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PwC chief admits firm is not perfect

I'm not a regular reader of the Czech Business Monthly (though that might now change) but I'm glad I landed on the current issue as it continues a fascinating interview with the global head of PricewaterhouseCoopers, Sam Di Piazza. And in it he reveals just how vulnerable accountancy firms - even those of PwC's colossal size and influence - remain to life-threatening problems of their own making.

In the wide-ranging interview Di Piazza draws a (perhaps unintended) parallel between Andersen's collapse and PwC's problems in Japan last year where the firm's affiliate partner, the ChuoAoyama Audit Corporation, was suspended by the Japanese Financial Services Agency following a questionable audit of cosmetics company Kanebo International.

Andersen's collapse, he tells the magazine, 'came about because a few people made a few bad decisions. That can happen in any company and that is why a company like ours is required to have a huge commitment to quality and integrity. Frankly, we have to admit that if we lose our reputation, we lose our firm. A few people in Andersen seemed to have lost their way and it cost them dearly.'

The parallels are eerie as Di Piazza then acknowledges regret at the behaviour of his former colleagues in Japan and admits PwC itself is not perfect.

'When people do not live by your values, unless you feel you can help them correct their behavior, you ask them to leave. … We feel there’s no client in the world worth our reputation. There is no tolerance for people who act without integrity. Occasionally, in a company as big as ours, you are going to have people that do things that you regret. Then you treat them directly and you make sure the regulator knows that you recognize your first obligation is to do the right thing. I think we have done that very well.

'In PwC we’re not perfect, but I think we have sent the message. In Japan we shut that firm down. We gave up a major amount of businesses, but we did it because we felt that the most important [asset] was our quality in that market to be at the highest level. We feel that we have that today: even if it’s smaller, it’s a better quality.'

You don't need to read too much between the lines to appreciate the severity of the crisis that engulfed PwC last year – and to its credit the firm took strong, decisive action.

It's not alone in surviving a all-too-close brush with the great regulator in the sky. I've talked to senior KPMG partners who acknowledge that had the firm been indicted in 2005 over the sale of fraudulent tax shelters, it would have struggled to retain client trust. Internal memos have confirmed as much. And as Di Piazza says, lose trust and you lose your business.

It's not easy managing firms employing tens of thousands of professionals across the globe when the actions of an individual could do irreparable harm. Yet partners are handsomely rewarded for doing so.

Given the recent experiences of KPMG and PwC you have to ask whether existing codes of conduct and monitoring systems of staff, partners and firms worldwide are good enough?

Unless they are tightened still further a Big Three might be more a matter of when not if.

And the award for worst government initiative goes to...

Congratulations to BDO Stoy Hayward, named accountancy firm of the year at last night's STEP awards. Congratulations to the government too - for not winning one of the gongs handed out by the trust and estate community.

Congratulations for not winning an award? Shurely shome mistake, you might say. But with the final category enticingly branded 'worst government initiative of the year', ministers deserve some credit for not being the recipient.

More puzzling was the fact that it was a category listed in the programme and conspicuous by its absence during the cermony itself.

Had host Andrew Marr simply forgotten? Presumably not as he was followed to the podium by the STEP president who also neglected to mention the award.

Perhaps there was truth in the suggestion of a fellow diner that there can't have been a bad government initiative this year. (Suggestions on a postcard please...). After all as Marr himself had earlier said: 'The prime minister has, by common consent, done rather better than expected - despite having to cope with every biblical plague know to man since he took office - floods, foot and mouth...'

For the record last year the award was won by The Treasury for Budget note 25 on aligning the inheritance tax treatment for trusts. Needless to say no one from Great George Street was available to collect it.

Accountancy Age Awards countdown

I spent yesterday helping to judge this year's Accountancy Age Awards. With a record number of entries this year and a number of new categories, it was an exhausting process. I'm pleased with the shortlist, though, which should keep debate raging until, ooh, next year's awards.

I can't say too much at this stage - the names on that shortlist are strictly under wraps until we reveal all on the website next week. And, of course, the winner's won't be named until the big night in November. But I will make a few observations.

The strength of each of the categories this year appeared to me to be a pretty accurate reflection of the market. Areas where business is strong had real strength in depth; in those areas that are suffering, we saw some stand-out candidates but perhaps fewer of them.

I sense a change is in the air, business-wise and this too was reflected in the submissions. The judges (who count former Bank of England governor Lord George, Deloitte vice-president Margaret Ewing, Cairn Energy FD Jann Brown, Home Office FD Helen Kilpatrick and Lastminute.com FD Paulo Pieri among them their number) spent longer debating the sectors that are feeling that pain most.

All in all a good and insightful day. I'm looking forward to the reaction once the shortlist is published. I'll keep you informed.

Temps and public sector suffer accountant shake-out

Recruitment consultant Hays reports strong growth (17% in both fees and eps) this morning but sounds a couple of warnings:

1) Public sector hiring of accountants appears to be slowing

2) Use of temp and contract accountants is weakening.

Encouraginly however it sontinues to see decent prospects and demand for (permanent) accountants in the private sector.

Nothing too dramatic then. I'll keep watching recruitment consultancy results closely, though, as they are an earlier indicator of market conditions to come.

Institute invites members to let rip

The ICAEW has launched a research project to uncover the attitudes and requirements of members, engaging a firm of consultants to contact a random sample of ACAs.

By using an third party, the institute hopes to persuade its sometimes sensitive membership that 'the research is objective, as well as to guarantee your responses are treated with the utmost confidentiality'.

Not surprisingly, some members are already sceptical. 'I suppose the questions will be quite leading...' writes the Small Practice Accountant on his blog. Credit where credit's due though, chief executive Michael Izza pledged to listen when he took office and this is tangible evidence of that.

Gracechurch has worked for other institutes (CIMA) and firms (PwC, KPMG, E&Y, GT, PKF and Smith & Williamson) in the past so has an impressive client roster. It has also conducted work for the institute's own benevolent fund previously.

A shame then that on its site, it refers to the ICEAW (sic) as a client.

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