anan retreat premier training & consulting 1 on good governance code for professional...
TRANSCRIPT
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ANAN RETREAT
Premier Training & Consulting
on Good governance code for professional accountancy organisations (PAOs)
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A presentation by:Emmanuel G. Ogbonnaya MSc, FCCA, FCA, CCFS,
ACTI
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Topic: Professional Accountancy
Organisations (PAOs) obligations to students, members and the public.
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PAOs’ obligation to students
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Examination and conferment of membership(emphasis on professional competence)
Harness competence and capabilities
Training and Teaching Procedures(emphasis on professional competence)
Reviewed for relevance regularly
Fair and Transparent admission policy(recognise prior learning capabilities)
Consistently applied across years
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Professional Accountancy Organisations (PAOs)
Obligations to Students1.Fair and transparent admission policy for all potential students a policy to ensure that an individual seeking to begin a
programme of Professional Accounting Education that would lead to membership of a PAO is fair and transparent i.e. every student is considered on merit based on meeting the PAO’s minimum requirement for admission
the policy must set out a minimum entry requirement that should be equivalent to that for admission into a recognised university degree or its equivalent;
the policy must be made publicly available and can be accessed closely or remotely either electronically or in hardcopies through network of offices;
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PAOs’ obligations to students cont’dit is not unusual to expect a
candidate commencing a programme in accounting education to do so with some level of capabilities i.e. skills, some values, ethics and attitudes and students should be encouraged to disclose such information.
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PAOs’ obligations to Students Cont’d
however, of importance is the extent of these capabilities, which could also influence candidate’s entry point into professional accounting education (e.g. AAT-without first degree, NCE, OND/HND, BA/BSc), thus the capabilities that come with each of these qualifications must be assessed;
PAOs have obligation to ensure that an individual embarking on a programme of professional accounting education do so with appropriate level of prior education and learning relevant to provide the necessary foundation to acquire the professional knowledge, skills, values, ethics and attitudes that are essential to become a professional accountant
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PAOs’ obligations to Students cont’d They should carefully draw up training programmes
for students of varying capabilities to ensure that each stream of students is provided the required accounting education programme in accordance with their strengths at entry point, which could be:
post graduate entry level; post secondary school entry level; or at some point between higher education and
below an undergraduate degree a fair and transparent admission policy should also
recognise work experience, mature students, candidates joining the programme part-way through their career and other types of learning
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PAOs’ obligation to students There might also be some other types
of learning that PAOs would have to identify and recognise as an acceptable entry point/pathway into accounting education
It should be said that whichever route, there should be consistency with the overall programme of professional accounting education and must be inline with the laid down accounting education programme admission policy of the PAOs concerned.
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PAOs’ obligations to students cont’d In some cases PAOs will want some level of assurance that it has high enough entry point to guarantee the likely success in the programme of professional accounting education. Therefore, assessment of these entry-point obligations must be discharged with high level of professional integrity and proficiency; It is likely that some PAOs would want to assess the
quality of the degree from tertiary institutions whose qualifications are tendered for admission into their professional accounting education programme.
This is very important as research has shown that there is a correlation between the quality of the degree tendered for admission into professional accountancy education and the successful completion of the programme.
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PAOs’ obligation to studentsFurther, it should also be said that there need to be proper cross-checking of students’ entry qualifications not only for the authenticity but as noted earlier, to assess the standing of the institutions whose qualifications are tendered at the entry point of professional accounting education programme given the varying levels of quality of degrees from some universities.
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PAOs’ obligations to students cont’d In its Framework (FW) for International
Education Standards (IES) for professional accountants, the International Education Standards Board (IESB) notes that “overall objective of accounting education is to develop competent professional accountants” and sets out a number of major training headings under its educational concepts required to build competence, which is defined “as the ability to perform a work role to a defined standard with reference to working environment” FW para.12.
