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Title: Ethical Issues in Accounting


1
Ethical Issues inAccounting Finance
  • Chapter 6

2
Ronald F. Duska andBrenda Shay Duska
  • Ethics in Auditing The Auditing Function
  • Duska and Duska examine the responsibilities of
    auditors.
  • They conclude that the duties of the auditor to
    the public override their duties to those who
    hire them (the corporations).
  • As a result, they have a duty to maintain
    independence in fulfilling their duties, even if
    that entails avoiding even the perception of a
    conflict of interest.

3
Internal Auditing
  • By examining the corporations books and records,
    the independent auditor determines whether the
    financial reports of the corporation have been
    prepared in accordance with generally accepted
    accounting principles.
  • The auditor then issues an opinion as to whether
    the financial statements, taken as a whole,
    fairly present the financial position and the
    operations of the corporation for the relevant
    period.
  • By certifying the public reports that
    collectively depict a corporations financial
    status, the independent auditor assumes a public
    responsibility transcending any employment
    relationship with the client.

4
Kantian Finance
  • Applying Kants universalizability principle
    what would happen if everybody misrepresented the
    financial health of their company when it was to
    their advantage to lie?
  • Trust in business dealings that required
    information about the financial picture would be
    eroded. Chaos would then ensue since markets
    cannot operate without trust.
  • Misrepresentation would be impossible since no
    one would be able to have the requisite levels of
    trust that are required for misrepresentation.
  • Because trust is so central to the operation of
    markets even the appearance of impropriety is
    damaging. Only a fool trusts someone who puts
    themselves in positions where they seem likely to
    have their integrity compromised.

5
The Auditors Basic Responsibilities
  • Proficiency on the part of the auditor
  • Independence in fact and in appearance
  • Due professional care, which involves a sense of
    professional skepticism
  • Adequately planned and properly supervised field
    work
  • A sufficient understanding of the internal
    control structure of the audited entity
  • Sufficient inspection observation, and inquiries
    to afford a reasonable basis for an opinion
  • A report stating whether the financial statements
    are in accord with generally accepted accounting
    principles (gap)
  • Identification of circumstances in which the
    principles have not been consistently observed
  • Disclosures in the financial statements are to be
    regarded as reasonably adequate unless otherwise
    stated
  • A report shall contain either an opinion of the
    statement taken as a whole, or an assertion to
    the effect that an opinion cannot be expressed

6
4 Principles ofAuditor Independence
  • Freedom from those pressures and other factors
    that compromise, or can reasonably be expected to
    compromise, an auditors ability to make unbiased
    audit decisions.
  • Assessing the level of independence risk
    Independence decision makers should assess the
    level of independence risk by considering the
    types and significance of threats to auditor
    independence and the types and effectiveness of
    safeguards.
  • Determining the acceptability of the level of
    independence risk After assessing the level of
    risk the auditor needs to determine whether the
    level of independence is at an acceptable
    position on the independence risk continuum.
  • Considering benefits and costs Independence
    decision makers should ensure that the benefits
    resulting from reducing independence risk by
    imposing additional safeguards exceed the costs
    of those safeguards.
  • Considering interested parties views in
    addressing auditor independence issues
    Independence decision makers should consider the
    views of investors, other users and others with
    an interest in the integrity of financial
    reporting when addressing issues related to
    auditor independence and should resolve those
    issues based on the decision makers judgment
    about how best to meet the goal of auditor
    independence.

7
Conclusion
  • Even the appearance of a conflict of interest is
    sufficient to undermine the faith needed to
    effectively fill the responsibilities auditors
    have to the public.
  • Question
  • Is it too strong to argue against even the
    appearance of a conflict?
  • Or should they just stick to actual conflicts of
    interest?

