to allow accountants to provide tax
minimization strategies to audit clients, as regulators consider banning the
practice.
The SEC has proposed rules aimed at removing any conflicts of interests for
auditors, who have come under fire after a spate of accounting scandals last
year, including Enron Corp. and WorldCom Inc. The agency is considering
forbidding accountants from providing certain tax services, such as setting up
tax shelters, since it could mean the accounting firm ends up auditing its own
work.
In a statement, the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants said it
asked the Commission to "specifically recognize that tax minimization services
are appropriate, while precluding auditors from advising audit clients on tax
transactions for which there is no business purpose other than tax avoidance
(except those that are consistent with the intent of applicable tax laws)."
It also urged the SEC to specifically spell out in the new rules that
accountants will still be allowed to provide traditional tax services such as
preparing tax returns and tax planning.
The AICPA, well known for its lobbying prowess and clout on Capitol Hill, also
asked the SEC to revise its definition of "expert" services that auditors are
not allowed to provide to clients. It argued that certain expert services, which
it did not specify in the statement, did not impair the objectivity of the
auditor.
The AICPA also wrote that it supported the idea of rotating the lead partner on
an audit on a periodic basis, but said that it would hurt small businesses for
whom rotating partners might force them to resign from clients for lack of
qualified partners to take over the account.
Courtesy of Reuters