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PAOs’ obligation to Students Cont’d to demonstrate competence in a role, the
standard notes that, a professional accountant must possess the necessary:
(a) professional knowledge;
(b) professional skills; and
(c ) professional values, ethics and attitudes. therefore, PAOs must be aware of, and should
design their accounting education programme to integrate the basis for acquiring competencies built around the above for the promotion of the profession when individual professional accountancy graduates become members of PAO. The ability to meet the level of competence should be checked at entry point
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PAOs obligations to students cont’d Training & Teaching Procedures:
It is important to stress here a computer phraseology that says“ garbage in garbage out”; so is true of teaching & training of professional accountancy students. Poorly designed and structured training and teaching procedures will produce poorly prepared graduate members with less than average level of competence and capabilities. The effect of this will run across generations; given that one can not give what they do not have.
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Training & Teaching Procedures cont’d But how should our training and teaching
programmes be structured and packaged to provide the needed competencies and capabilities to PAOs’ students?
This obligation can be addressed by designing teaching and training programmes that significantly highlight competencies required at various study areas;
it should also create awareness to students of the related work profile in the particular study area and performance objectives in the study area as well.
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Training and Teaching Procedures cont’d The mode of training and teaching has
continue to change with the advent of ICT and various other information technology infrastructure that have made various training and teaching methods very interactive.
As a result, the different training modes or methods must be identified including any training and teaching modules that are conducted electronically.
Given the fair and transparent training and teaching methods, PAOs must designed their training and teaching modules to be consistent across the different training and teaching programmes.
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Training and Teaching procedures cont’d Procedures for highlighting importance of
competencies, work related profile and performance objectives is shown below:
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Training & Teaching Area for example: Management Accounting (or Performance Management) Competencies Key job related profile
on completionPerformance Objectives on completion
• demonstrate the concepts and calculations for measuring performance for profit and non profit motive organisations;
• prepare budgets and interpret their various components;
• identify and demonstrate the different decision making techniques including their associated risks
• etc.
• Management Accountant;
• Group Accountant• etc.
• Able to prepare financial information for management;
• Monitor and control budget;
• Communicate financial and non-financial information effectively
• etc.
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PAOs’ obligations to students cont’dTraining and Teaching area for example: Audit &
AssuranceCompetencies Key job related profile
on completionPerformance Objective on completion
• demonstrate risk assessment procedures and determination of materiality threshold;
• have the knowledge and ability to explain the scope and purpose of assurance engagements;
• discuss and demonstrate the fundamental principles of professional ethics, values and attitudes;
• etc.
• External auditor• Internal auditor• Chief Financial Officer
(CFO)• Forensic accountant• etc.
• Demonstrate and able to apply professional ethics, values and attitudes;
• Apply the fundamental principle for collection and preservation of audit evidence;
• Understand and able to prepare and evaluate audit evidence
• etc.
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PAOs’ obligations to students cont’d The emphasis here are competencies (as
opposed to just listed the topics and areas of study in the syllabus) so that the students’ attentions are drawn.
As much as possible the relevant competencies are linked to certain job related roles that students may be interested on completion (an area most PAOs’ training information fails to mention).
Also for students to be made aware of the identified key performance measurement objectives that employers may use.
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PAOs’ obligations to students cont’d for the training programme to be fair, PAOs
must design it to ensure that a comparable level of professional competence at the point of qualification is attained by candidates from all possible entry routes whether from the secondary school, further or higher education;
information about teaching and training locations e.g. training location centres, whether training could be obtained on-line from the PAO or their accredited training organisations
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PAOs’ obligations to students cont’d Given the continuing relevance of work
experience, PAOs’ admission policy should also include the recognition of work experience, mature candidates and those joining the part-way through their career and with the varying degrees of students capabilities.
As noted before, there might be some other types of learning that PAOs might want to recognise as acceptable path into their accounting education.
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PAOs’ obligations to students cont’d it should be said that which ever routes
that are chosen, there should be consistency with the overall programme of professional accounting between one period and another;
however, where there are updates in professional standards, legal or regulatory framework such should be reflected in the training and teaching of the PAO as soon as practicable to ensure students remain well informed of the changes.
