Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Enhancing Audit Quality: Canadian Perspectives


Since the 2008 global financial crisis, policy makers, regulators, standard setters and others around the world have been considering changes to the financial system to promote greater financial stability and to reduce systematic risk. Audit quality is among the factors being discussed, with major audit reform initiatives well underway by the European Commission; the United States’ Public Company Accounting Oversight Board; the United Kingdom’s Financial Reporting Council; and the International Auditing and Assurance Standards Board, which has launched a project on enhancing auditor reporting

Enhancing Audit Quality: Canadian Perspectives is a consultation process being led by the Canadian Public Accountability Board (CPAB) and the Canadian Institute of Chartered Accountants (CICA) to gain stakeholder input on key issues emerging with respect to enhancing audit quality globally, and the impact on Canada. To provide effective coordination and direction to this work, an enhancing audit quality steering group (chaired by David Brown, a leading securities lawyer and former chair of the Ontario Securities Commission) has been established, along with three working groups, with experts from audit committees, auditing and assurance standard setters, auditors, investors, prudential and securities regulators, financial-statement preparers, CPAB and the CICA.

The working groups will focus on three aspects of audit quality and reform being discussed internationally. The working group on the role of the audit committee will focus on the reporting relationships between audit committees and their key stakeholders, along with enhancing and promoting professional skepticism by the audit committee and the auditor. The working group on auditor reporting will target enhancing the information value of the auditor’s report and expanding auditor association with management disclosures outside of the financial statements. The working group on auditor independence will focus its efforts on the options relating to the appointment and rotation of, and non-audit services provided by, auditors that will improve independence, objectivity, professional skepticism and audit quality at firms.