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Ethics in Public Sector Organizations

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Rule based ethics generate rules that guide behavior. Act based ... Niccolo Machiavelli. Good & well intentioned people produce bad policy & administration ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ethics in Public Sector Organizations


1
Ethics in Public Sector Organizations
2
Conventional Ethics
  • Ethics dimensions
  • Deontological
  • Means justify end
  • Right wrong vs. benefit harm
  • Teleological
  • End justifies means
  • Benefit harm vs. right wrong
  • Theories
  • Rule based ethics generate rules that guide
    behavior
  • Act based ethics guide decision making

3
Conventional Ethics
  • Philosophers of note - Ancient Greece
  • Term ethics first discussions of
  • Plato
  • Justice, reason, ethics
  • Aristotle
  • Ethics moral virtues
  • Instill through training practice
  • A way of life vs. rules principles

4
Conventional Ethics
  • Philosophers of note - Ancient Greece
  • Term ethics first discussions of
  • Socrates
  • Action/decision is right or wrong
  • Without considering personal impact, what others
    will think, or how we feel about what happened

5
Conventional Ethics
  • Philosophers of note
  • Habermas
  • Do no harm (medical professions)
  • Niccolo Machiavelli
  • Good well intentioned people produce bad policy
    administration
  • People need to learn how not to be good
  • Judge ethical merit by consequences

6
Conventional Ethics
  • Philosophers of note
  • Immanuel Kant
  • Categorical imperative (3 iterations)
  • Act so that in your own person as well as in the
    person of every other you are treating mankind
    also as an end, never as a means (second
    iteration)

7
Conventional Ethics
  • Philosophers of note
  • John Rawls
  • Justice based on individual rights to basic
    liberties
  • Distribute rights as equally as possible
  • Arrange inequalities to benefit least advantaged

8
Conventional Ethics
  • Philosophers of note
  • Lawrence Kohlberg
  • Theory of Moral Development
  • Three levels six stages
  • Pre-conventional morality
  • Conventional morality
  • Post conventional morality

9
Conventional Ethics
  • Philosophers of note
  • John Stuart Mill
  • Utilitarianism
  • Judge acts by greatest good to greatest number
  • Precursor to cost-benefit

10
Conventional Ethics
  • Philosophers of note
  • Alasdair MacIntyre
  • Focus on practices vs. professions
  • Practices normative framework
  • Broader framework avoids self protection self
    aggrandizement of professions

11
Accounting Today
  • The late 20th century
  • 1970s client loyalty fades, client-auditor
    relationship changes
  • 1973 FASB created
  • Early 1980s Florida Hawaii adopt 150-hour rule
    for CPA candidates

12
Accounting Today
  • The late 20th century
  • 1980s 1990s
  • Competition for audit clients rises while margins
    decrease
  • Huge growth in non audit services
  • Firms become multidisciplinary
  • Big 8 mergers

13
Accounting Today
  • The late 20th century
  • 1980s 1990s
  • Explosive corporate growth
  • Dot coms
  • Earnings management
  • Stock option compensation
  • Late 1990s - restatements

14
Accounting Today
  • The new millennium
  • 2001 Enron, Andersen, et al
  • 2002
  • Sarbanes-Oxley Act
  • Fall of Arthur Andersen
  • 700 restatements 1/97 to 3/02
  • 39 for premature revenue recognition
  • Norwalk Agreement

15
Accounting Today
  • Scandal public distrust
  • Accountants auditors
  • Most states require 150 hours
  • More women partners
  • Family friendly companies
  • Specialization
  • Increasingly complex business environment

16
Accounting Today
  • SOX
  • PCAOB
  • Restrictions on non-audit services
  • Audit committee
  • Auditor rotation
  • Revolving door policy

17
Accounting Tomorrow
  • PCAOB quality review vs. peer review
  • Public education regarding what an audit is/says
  • Reassert ethics in the profession

18
Accounting Tomorrow
  • International standards
  • Accounting
  • Private public sector entities
  • Auditing
  • Increased focus on management accounting
  • Congressional involvement
  • Auditor rotation
  • Benefit plans

19
Ethics the CPA
20
Why Professional Ethics?
  • Professional
  • Self disciplined group of individuals
  • Hold out to public possess skill
  • Education or training
  • Use skill in interest of others

21
What It Means To Be a CPA
  • Compliance with ethical professional standards
  • Founding values
  • Honesty
  • Trustworthiness
  • Conflict free
  • Doing whats right
  • Due proper support for work opinions

22
What It Means To Be a CPA
  • Today
  • Ethical compliance not a luxury
  • Expanded responsibilities
  • Greater need for transparency
  • Increased professional liability
  • New civil criminal penalties
  • Failure to meet professional standards

23
Ethical Perspectives for the CPA
  • Individual CPA
  • Relation to employer/clients
  • Relation to colleagues the profession
  • Relation to third parties general public

24
Ethical Breakdowns
  • Meet immediate self-interest easier
  • Anticipated harm to self
  • Right may conflict other obligations
  • Personal ethics conflict with firmly established
    community/organizational standards

25
Ethical Breakdowns
  • Cant succeed without getting hands dirty
  • Small part of overall operation
  • Many involved in decision no individual held
    responsible
  • Failure to think about ethical considerations

26
Section 500Acts Discreditable
  • Failure to return client records
  • Failure to follow standards, procedures, etc.
    required in governmental audits
  • Negligence in preparation of FS or records

27
Section 500Acts Discreditable
  • Failure to follow requirements of governmental
    bodies, commissions or other regulatory agencies

28
Section 500Acts Discreditable
  • Solicitation/disclosure of CPA exam
    questions/answers
  • Failure to file tax return or pay tax liability

29
Issues to Consider
  • Fraudulent financial reporting based on
    deep-seated moral ethical problems
  • Not disappeared even after high profile
    convictions

30
Issues to Consider SLGs NFPs
  • Financial reporting issues
  • Revenue recognition
  • Fair value measurements
  • Lease accounting
  • DB other retirement plans
  • Quantifying FS misstatements through quantitative
    qualitative factors
  • Executive compensation issues

31
Addressing Ethical Dilemmas
  • Know respect professional standards
  • Understand proper disclosure financial
    reporting considerations
  • Know proper value-oriented responses to ethical
    dilemmas

32
What Must You Do?
  • Remember key reference points from Code of
    Professional Responsibility
  • Fulfill responsibilities to all stakeholders
  • Are you doing what a person with integrity would
    do?
  • Avoid conflicts of interest in services rendered

33
Conclusion
  • Whenever you are to do a thing, though it can
    never be known but to yourself, ask yourself how
    you would act were all the world looking at you,
    and act accordingly.

34
Ethics GAGAS
35
Auditing Accountability
  • Public expects auditors to be ethical
  • Ethical tone set by organizational management
  • Essential element of positive ethical environment
  • Ethical culture
  • Communicating acceptable behavior expectations
  • Creating environment reinforcing encouraging
    ethical behavior

36
A Matter of Responsibility
  • Conducting audit work in accordance with ethical
    principles is a matter of personal
    organizational responsibility.
  • Preserving independence
  • Taking on only work auditor is competent to
    perform
  • Performing high-quality work
  • Following applicable standards cited in audit
    report

37
Ethical Principles
  • The public interest
  • Integrity
  • Objectivity
  • Proper use of government information, resources,
    position
  • Professional behavior

38
The Public Interest
  • A distinguishing mark of an auditor is acceptance
    of responsibility to serve the public interest.
    This responsibility is critical when auditing in
    the government environment.
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