Harvey L. Pitt, chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, spoke in a press conference Thursday, ready to take action to preserve the integrity of the tarnished accounting profession. "We have taken the initiative to begin the process of restructuring the regulatory process that governs the accounting profession," he stated.
"The Commission, not the profession, must take a leading role in protecting the public interest," he continued.
A new regulatory system was outlined focusing on two primary components - quality control and discipline:
"In what I am contemplating, the AICPA would have no role in the disciplinary and quality review portions" of the new public regulatory body, Mr. Pitt said. He went on to describe that the AICPA will continue its role in ethics oversight, and indicated that a vast body of knowledge has been built by the AICPA on the disciplinary process during its stewardship of this role that the SEC and the public can benefit from. Mr. Pitt welcomed the profession's willingness to work with the SEC to bring about meaningful reform.
"Accounting firms have critical public responsibilities and there have been far too many financial and accounting failures. This commission cannot and will not tolerate this pattern of growing misstatements, audit failures, corporate failures and then massive investor losses."
The disciplinary aspect of this new body would perform investigations and address violations of the law, subject to SEC oversight. The quality control aspect of this body would include a reform of the current peer review process to provide for more frequent monitoring by a permanent Quality Control staff not affiliated with any accounting firm.
Specific SEC recommendations for overhauling the system and restoring confidence in the integrity of the accounting function include the following:
The AICPA sent an e-mail [1] to its membership prior to the press conference asserting its commitment to work with the SEC in whatever capacity it can to bring about the needed reform.
You can read the complete text [2] of Mr. Pitt's speech, listen [3] to the one hour long press conference, or watch [4] the press conference which is archived on C-Span's web site.
Links:
[1] http://www.aicpa.org/news/important_enron.html
[2] http://www.sec.gov/news/speech/spch535.htm
[3] http://media5.bloomberg.com:443/cgi-bin/getavfile.cgi?A=19623940
[4] http://www.c-span.org/enron/index.asp