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Understanding Accounting Ethics

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Alison has a relative who has at various times invested in Classic Car Company. ... four criteria, the lease should be classified as a transfer of ownership... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Understanding Accounting Ethics


1
Understanding Accounting Ethics
  • Chapter 6
  • Rules Are Not Enough

2
A fact pattern for a consideration of an
accountants independence
  • Alison, Bill, and Cathy are members of Accurate
    Accounting, LLP, and are engaged to audit Classic
    Car Company of New England.
  • Alison has a relative who has at various times
    invested in Classic Car Company.
  • Bill has a relative who is an employee of Classic
    Car Company.
  • For part of her work on the engagement, Cathy
    uses the services of a consulting company, which
    employs a relative of an employee of Classic Car
    Company.

3
Alisons independence would be regarded as
impaired
  • If the investment of Alisons relative were
    material to the relative and
  • If the relative had invested during the time of
    the engagement or when Accurate Accounting
    expressed its opinion and
  • If Alison knew of the relatives investment and
  • If the relative were Alisons spouse or
    dependent.

4
Bills independence would be regarded as impaired
  • If the relative had a position at Classic Car
    that was audit sensitive and
  • If the relative were Bills spouse or dependent.

5
Cathys independence would be regarded as impaired
  • If Cathy had relied upon the consulting company
    for a significant part of the engagement and
  • If the relative of the employee of the consulting
    company, who works for Classic Car, were a spouse
    or dependent and
  • If that relative who works for Classic Car had
    significant influence in that company or were
    involved in audit-sensitive work in that company.

6
Rules are not enough.
  • These rules about independence are detailed and
    complex.
  • One would think they are sufficient to settle
    questions of an accountants independence.
  • But they are not.

7
Six reasons why rules are not enough
  • Rules give only necessary, not sufficient
    conditions.
  • Rules contain terms that require interpretation.
  • We must appeal to idealizations in order to apply
    a rule.
  • Rules cannot supply the motivation for following
    a rule.
  • Rules on their own are unmanageable.
  • Due diligence is needed for checking that we have
    indeed followed a rule.

8
1. Rules give only necessary, not sufficient
conditions.
  • Necessary condition what is necessary for
    something.
  • synonyms sine qua non requirement that
    without which not
  • example electricity is a necessary condition for
    the operation of a washing machine
  • Sufficient condition what suffices for
    something.
  • synonym guarantee
  • example electricity plus a functioning washing
    machine with its power on constitute a sufficient
    condition for the operation of a washing machine

9
I followed all the relevant rules, therefore I
acted properly. NO.
  • Members must be aware that it is impossible to
    enumerate all circumstances wherein the
    appearance of a members independence might be
    questioned by a third party. For example, a
    members relationship with a cohabitant may be
    equivalent to that of a spouse.

10
2. Rules contain terms that require interpretation
  • Cathys independence would be regarded as
    impaired
  • If Cathy had relied upon the consulting company
    for a significant part of the engagement and
  • If the relative of the employee of the consulting
    company, who works for Classic Car, were a spouse
    or dependent and
  • If that relative who works for Classic Car had
    significant influence in that company or were
    involved in audit-sensitive work in that company.

11
A vicious regress
  • If we supply further rules in order to explain
    those terms that require interpretation, these
    additional rules will also contain terms that
    require interpretation.
  • For example
  • In general, a persons activities would be
    considered audit-sensitive if such activities are
    normally an element of or subject to significant
    internal accounting controls.

We cannot indefinitely clarify rules with rules.
12
3. We must appeal to idealizations in order to
apply a rule ( e.g. ideally reasonable person)
  • In addition, in situations involving assessment
    of the association of any relative or dependent
    person with a client, members must consider
    whether the strength of personal and business
    relationships between the member and the relative
    or dependent person, in conjunction with the
    specified association with the client, would lead
    a reasonable person aware of all the facts, who
    took into consideration normal strength of
    character and normal behavior under such
    circumstances, to conclude that the situation
    poses an unacceptable threat to the members
    objectivity and appearance of independence.

