Title: Some fundamental concepts of professional ethics for accounting
1Some fundamental concepts of professional ethics
for accounting
2What is the best approach to accounting ethics?
- The Methods of Ethics approach is rejected.
- (Not timeless, but originating in late 19th c.,
due to Henry Sidgwick.) - A more classical approach is advocated (Plato,
Aristotle)
3Methods of Ethics Approach
- Distinguish ethical theories
- Deduce different practical conclusions from the
different theories - Students left with picking a theory (based
presumably on some balance between appeal of
theory and appeal of practical implications)
4Objections to this approach
- 1. This could not capture what is distinctive
about accounting ethics it would tell us,
rather, only what it means to act well as regards
general morality, for someone who happens to be
an accountant. (For instance, that someone
happens to be an accountant does not change the
fact that, as a human being, he should not
steal.)
5- 2. What counts as a correct procedure for
deciding ethical questions is extremely
controversial, and yet what constitutes ethical
conduct for an accountant, at least in broad
outline, is not controversial. Thus, in the area
of accounting ethics, it would be desirable to
build upon matters of agreement rather than
introduce additional reasons for disagreement
(i.e. above and beyond those already present in
the interpretation or assessment of the facts of
a difficult case).
6- 3. The fact that one begins deliberation about
accounting ethics with a presentation of methods
of ethical decision suggests that ethical
deliberation should depend upon the prior choice
of an ethical system. - But this presupposition seems mistaken for two
reasons, one theoretical and the other
pedagogical.
7Theoretical objection
- By hypothesis it would need to be a (so far)
non-ethical person who engaged in this selection
of an ethical system, and yet one wonders what
criteria a non-ethical person would use for such
a choice (that there exists a valid argument from
considerations of pure rationality to a system of
morality, as some philosophers have held, seems
problematic and is in any case very
controversial), and how could we have confidence
in the system thus chosen?
8Pedagogical objection
- Since, for someone who has not yet chosen an
ethical system, it looks as though only interest
could provide the motive for a choice, this way
of setting up the problem encourages the thought
that, in general, interest dictates the selection
of an ethical rationale for ones decisionbut
this is exactly the outlook that one needs to
reject in the context of accounting ethics
(desired results determine the selection or
application of the rules).
9Making explicit what is implicit
- For these considerations it seems best to see
whether there are ethical principles already
implicit in the practice of accounting, which
accountants who practice with integrity are
already committed to, and then a primary task of
accounting ethics would be to make these
principles explicit.
10The Ergon Principle
- A good instance of kind K is that which has
those traits, or virtues, which enable it to
carry out well the distinctive work of a thing of
kind K. - The distinctive work of a kind of thing, in turn,
is understood to be some useful or productive
thing that a member of that kind can alone
achieve, or can achieve better than any other
kind of thing.
11The Principle of Associations
- Persons cooperate to form an association when
there is something that each wishes to achieve,
but which each cannot achieve at all, or cannot
easily achieve, working on his own.
12The most important questions for accounting ethics
- I. What is the distinctive task (ergon) of an
accountant? - II. What are the raison detre and lawlike common
goal of a professional body of accountants? That
is, why do accountants form professional
organizations in the first place, and in what way
is the practice of accountancy as a consequence
qualified by the law of a professional body?
13Evidence for the distinctive task of accountants
- Appeal to authorities reflection on accounting
itself. - Authorities
- Professional associations
- Regulatory entitities
- Practitioners
14FASB Statement of Accounting Concepts No. 1
- Financial reporting should provide information
that is useful to present and potential investors
and creditors and other users in making rational
investment, credit, and similar decisions. The
information should be comprehensible to those who
have a reasonable understanding of business and
economic activities and are willing to study the
information with reasonable diligence.
15- In a highly developed exchange economy most
goods and services are exchanged for money or
claims to money (n. 10) the production and
marketing of goods and services often involve
long, continuous, or intricate processes that
require large amounts of capital this
productive activity, furthermore, is carried on
through investor-owned business enterprises (n.
11) and, on the one hand, management is
accountable to these investor-owners (n. 12),
whereas, on the other hand, investors aim to be
effective in allocating scare resources among
competing uses (n. 16).
16-
- Implicit in the Statement is the view that the
distinctive task of an accountant in the precise
sense is to provide information that may be
relied upon by present and potential investors
and creditors, who cannot themselves directly
obtain that information.