8
Colin Boyd
  • The Structural Origins of Conflicts of Interest
    in the Accounting Profession
  • Boyd provides a detailed account of the
    transitions that took place within the major
    accounting firms over the years.
  • He picks out several practices that he believes
    largely led to the conflicts of interest that
    resulted in the Enron scandal and others.
  • In light of the role those practices had, he
    concludes that it is unlikely that the
    Sarbanes-Oxley Act will be sufficient to prevent
    similar scandals in the future.

9
The Big Eight, um Six, no Five
  • During the 1950s and 60s, following the national,
    and then international consolidation of
    businesses, accounting firms began to merge
    resulting first in the Big Eight, then the Big
    Six, and finally the Big Five accounting
    firms.
  • In 1996 93 of the revenues earned by the top 18
    accounting firms in the U.S. went to the Big Six
  • 91 of the employees were Big Six employees
  • The revenue of the smallest of the Big Six Firms
    was one and a half times the combined revenue of
    the seventh through eighteenth largest firms.

10
Consolidation of Power
  • This consolidation of power and ownership in the
    accounting industry coincided with a
    transformation of auditing from being the
    professions most conspicuous and prestigious
    service to its later state as a low profit
    activity within a constellation of other, more
    profitable services.
  • Clients began to put pressure on audit prices and
    the traditional, long-term auditor-client
    relationship disappeared.

11
Shopping for Opinions
  • Eventually this led to the emergence of opinion
    shopping where clients would shop for not only
    audit prices but also attempt to determine the
    degree the firm may be willing to interpret
    accounting standards in order to present the
    clients financial statement in managements
    preferred manner.
  • Price pressure led to the need to cut costs. It
    is hard to determine if this was done by reducing
    the number of hours spent on an audit, however,
    it is clear that they did decrease costs by
    utilizing (and hiring) more low-cost junior
    auditors.
  • The increasing number of junior auditors who were
    hired by the auditing firms, were then able to be
    moved to clients who needed them for auditing
    within industry and commerce.

12
Conflicts of Interest
  • The case of Enron revealed that these employee
    transfers from the auditing company to their
    client were taking place on a huge scale
  • Horizontal Integration As auditing became
    increasingly unattractive as a money making
    endeavor it began to be used primarily as an
    avenue for the selling of consulting services to
    the client to fix problems identified during the
    auditing process.
  • Conflicts of Interest The combination of
    increasing amounts of revenue streaming from the
    selling of consulting services to client
    companies, and the increasing number of previous
    firm employees under the employment of the
    companies those firms audited for, virtually
    guaranteed conflicts of interest. Afraid of
    losing valuable consulting services, firms became
    increasingly less independent in their audits.

13
The Sarbanes-Oxley Act
  • The Enron scandal prompted the passage of the Act
    in 2002 in order to secure against future
    incidences.
  • Section 206 The CEO, Controller, CFO, Chief
    Accounting Officer or person of equivalent
    position cannot have been employed by the
    companys audit firm during the 1-year period
    preceding the audit.
  • Prevents conflicts of interest from arising from
    the transfer of employees at the highest levels
    but it does not bar the transfer of employees at
    lower levels.
  • Section 203 The lead audit or coordinating
    partner and the reviewing partner must rotate off
    the audit every 5 years.
  • This falls short of the full rotation of the
    audit firm itself.

14
The Sarbanes-Oxley Act
  • Section 201 An auditor may not offer these
    services to a client along with the audit (1)
    bookkeeping or other services related to the
    accounting record or financial statements of the
    audit client (2) financial information systems
    design and implementation (3) appraisal or
    valuation services, fairness opinions, or
    contribution-in-kind reports (4) actuarial
    services (5) internal audit outsourcing
    services (6) management functions or human
    resources (7) broker or dealer, investment
    adviser, or investment banking services (8)
    legal services and expert services unrelated to
    the audit (9) any other service that the Board
    determines, by regulation, is impermissible.
  • The concerned services center on operational or
    production conflicts of interest. As several of
    the conflicts picked out in the article arise
    from marketing and sales activities of the
    accounting firms, there is fear the Act may have
    missed the mark.