13
4. Rules cannot supply the motivation for
following a rule
  • It is self-defeating to attempt to capture, in a
    rule, the motivation for following a rule, e.g.
  • A member should refuse an engagement with an
    enterprise if his or her spouse does
    audit-sensitive work for the enterpriseand a
    member must be committed to following this rule!
  • Members are to follow all of the rules in this
    Code.

To follow a rule presupposes a commitment which
cannot be captured in rules.
14
above and beyond the requirements of laws and
regulations
  • The AICPA Code of Professional Conduct
    acknowledges at the start that a practitioners
    commitment to the code, and to any rules, must be
    based on something higher than any rule
  • Membership in the American Institute of
    Certified Public Accountants is voluntary. By
    accepting membership, a certified public
    accountant assumes an obligation of
    self-discipline.

15
5. Rules on their own are unmanageable.
  • We unify cases, relative to a rule.
  • We unify rules, relative to a principle.

16
6. Due diligence is needed for checking that we
have indeed followed a rule.
  • We must know when to check that we have indeed
    conformed to a rule.
  • if the accountant becomes aware that
    information coming to his attention is incorrect,
    incomplete, or otherwise unsatisfactory, he
    should perform the additional procedures he deems
    necessary to achieve limited assurance that there
    are no material modifications that should be made
    to the financial statements in order for the
    statements to be in conformity with generally
    accepted accounting principles (AR 100.30).

In professional conduct, this is called due
diligence.
17
Culpable ignorance and due diligence are related.
  • Culpable ignorance when you fail to know
    something that you should have known.
  • Due diligence taking the pains to learn
    something that you should know.
  • Thus culpable ignorance is the result of failing
    to exercise due diligence.

18
External and internal principles.
  • An external principle a high-level
    generalization or rule.
  • e.g. Independence regarded as a rule An
    accountant should act in such a way that an
    impartial and objective observer, aware of all
    the relevant facts, would judge that, given
    ordinary human character, his or her judgment is
    not liable to be deflected.
  • An internal principle a commitment to an
    ordering of goods
  • e.g. An accountant actually values the truth (a
    true representation of the financial condition of
    a company) over money (the business that might be
    lost if a true representation of a company is
    given).

19
Even external and internal principles are not
enough!
  • A practitioner additionally needs good
    character.
  • Good character emotions, dispositions, and
    habits which enable us successfully to abide by
    our reasonable commitments.

20
An example of bad character greed.
  • Some signs of greed
  • loving wealth as an end, not as an instrument for
    anything else (The love of money is the source
    of all evil.)
  • taking increasing wealth as an ultimate goal to
    get as much wealth as possible (morebetter
    lessworse)
  • being addicted to money

Someone afflicted with greed will find it
difficult or impossible to be independent,
however committed he might be to principles.
21
Rules in the service of principles, or rules as
trumping principles?
  • Rules are meant to safeguard and to express
    principles Rules in the service of principles.
    (Substance over form.)
  • Rules are misused, when they are followed to the
    neglect of the relevant principle Rules as
    trumping principles. (Form over substance.)

22
Operating or a capital lease?
  • E.g. Should a lease be treated as an operating or
    a capital lease?
  • The matter needs to be decided with a view to the
    relevant principles
  • Transparency The accounting treatment of a
    transaction should fairly represent that
    transaction.
  • Substance Over Form When the burdens and
    benefits of ownership are assumed by the lessee,
    then, although the transaction has the form of a
    lease, in substance it is equivalent to a
    mortgage arrangement.

23
FASB rules
  • Rule 1. If ownership is transferred at the end
    of the lease, then the lease should be treated as
    a capital lease.
  • Rule 2. If the lessee has an option to buy the
    property at a bargain price (below market value),
    thus effectively guaranteeing purchase, then the
    lease should be treated as a capital lease.
  • Rule 3. If the length of the lease is for at
    least 75 of the total useful life of the
    property, then the lease should be treated as a
    capital lease.
  • Rule 4. If the lease payments equal at least 90
    of the value of the property, then the lease
    should be treated as a capital lease.