17Charles Waldo Haskins
- Questions and cross-questionings, of owners, of
stockholders, of directors, - of presidents, are often to be answered as
supplementary to the report the - answer must be intelligent, ready, and never
resentful. These gentlemen - desire truth and nothing else it belongs to the
spirit of professional - Accountancy to seek out and reveal to them the
truth. - The ideal conception of its true mission by the
profession itselfa - conception from within and not dependent upon
extraneous exigencies - places Accountancy far outside the pale of all
ordinary callings, and sets it - upon a platform of its own as a learned
profession, self-impelled to - culture, to moral enlargement, and to scientific
attainment it lays a basis - of confidence for every business enterprise that
in professional - Accountancy there is a self-centered soul of
economic truth.
18U.S. v Arthur Young
- 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. The independent
public accountant performing this special
function owes ultimate allegiance to the
corporation's creditors and stockholders, as well
as to the investing public. - This public watchdog function demands that the
accountant maintain total independence from the
client at all times and requires complete
fidelity to the public trust.
19Reflections on the nature of accountancy
itself-- e.g. FASB Statement ofFinancial
Accounting Concepts, no. 2, Qualitative Concepts
of AccountingInformation.
20- If alternative accounting methods could be given
points for each ingredient of usefulness to in a
particular situation, it would be an easy matter
to add up each methods points and select the one
(subject to its cost) that scored highestso
long, of course, as there were some general
agreement on the scoring system and how points
were to be awarded. - There are some who seem to harbor the hope that
somewhere waiting to be discovered there is a
comprehensive scoring system that can provide a
universal criterion for making accounting
choices. Unfortunately, neither the Board nor
anyone else has such a system at the present
time, and there is little probability that one
will be forthcoming in the foreseeable future. - Consequently, those who must choose among
alternatives are forced to fall back on human
judgment to evaluate the relative merits of
competing methods (para. 10).
21- FASB goes on to identify and explain the concepts
of relevance, reliability, comparability,
materiality, and cost-effectiveness. - FASB indirectly defines the distinctive task of
an accountant - someone who is capable of exercising judgment
in order to compile, present, and evaluate
financial information about an enterprise which
realizes in an appropriate way these qualitative
characteristics, or ideals ( attest) - This spells out more concretely what is meant by
truth in the definition we earlier gave.
22Why do accountants organize themselves into a
professional body?
- What can accountants/auditors do in common which
cannot be achieved by each working on his/her own?
23Why a profession (and not a business)?
- Professionals need to confer with one another
in order to improve and perfect their
professional judgment (professional development)
they need to clarify publicly, through a public
profession, the ideal of truthfulness to which
they adhere (public standing) and, because of
the difficulty of adhering to this ideal, they
need to set standards for themselves and remove
members who in some serious way fail to adhere to
the ideal (quality control).
24Fill out the ergon of accountants, adding this
social element of professionalism
- Cooperating with other like professionals in the
truthful presentation, in observance of the
qualitative characteristics of accounting, of the
financial condition of an enterprise, for an
altruistic purpose, viz. so that others may rely
on this for their serious purposes.
25From this one may deduce and discuss the
virtues of an accountant.
- Objectivity
- Independence
- Due diligence
- Integrity
- --rethought not as high-level rules, but as
traits of practitioners.
26Questions which naturally arise
- Exactly how many virtues of an accountant are
there, and which of these are more fundamental,
and which are less so? Which virtues are
derivative or actually species (special cases) of
some more comprehensive virtue?
27- How are the virtues of an accountant acquired,
and how are they fostered and preserved in the
culture of a firm? - How important for these purposes is classroom
instruction? - What are the roles of mentoring, examples, and
stories?
28- To what extent are the virtues of an accountant
dependent upon, or grafted upon, the virtues
that someone has as a human being? - Is it possible to be a bad human being, and lack
important human virtues, and yet nonetheless have
all of the virtues of an accountant?
29- Can a consideration of the virtues of an
accountant help to decide which among various
codes of ethical conduct is preferable, when
these codes differ? For instance, can it shed
light on whether international and European
formulations are preferable to U.S. formulations,
and, if so, why? - Also, can a reflection on the underlying virtues
lead to a simplification or at least
rationalization of the unwieldy rules governing
independence?
30- To what extent can reflection on the virtues
(and vices) which pertain to accountants as
professionals lead to useful reflections about
the causes and prevention of accounting scandals?
31- What difference does it makeand is the
difference importantwhen case studies are
thought about not in terms of rules and
principles solely, but also as cases in which an
accountants virtues might be exemplified?