15
John R. Boatright
  • Individual Responsibility in the American
    Corporate System Does Sarbanes-Oxley Strike the
    Right Balance?
  • Boatright examines several theories of motivation
    and deterrence in corporate responsibility.
  • In each case he concludes that liability is more
    effective as a deterrent when it is primarily
    placed on shareholders and the corporation as a
    whole.

16
The Sarbanes-Oxley Act on individual
responsibility
  • Section 302 requires
  • that the chief executive officer and the chief
    financial officer personally certify that he or
    she has reviewed certain reports submitted to the
    SEC
  • that to the officers knowledge the reports are
    complete and accurate
  • that they fairly represent the financial
    situation of the company
  • that effective internal controls have been
    established and evaluated
  • and that any deficiencies in the control system
    and any fraud involving management or those
    involved in the control system have been
    disclosed to the auditors and the audit committee
    of the board.

17
The Sarbanes-Oxley Act on individual
responsibility
  • Section 304 The Forfeiture Provision
  • mandates that in the event the corporation is
    forced to restate its earnings due to misconduct
    with regard to financial reporting requirements,
  • the CEO and the CFO shall return to the company
    any bonus or incentive compensation,
  • and return any profits from the sale of
    securities in the 12-month period following the
    issuance or filing of the report that contains
    the misreported earnings.

18
The Sarbanes-Oxley Act on individual
responsibility
  • Section 404
  • Requires management to assume responsibility for
    establishing and maintaining an adequate system
    of internal control, and
  • Requires management to assess the effectiveness
    of this system annually

19
White-Collar Crime
  • Title IX The White-Collar Crime Penalty
    Enhancement Act of 2002 (WCCPEA)
  • Increases the fines and sentences of a number of
    offenses, including fraud and conspiracy.
  • It instructs the U.S. Sentencing Commission to
    revise the Federal Sentencing Guidelines to
    reflect these changes and also contains penalties
    for violating the certification provision.
  • Since CEOs and CFOs are already liable for
    documents filed by their companies it is not
    clear how these measures will improve individual
    responsibility.

20
Individual Responsibility
  • Responsibility being answerable or accountable
    for what one has done
  • Most importantly, for a failure to perform some
    moral or legal obligation
  • As a result, the person now deserves to be blamed
    or punished

21
Conditions for Responsibility
  • Generally applies to both legal and moral
    responsibility
  • Person must act freely i.e., not be coerced
  • Person acts from the appropriate state of mind
  • Justice requires punishment for the responsible
  • No punishment injustice

22
Problems of responsibility within modern
corporations
  • Fragmented decision-making and action, and the
    diffusion of knowledge in organizations, can make
    it difficult to place responsibility on any
    specific individual or group of individuals.
  • Insofar as a corporate officer, such as a CEO is
    an agent of the shareholders, it is difficult to
    determine whether that individual or the
    corporation as a whole should be held responsible
    for wrongdoing.
  • Individuals are generally held responsible for
    wrongdoing or facilitating the commission of a
    crime, however, in less serious cases the legal
    principle of respondeat superior has been
    applied, where the principal is responsible for
    the actions of the agent.

23
Law and Responsibility
  • 3 objectives driving the laws treatment of
    individual responsibility
  • To deter actions that cause harm to the public
    deterrence
  • To secure compensation for wrongful harms (tort
    law) compensation
  • To seek appropriate punishment for criminal
    conduct by means of fines and imprisonment
    retribution

24
Striking a Balance
  • We ought to temper our moral outrage over the
    individual actions in cases like Enron.
  • We must understand the practical effects of
    assigning responsibility in different ways
  • Balance individual resp. w/ corp. resp.
  • Do this using Agency Theory, Transaction Costs,
    and Behavioral Law