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PAOs’ obligations to students cont’d In respect of updates, PAOs should know that
they have a major obligation to students by ensuring that major changes to their key training subjects are brought to their attention and arrangement made to incorporate the changes into their training programme
For example, update on IFRS, ISA, or other professional standards such as ethics to professional accountants or issuance of new standards, there should have lapsed period after which the changes are incorporated into the students learning materials for example, 6 months after the effective date of the standards or changes.
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PAOs’ obligations to students cont’d to provide students with the
assurance of high quality of the PAO’s qualification, it is important that candidates from all possible routes achieve a comparable level of professional competence at the point of qualification;
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PAOs’ obligation to Students cont’d it is very common this days to find
PAOs, having some pre-admission training programme before finally admitting students (such as ANAN conversion course programme to assess the capabilities of individual students through integrated classroom coursework). This allows PAOs to gain such guarantees and ANAN has this pre-admission training programme in place i.e. conversion course.
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PAOs’ obligations to students cont’d Examination and Membership conferment
PAOs should design examinations that place more emphasis on students’ competencies and capabilities particularly at the point of exit (i.e. final examinations) because the final examinations precede the period of transition to membership following qualification;
The professional qualifying certificates certify the holders as being competent to carry out work as professional accountants;
The certificates act as assurance both to the student and the public that the holder can perform work of a professional accountant.
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Examination and membership Conferment cont’d Major questions to ask by PAOs in order to
identify their key obligations to students at this point preceding membership include:
Do our examinations particularly, the final sections test integrated knowledge and application on, for example, financial reporting (separately, on IFRS, IPSAS and IFRS for SMEs) by students?
Can students of the PAO demonstrate sufficient knowledge and understanding of the application of ISAs, ISQC,
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Examination and membership conferment cont’d Can they demonstrate professional ethics, values,
attitudes , understanding and are able to comply with regulatory and legal frameworks that the public looks to see in a professional accountant?
With respect to financial and performance management respectively, can our newly qualified demonstrate integrated knowledge and application of the relevant concepts required in real life situations?
These questions are geared toward the appropriate level of competencies and capabilities, which are generally acquired through PAO’s training and are demonstrated through training as well as through examinations.
It needs to be said that more of these competencies and capabilities will become focal points at membership terrain.
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Examination and membership conferment cont’d The table below summarises the recent
rating of newly qualified finance professionals having a good working knowledge of different finance areas;
The results point PAOs to where they should prepare students more for competence acquisition bearing in mind the more likely rewards in terms of job opportunities;
financial management high rating shows how critical a tool it is for all businesses and its understanding and application is not restricted to private sector.
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Rating (%age ) of newly qualified finance professionals having a good working knowledge of different finance areas
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Financial Management
Professionalism and ethics
Corporate reporting
Sustainable managemnt accounting
Governance, risk and control
Strategy and innovation
Leadership and management
Audit and Assurance
Law and Taxation
Stakeholders relationship management
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
96
94
93
87
86
86
83
80
75
68
Source: ACCA , the complete finance professional 2013
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PAOs’ obligations to members As other members of the accountancy profession
would have noticed, professional accountants have become so dependent on their professional bodies to facilitate their development in all aspects of their professional career in order to remain relevant after qualification;
This means that members are on regular basis looking out for issues and information emanating from their PAOs and these may well include courses, seminars and conferences, etc.;
This may even seem more burdensome if the dependency is on more than one PAO, for example, a member of ANAN and ICAN or ACCA and ICAEW, for those who are members of more than one PAO.
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PAOs’ obligations to members cont’dBut why should this be the case? well there is this believe that what
happens in and around the profession would more likely be known first by the PAOs; and
this is said to be the case where or because the relevant regulatory bodies work closely with PAOs and would prefer to disseminate information to professional accountants through their relevant PAOs.