24
The reality of accounting practice
  • Often latitude in how one estimates fair value
    and income stream.
  • Thus, a practitioner has to choose between rules
    in the service of principles or rules as
    trumping principles.
  • Rules as trumping principles e.g. the only
    question the practitioner considers is whether
    the numbers could reasonably be manipulated to
    justify whatever accounting treatment was desired
    by the client.

25
Millers GAAP Guide goes right
  • Millers Comprehensive GAAP Guide first gets it
    right
  • Some lease agreements are such that an asset
    and a related liability should be reported on the
    balance sheet of an enterprise. The distinction
    is one of substance over form (basic principle)
    when the transaction actually transfers
    substantially all the benefits and risks inherent
    in the ownership of the property.

26
But then gets it wrong
  • Established in GAAP are criteria to determine
    whether a lease transaction is in substance a
    transfer of the incidents of ownership. If, at
    its inception, a lease meets one or more of the
    following four criteria, the lease should be
    classified as a transfer of ownership
  • But the rules are not criteria to
    determine!

27
The wisdom of the ancients (Aristotle)
  • Every law is general, but as regards some
    matters it is not possible to speak in a general
    way with complete correctness. In those matters
    about which one needs to speak in a general way,
    but as regards which it is not possible to do so
    with complete correctness, the law is satisfied
    with speaking about what happens for the most
    partand when it does so, it is not ignorant of
    the fact that it is going astray.

28
A case in which rules were not enough U.S. v.
Simon
  • Advances to Repayments by Receivable at
  • Year Valley Valley Year-End
  • 1958 3,356,239 2,583,172 0
  • 1959 4,586,000 3,510,451 384,402
  • 1960 2,511,000 2,670,500 397,996
  • 1961 2,390,674 1,520,000 848,006
  • 1962 4,708,000 1,986,500 3,543,335

29
The footnote in the 1962 statement
  • 2.The amount receivable from Valley Commercial
    Corp. (an affiliated company of which Mr. Harold
    Roth is an officer, director and stockholder)
    bears interest at 12 a year. Such amount, less
    the balance of the notes payable to that company,
    is secured by the assignment to the Company of
    Valley's equity in certain marketable securities.
    As of February 15, 1963, the amount of such
    equity at current market quotations exceeded the
    net amount receivable.

30
How the footnote should have been written
  • 2. The amount receivable from Valley Commercial
    Corp. (an affiliated company of which Mr. Harold
    Roth is an officer, director and stockholder),
    which bears interest at 12 a year, was
    uncollectible at September 30, 1962, since Valley
    had loaned approximately the same amount to Mr.
    Roth who was unable to pay. Since that date Mr.
    Roth and others have pledged as security for the
    repayment of his obligation to Valley and its
    obligation to Continental (now 3,900,000,
    against which Continental's liability to Valley
    cannot be offset) securities which, as of
    February 15, 1963, had a market value of
    2,978,000. Approximately 80 of such securities
    are stock and convertible debentures of the
    Company.

31
The judgment
  • We join defendants' counsel in assuming that
    the mere fact that a company has made advances to
    an affiliate does not ordinarily impose a duty on
    an accountant to investigate what the affiliate
    has done with them or even to disclose that the
    affiliate has made a loan to a common officer if
    this has come to his attention. But it simply
    cannot be true that an accountant is under no
    duty to disclose what he knows when he has reason
    to believe that, to a material extent, a
    corporation is being operated not to carry out
    its business in the interest of all the
    stockholders but for the private benefit of its
    president. For a court to say that all this is
    immaterial as a matter of law if only such loans
    are thought to be collectible would be to say
    that independent accountants have no
    responsibility to reveal known dishonesty by a
    high corporate officer.

32
Continued.
  • If certification does not at least imply that
    the corporation has not been looted by insiders
    so far as the accountants know, or, if it has
    been, that the diversion has been made good
    beyond peradventure (or adequately reserved
    against) and effective steps taken to prevent a
    recurrence, it would mean nothing, and the
    reliance placed on it by the public would be a
    snare and a delusion. Generally accepted
    accounting principles instruct an accountant what
    to do in the usual case where he has no reason to
    doubt that the affairs of the corporation are
    being honestly conducted. Once he has reason to
    believe that this basic assumption is false, an
    entirely different situation confronts him.
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