25
An Agency Theory, Transaction Cost Perspective
  • The main objective of both government and market
    regulation is deterrence.
  • Four arguments for corporate liability
  • Managers are too poor to pay effective fines
  • Higher costs for Managerial Liability
  • Less incentive for oversight
  • Managers are ineffective police

26
Ineffective Managerial Fines
  • Managers do not have the resources to pay fines
    that are substantial enough to have a deterrent
    affect
  • Optimal Penalty Theory
  • Any fine capable of deterring must exceed a
    persons expected return divided by the
    probability of successful prosecution
  • If this amount exceeds a persons total assets,
    then the deterrent value of any fine is
    significantly reduced.
  • Since corporations are more likely to have
    sufficient resources to pay these fines it is
    better to hold the corporation liable and have
    the corporation police for misconduct.

27
Higher Costs
  • Since managers are not diversified, if they are
    held liable they would demand compensation in the
    form of higher pay, indemnification, insurance,
    or some combination.
  • This will ultimately cost the shareholders.
  • Since shareholders are diversified they can carry
    this risk at a lower cost than managers.

28
Less Oversight
  • As more responsibility is shifted from
    shareholders to managers, the less incentive
    shareholders have to carefully select and monitor
    managers.
  • As individual responsibility shifts to
    lower-level employees (doesnt flow up), managers
    and shareholders have incentives to encourage
    misconduct.

29
Ineffective Policing
  • The separation of ownership and control within
    corporations means that
  • often financial controls create stronger
    pressures on lower level employees than internal
    sanctions for wrongdoing,
  • meaning that managers may often be less effective
    at policing employees than shareholders who are
    in control of financial mechanisms.

30
A Behavioral Law andEconomics Approach
  • Managers are not always rational decision makers.
  • Managers may not be aware that conduct is
    unethical or illegal, they may be misled, they
    may underestimate the likelihood of detection or
    the severity of consequences, managers are
    vulnerable to bias, they utilize heuristics, etc.
  • Solutions to problems of bias and heuristics
    usually center on changing corporate culture.
    Only threats to shareholders are sufficient to
    bring about these kinds of changes.

31
Aiding and Abetting
  • Should gatekeeper institutions be held liable for
    actions brought against a corporation when they
    failed to fulfill their gatekeeper duties?
  • Corporations are more likely to have borne the
    benefits of their impropriety and will have less
    motivation to settle than the firm.
  • This means that corporations may have leverage
    with which to coerce the firm in question.
  • Firms often do not have control over the uses a
    corporation puts their services to.
  • For them to bear liability for actions out of
    their control is unfair.
  • Since the activities of monitors and gatekeepers
    is often unclear and it is often difficult to
    determine what constitutes aiding and abetting
    liability deterrence is not particularly
    effective.
  • Incentives that increase independence and provide
    oversight are often more effective strategies.

32
John R. Boatright
  • Ethical Issues in Financial Services
  • Boatright examines the moral issues that serve as
    objections against four problematic practices
    within financial services.
  • While he agrees that deception, churning, and
    suitability constitute problematic moral wrongs,
    he is not clear on what precisely the moral
    objection to insider trading is.
  • He raises questions over the appropriateness of
    anti-insider trading laws.

33
Deception
  • Ethical treatment of clients requires salespeople
    to explain all of the relevant information
    truthfully in an understandable, non-misleading
    manner.
  • Salespeople employ euphemisms to hide the true
    meaning of what they are explaining tax-free
    when its tax-deferred high yield when its
    actually risky commissions are front-end or
    back-end loads, etc.
  • Figures of past performance can be carefully
    selected and displayed in a misleading fashion
    essential information may be left out, etc.
  • The Securities Act of 1933 requires all
    material information, defined as information
    about which an average prudent investor ought
    reasonably to be informed or to which a
    reasonable person would attach importance in
    determining a course of action in a transaction.
  • In general a person is deceived when that person
    is unable to make a rational choice as a result
    of holding a false belief that is created by some
    claim made by another.