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PAOs’ obligations to members cont’d However, it needs to be said that PAOs
do not necessarily have privy to regulatory information as and when it emerges and/or the dissemination of emerging information to their members;
From observations, in most cases, the major big accounting & auditing firms who, one way or another, participate in major international regulatory committees would have greater privy to emerging information in the profession than some PAOs.
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PAOs’ obligations to members cont’d Also given the state of transparency in due
process particularly, in respect of standard setting and amendments to existing standards by regulatory authorities, information dissemination (with the advent of internet) has been made seamless and some members are likely to have new regulatory information emerging from the relevant authorities before their PAOs.
Therefore, the dependency of members on their PAOs for relevant information to assist them maintain their competencies may not anymore be contested.
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PAOs’ obligations to members cont’d However, given this level of
dependency on PAOs by their members, what major obligations do PAOs have to their members?
The concept of lifelong learning brings a major obligation on PAOs to ensure that their members remain competent through out their career
See diagram below:
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PAOs’ obligations to members cont’dThe concept of lifelong learning:
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LIFELONG LEARNING
Commences following enrolment
into accountancy education programme
All accountancy education
training programme
s
Becoming a qualified
accountan
t
Throughout the
professional
accountant’s career
through
Up to and
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PAOs’ obligations to members cont’d In its standard, the International Education
Standards (IES-7) issued by the International Education Standards Board (IESB) titled-Continuing Professional Development: A Programme of Lifelong Learning and Continuing Development of Professional Competence, the standard, para.13 requires IFAC member bodies to “promote the importance of continuous improvement in competence and a commitment to lifelong learning for all professional accountants”.
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PAOs’ obligations to members cont’d The standard prescribes that IFAC
member bodies should: Foster a commitment to lifelong learning
among professional accountants; Facilitate access to continuing
professional development opportunities and resources for their members;
Establish for members benchmark for developing and maintaining the professional competence necessary to protect public interests; and
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PAOS’ obligations to members cont’d monitor and enforce the continuing
development and maintenance of professional competence of professional accountants.
However, the standard recognises the principle that it is the responsibility of each professional accountant to develop and maintain professional competence necessary to provide high quality services to their clients, employers and other stakeholders.
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PAOs’ obligations to members cont’d Mandatory CPD for all Professional
Accountants IES 7 para.18 notes that member
bodies should require all professional accountants to develop and maintain competence relevant and appropriate to their work and professional responsibilities.
However, the standard stresses that the responsibility for developing and maintaining competence rests primarily with each professional accountant.
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PAOs’ obligations to members cont’d Therefore, PAOs, in organising CPD
programmes is in the spirit of ensuring that members take advantage of the platform provided by them.
It may seem unlikely that if professional accountants were left to provide on their own, the required level of continuing CPD it may lack cohesion and also may not sufficiently identify gaps in competence and training needs. But see below how some PAOs manage CPD activities.
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PAOS’ obligations to members cont’d However, where PAOs conduct CPD programmes
for their members themselves, they are required to consider what is relevant and appropriate for professional accountants.
The standard requires that the following issues be considered:
relevance-given the expected contributions to competence of professional accountants, acceptable CPD activities should facilitate the development of the professional knowledge, professional skills and professional values, ethics and attitudes of the professional accountant, relevant to their current and future work and professional responsibilities.
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PAOS’ obligations to members cont’d Another issue to be considered is
Measurement of CPD activities paras. 25, 26 IES-7, require Professional
accountants to measure learning activities or outcomes to meet the member body’s (such as ANAN) CPD requirements.
The standard also notes that learning activity can be measured in terms of effort or time spent, or through a valid assessment method, which measures competence achieved or developed.
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PAOS’ obligations to members cont’d The issue of measurement brings on
another issue of verification of CPD activities .
First is the fact that CPD records must be kept be professional accountants, which document related CPD activities and can be produced when required by the PAO.
