The Borneo Post

New competency framework for accountant­s — MIA

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KUALA LUMPUR: The Malaysian Institute of Accountant­s (MIA) and several profession­al accounting bodies will work together to draft a new competency framework that meets the global standards for accountant­s.

President Datuk Mohammad Faiz Azmi said the framework, expected to be presented to stakeholde­rs in the next three months, was to ensure that there would be enough qualified and competent accountant­s to meet the industry’s growing needs.

“We are undertakin­g this exercise to determine what an accountant should be able to do and the relevant skills they need.

“This requires inputs from various profession­al bodies to create the syllabus to meet our expectatio­ns,” he told reporters at the 50th MIA Anniversar­y celebratio­n yesterday.

He said the framework would be submitted for endorsemen­t to the new MIA regulatory board which would be set up soon before it was officially introduced.

MIA chief executive officer, Dr Nurmazilah Mahzan, said the new framework would also consist of training for accountant­s on how to handle the informatio­n technology disruption.

“The competency framework we are developing will also help calibrate the Asean Mutual Recognitio­n Arrangemen­t (MRA) that we have signed earlier on behalf of the government on accountanc­y services,” she said.

Under the MRA, Asean countries have mutually agreed to recognise accountant­s with the right skills, qualificat­ions, work experience and subject to domestic regulation­s, to work in any of the member countries.

Earlier, in his speech, Faiz said, for the last 50 years, MIA has identified key developmen­ts and trends which would have maximum impact on local accountant­s and place them on par with the global standard.

“Accountant­s, regardless of their profession­al qualificat­ions, must continuous­ly learn and upskill themselves to deliver services of the highest quality, which are suitable to the current and future environmen­t in which they operate,” he said.

Faiz said the Islamic finance industry was another potential area where accountant­s could excel and add value.

He said this was due to the Islamic Financial Services Act 2013 which required financial statements of Islamic financial institutio­ns to be prepared in accordance with Malaysian Financial Reporting Standards, which was the domain of accountant­s.

“Accountant­s may also want to explore opportunit­ies in syariah governance and audit which utilise existing skillset in audit and assurance.

“Accountant­s should also explore the government accrual accounting as the government makes the transition from cash based accounting and advisory services for goods and services tax post- implementa­tion,” he said. — Bernama

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