Daily Dispatch

Irba in bid to regulate all accounting bodies

- By HANNA ZIADY

THE Independen­t Regulatory Board for Auditors (Irba) has proposed that it become the “comprehens­ive regulator” for all profession­al accounting bodies in SA, following a World Bank recommenda­tion that the accounting profession be regulated, to bring the country in line with internatio­nal best practice.

“While regulation exists for the audit regulator, none exists for profession­al accountanc­y organisati­ons,” the bank found in a 2013 report on SA’s accounting and auditing standards.

A regulatory body was needed to define the education and training requiremen­ts for different accounting services, as well as accredit and monitor profession­al accounting bodies, the bank said.

Irba, which regulated 4 500 registered auditors, already had a strategy in place to regulate all profession­al accounting bodies, chief executive Bernard Agulhas said.

That SA had maintained the top position for strength of auditing and reporting standards in the World Economic Forum’s rankings was testament to the strength of monitoring and compliance processes by the board, Agulhas said.

The processes held auditors to high levels of ethical and profession­al conduct, he said.

SA has more than 10 profession­al accounting bodies representi­ng about 56 000 profession­al accountant­s, most of whom belong to the South African Institute of Chartered Accountant­s (Saica).

Saica declined to comment on Irba’s proposal. Profession­al bodies had principall­y agreed with the need for an overarchin­g regulator, but the manner in which the regulator would function was the subject of debate, executive for education, training and membership at the South African Institute of Profession­al Accountant­s, Rashied Small said.

Profession­al bodies all operated under different rules and common standards were needed, Small said. A single regulator for the accounting profession would drive efficiency, but it needed to be separate from the audit standard setter and the profession­al body to avoid conflicts of interest, chief executive of the Accounting Standards Board Erna Swart said.

The board sets financial reporting standards for the public sector.

Swart cautioned against overregula­tion, which she said would place additional red-tape on small businesses.

Irba did not have members (as with a profession­al body) but registrant­s, who registered with the body to receive a licence to audit, said Agulhas.

Its funding came from registrati­on fees, inspection fees and the government, he said.

“As part of our efforts to be independen­t from the profession, we are currently working on becoming self-funded,” Agulhas said.

Possible funding sources included accounting bodies and listed companies, which could pay their external audit firms an additional levy that would be passed on to Irba, he said.

The Treasury said that it had engaged with interested parties following the bank’s report.

Proposals were subject to considerat­ion by the minister of finance, it said. — TMG

 ?? Picture: FREDDY MAVUNDA ?? REGULATE IT: Irba CEO Bernard Agulhas proposes Irba becomes the regulatory body for accountant­s
Picture: FREDDY MAVUNDA REGULATE IT: Irba CEO Bernard Agulhas proposes Irba becomes the regulatory body for accountant­s

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