34
Churning
  • Excessive or inappropriate trading for a clients
    account by a broker who has control over the
    account with the intent to generate commissions
    rather than to benefit the client.
  • Churning is a breach of the fiduciary duty to
    trade in ways that are in the clients best
    interests.
  • Cases of churning require three elements
  • The broker must control the account
  • The trading must be excessive for the character
    of the account
  • The broker must have acted with intent
  • The commission system is primarily responsible
    for this practice. However, the SEC has
    concluded that this system is too deeply rooted
    to be significantly changed.

35
Suitability
  • Brokers have an obligation to recommend only
    suitable securities and financial products.
  • The most common causes of unsuitability are
  • Unsuitable types of securities i.e.
    recommending stocks when bonds would be more
    appropriate.
  • Unsuitable grades of securities i.e. selecting
    lower-rated bonds when higher-rated bonds are
    more appropriate.
  • Unsuitable diversification diversification (or
    the lack of) that leaves a portfolio vulnerable
    to market changes.
  • Unsuitable trading techniques i.e. using
    margins or options to leverage an account and
    create greater risk.
  • Unsuitable liquidity i.e. creating a limited
    partnership which is not very marketable and
    unsuitable for customers that may need to
    liquidate their investment.
  • It is difficult to determine unsuitability except
    within the context of a clients entire portfolio.

36
Insider Trading
  • Trading in the stock of a publicly held
    corporation on the basis of material, nonpublic
    information.
  • Insider trading occurs when
  • The trader has violated some legal duty to a
    corporation and its shareholders or
  • The source of the information has such a legal
    duty and the trader knows that the source is
    violating that duty.
  • Arguments against insider trading
  • Insider information as property companies make
    investments in acquiring information and the
    competitive value that information has.
  • However, its not clear how using this
    information is a violation of property rights
  • Insider trading is unfair other traders are
    barred from obtaining insider information no
    matter how diligent they may be in their
    research.
  • However, some argue that the stock market would
    be more efficient without laws against insider
    trading. If insider trading was allowed
    information would be registered more quickly with
    less cost.
  • Insider trading is a violation of fiduciary
    duties benefiting from the use of information
    garnered while operating as a fiduciary is a
    violation of fiduciary duties.
  • However, this says nothing about the moral
    wrongness of insider trading for those who do not
    have a fiduciary relationship with the person
    they receive the information from.

37
Robert W. McGee
  • Applying Ethics to Insider Trading
  • McGee examines the primary arguments for and
    against insider trading.
  • Relies primarily on a utilitarian analysis of
    insider trading
  • Concludes that there is not sufficient reason to
    believe that insider trading does in fact cause
    harm
  • Also, there is significant reason to believe that
    insider trading may in fact be beneficial.

38
What is wrong with insider trading?
  • Inside information is the information held by the
    board of directors, auditors, and management of a
    corporation and is available to them solely due
    to their role inside the organization.
  • This distinguishes inside information from other
    kinds of specialized knowledge (such as that of
    doctors or accountants) in that their knowledge
    is inherently public, even if most of us do not
    possess it.

39
Two Answers
  • Is it ethical to profit from asymmetric
    information?
  • The utilitarian approach if the winners exceed
    the losers or if the result is a positive-sum
    game then profiting from such information is
    ethical.
  • The process approach if the process is ethical
    then profiting from such information is ethical
    regardless of whether it is a positive-sum game.

40
Who does insider trading harm?
  • Fraud intentional deception to cause a person
    to give up property or some lawful right.
  • Insider trading does not seem to fit the
    definition of fraud an inside trader has no
    duty to inform potential sellers or buyers of his
    information.
  • Who does insider trading harm?
  • Sellers who sell their stock to an inside trader
    would have sold to another individual if he had
    not purchased it. In fact they may have received
    a better price.
  • If employers are harmed by insider trading they
    should sue the employee, not utilize the
    government.

