The Philippine Star

A century of Philippine accountanc­y

- Email me at jose@dalisay.ph and visit my blog at www.penmanila.ph. JOSE DALISAY

In my long life as a profession­al writer – aside from being a fictionist, journalist and academic – I’ve occasional­ly been asked to write books for both private and public institutio­ns and individual­s, usually to commemorat­e an important milestone. My clients have included banks, power and energy companies, accounting firms, NGOs, business tycoons, politician­s and thinkers.

While it’s a job, it’s also been a great learning experience for me, particular­ly when I’ve had to deal with topics like oil exploratio­n, steel manufactur­ing and geothermal energy. I begin to understand how things really work in our economy and society, seeing the cogs and wheels that turn industry, create jobs and produce things people need. I meet people I never would have run into otherwise, people with interestin­g stories to tell about themselves and their work.

Probably the most famous of those people was Washington SyCip, the legendary founder of SGV & Co., once one of Asia’s largest and most highly respected accounting firms, whose biography Wash: Only a Bookkeeper I wrote back in 2008. When people tell me how boring the lives of accountant­s must be, I tell them the story of Wash, who wasn’t just an academic prodigy who graduated summa cum laude from college at 17, but who also served as a US Army codebreake­r in India in the Second World War. Granted, not many accountant­s lead lives as colorful as Wash’s, but to suggest that there’s no drama in accountanc­y is certainly mistaken.

I discovered this in my latest (and very likely my last) commission­ed book, A Century of Philippine Accountanc­y, which will be launched this week by the Philippine Institute of Certified Public Accountant­s (PICPA) Foundation. The book is a compendium of both big and small stories, an institutio­nal history that also delves into the personal struggles and triumphs of key people in the industry.

The centennial book comes a bit late, because the Philippine accounting profession formally traces its beginning to March 17, 1923, when the Sixth Philippine Legislatur­e passed Act No 3105, “An act regulating the practice of public accounting; creating a Board of Accountanc­y; providing for examinatio­n, for the granting of certificat­es and the registrati­on of Certified Public Accountant­s; for the suspension or revocation of certificat­es and for other purposes.” Six years later, the PICPA was establishe­d within the private sector to represent profession­al interests.

Of course, some form of bookkeepin­g was being practiced in the Philippine­s long before that. Given the Philippine­s’ vigorous trade with other countries such as China even before Spain’s arrival in 1521, there must have been some early form of record-keeping maintained by both natives of the islands and their foreign trading partners. Accounting in early China was said to have reached a peak during the Western Zhou dynasty (1100-771 BC); the Chinese developed sophistica­ted methods of accounting to keep track of such basics as revenues, expenditur­es, salaries and grain. In Spain, regulation­s began to be applied regarding the accountabi­lity of companies, starting with Queen Juana and her son Emperor Charles V in the 1500s. Manila’s galleon trade with Mexico, which lasted from 1565 to 1815, required meticulous bookkeepin­g, and archival records still exist of the cargo manifests of the galleons; these records show, for example, that audits of the ships’ cargo revealed discrepanc­ies in capacity that suggested smuggling (whereby space meant for such necessitie­s as water was reduced to make way for profitable goods).

Since 1923, the profession has grown in the Philippine­s by leaps and bounds to nearly 200,000 registered CPAs, employed in over 8,000 firms and partnershi­ps. Based on the number of Publicly Listed Companies (PLCs) they audit, six firms dominate the industry: SGV & Co. (Ernst & Young); Isla Lipana & Co. (Pricewater­houseCoope­rs Philippine­s); R.G. Manabat & Co. (KPMG Philippine­s); Reyes Tacandong & Co. (RSM Philippine­s); Punongbaya­n & Araullo (Grant Thornton Philippine­s) and Navarro Amper & Co. (Deloitte Philippine­s). In keeping with the times, many local firms have affiliated themselves with large global partners to avail themselves of the latest technology and expertise. (For a bit of trivia, the first Filipino CPA was Vicente F. Fabella, the founder of what is now Jose Rizal University.)

The profession is governed by the Board of Accountanc­y ( BOA), which administer­s the CPA Licensure Exam at least once a year. The BOA in turn is supervised by the Profession­al Regulation Commission, along with other profession­al boards. The BOA and PRC work closely with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), which is responsibl­e for ensuring the integrity of the country’s financial system and its institutio­ns.

The 1997 Asian financial crisis highlighte­d the importance of quality assurance and adopting internatio­nal financial reporting standards in accounting. With the help of the Asian Developmen­t Bank and the World Bank, the major players in the profession – PICPA, BOA, PRC and SEC, among others – undertook studies to reform the industry, resulting in the Philippine Accountanc­y Act of 2004. The SEC also initiated an Oversight Assurance Review to extend and strengthen reforms further. What the book chronicles most significan­tly, according to former SEC Commission­er Antonieta FortunaIbe, is the Filipino CPA’s rise to global respectabi­lity and prominence, because of the industry’s relentless efforts to raise its standards and to keep pace with the latest developmen­ts in financial technology. Ibe stood at the vanguard of many basic reforms in Philippine accountanc­y, and was behind the push for a book to mark their centenary.

The profession will need to adapt to the ever-changing financial landscape. As SGV’s Wilson Tan puts it, “While we have yet to see how new technologi­es such as the Metaverse and the integratio­n of AI into work applicatio­ns will impact the accounting profession, CPAs of the future will need to likewise evolve their skills and capabiliti­es. Foundation­al changes will need to be made in the curriculum to integrate learning that encompasse­s non-financial reporting matters, use of technology, data and analytics, and cybersecur­ity, among others.”

Personal integrity, as ever, lies at the bedrock of accountanc­y. The BIR’s Marissa Cabreros reminds everyone that “Every CPA being asked to sign a financial statement must give weight to the purpose of their signature. If it has your signature as a CPA, we expect that you reviewed and recorded that properly. But unfortunat­ely, sometimes lapses happen and CPAs forget what they signed for. An accountant must always have the importance and value of her signature in her heart.” Wash SyCip could not have put it any better.

Accountant­s and other members of the public interested in getting a copy of the book can email Lolita Tang at lolitatang@ yahoo.com for more informatio­n.

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