41
What are the benefits of insider trading?
  • Insider trading serves as a means of
    communicating market information which makes
    markets more efficient.
  • An acquirer in a takeover attempt may benefit
    when arbitragers accumulate shares with the
    intention of selling them shortly, which may
    increase the chances of a takeovers success.
  • Sellers who sell to the arbitragers may benefit
    from a higher price (since they would have been
    selling anyway).
  • Insider trading has a tendency to increase stock
    prices which is the goal of most corporate
    management.

42
Who is harmed by prohibitions on insider trading?
  • The market operates less efficiently
  • Hostile takeovers will be more difficult and
    since they generally tend to benefit by hostile
    takeovers, shareholders lose out.
  • Laws incur compliance and escape costs (i.e.
    legal and accounting fees).
  • Taxpayers are adversely affected due to increased
    policing expenses.
  • Further, since the risk-to-benefit ratios are so
    high, policing will never be particularly
    effective.

43
Leveling the Playing Field
  • The market should be fair to all participants
  • Meaning that the asymmetry of information should
    be minimized.
  • Ricardos theory of comparative advantage
    penalizing those who are better at something or
    subsidizing those who are worse at something
    results in inefficient outcomes and is unfair to
    some groups.
  • It reduces efficiency and violates rights.

44
Property Rights and Contract Rights
  • It is not clear whether insider trading creates
    more good or harm
  • However, there is clear concern that enforcement
    of anti-insider trading laws has the potential to
    infringe on individual property and contract
    rights.

45
Legal Perspectives
  • United States, Petitioner v. James Herman OHagan
  • In 1988 OHagan, operating on information he had
    gathered while working as local counsel
    representing Grand Met, regarding the potential
    offer of Pillsbury Company common stock,
    purchased 2,500 options of Pillsbury stock. Upon
    making the offer for Pillsbury the stock rose 21
    and OHagan sold his outstanding shares. The
    court concluded that OHagan was in violation of
    the SEC laws governing insider trading.
  • American Institute of Certified Public
    Accountants Code of Professional Conduct
  • The code lays out the responsibilities and proper
    practices that govern the American Institute of
    Certified Public Accountants. These policies and
    procedures strive to maintain the independence
    and the reliability of certified public
    accountants.

46
Cases
  • An Auditors Dilemma
  • Alison Lloyd, an internal auditor for Gems Jams,
    stumbles across a misdated invoice. She quickly
    recalls having seen several similar invoices.
    Concerned she goes to Greg Berg, the head of
    purchasing. Berg explains that this is a common
    practice that has been adopted so that the
    company may meet its monthly quotas. Alison
    feels that no one is being harmed by the practice
    but feels that if she does not report the issue
    that she will be in violation of the code of
    ethics governing the Institute of Internal
    Auditors.

47
Cases
  • Accounting for Enron
  • The article discusses in detail the events that
    led up to and followed the Enron scandal. The
    case examines the primary practices that
    ultimately caused the scandal and subsequent
    bankruptcy and the legislation that has since
    been passed in response to it.
  • Enron and Employee Investment Risk
  • In the midst of the questionable bookkeeping
    practices that ultimately led to the eventual
    Enron scandal, Enron began using company stock as
    the sole unit of deposit for employee 401(k)
    earnings. In the subsequent collapse, employees
    with retirement savings invested in company stock
    had lost all of their savings.

48
Cases
  • The Conventions of Lying on Wall Street
  • The case examines the apparently common practices
    surrounding the purchase of U.S. Treasury notes.
    These questionable practices are so widespread
    that many defend it as the rules of a game that
    everyone understands.
  • Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia Inc. An
    Accusation of Insider Trading
  • The case examines the events that surrounded
    accusations of insider trading by Martha Stewart.
    Following a message from either her broker or
    his office a trade was executed in her behalf,
    eventually leading to her investigation by the
    SEC.
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