This is to enable the CPD attained by the professional accountant to be verified. It is recognised that some learning activities may be measured but not verified
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PAOs’ obligations to members cont’dGiven that CPD is to develop the professional competence of professional accountant, the standard identifies three approaches through which CPD activities could be achieved thus: Input-based approaches these require
establishment (presumably, by PAOs) of a set amount of learning activities that are considered appropriate to develop and maintain competence.
Output-based approaches these are where the professional accountants are required to
demonstrate, by way of outcomes, that they develop and maintain professional competence.
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PAOs’ obligations to members cont’d The standard also recognises a third
approach, which is a combination of the two approaches noted above.
Combined approaches—these refer to methods that effectively and efficiently combine elements of the input and output based approaches, setting the amount of learning activities required and measuring the outcomes achieved.
Our research shows that most PAOs adopt the combined approach, which brings in some level of flexibility and professional judgement. See ACCA and ICAEW CPD Administration tables below.
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PAOs’ obligations to members cont’d However, a major obligation that rest
on PAOs is to ensure that while assisting members (whichever approach adopted) to achieve their CPD activities, they are required to establish a systematic process to monitor whether professional accountants meet the CPD requirement and the system must provide for appropriate sanctions for failing to meet the requirement, including failing to report or failing to develop and maintain competence.
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PAOs’ obligations to members cont’d The systematic process put in place by PAOs vary
and the variants include the following: (i) PAO directly setting and administering activities that count toward CPD including training. This provides the PAO the opportunity to monitor and enforce compliance on CPD requirement; (ii) PAO permits members to attain a specific number of CPD units or hours and produce evidence that the PAO can verify; (iii) PAO in addition to providing CPD activities by itself, also permits or registers some training providers including employers as authorised CPD training providers
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PAOs’ obligations to members cont’d PAOs are said to base their decision of
what systematic process to adopt on the basis of cost efficient and convenient ways of administering CPD to members before adopting a CPD process.
For example, ACCA has four streams through which members can satisfy their CPD requirements and these are shown in the table below.
Also ICAEW has quite a different system of administering CPD on its members as shown below.
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PAOs’ obligations to members cont’dUnit route Unit route-part-time or
service retiredACCA approved employer route
IFAC body route
The unit route is for members who plan and organise their own CPD. If you follow the unit route, you are required to complete 40 relevant units of CPD each year, where one unit equals one hour of development. 21 units must be verifiable; the other 19 can be non-verifiable. It is extremely important to focus on what is relevant to your role and your career ambitions. No matter what your learning activity is, if you can answer ‘yes' to the three questions below, you can record your learning activity as verifiable CPD:Was the learning activity relevant to your career?Can you explain how you will apply the learning in the workplace?Can you provide evidence that you undertook the learning activity?
If you are employed for 770 hours or less over the course of a CPD year, then you may be eligible to follow this route. For example, you might work up to 17.5 hours per week, or you might only be active in the workplace at specific points in the year. If this applies to you, then you may complete 19 units of non-verifiable CPD and set your own level of verifiable CPD. You will need to ensure that you have completed an appropriate level of CPD for your role. The most important thing to focus on is relevance to your role and your career.The following conditions apply to this route:If you are not eligible for this route, you must follow the full unit route.If you are a practising member, you may only follow this route if you are not responsible for audit or other regulatory work. You also need to be able to show that you have the support of a technical expert when carrying out your duties.You may not follow this route if you are involved in the preparation or presentation of accounts investors may rely on, or are a Non-Executive Director of a listed company.
If you work for an organisation which is an ACCA Approved Employer - professional development, you may achieve your CPD by participating in your organisation's employee development programme and you are not required to complete any additional CPD. You must however, complete an annual CPD declaration to ACCA stating that you have followed this route.If you have worked for an ACCA Approved Employer - professional development for all or any part of a CPD year, you can indicate that you have taken the employer route when you make your annual declaration.It is your responsibility to confirm with your employer that they are an ACCA Approved Employer - professional development and that you or your team are covered by the approval. ACCA maintains a list of all employers who have gained approval under the professional development stream.
if you are also a member of another professional accountancy body then ACCA's CPD programme is sufficiently flexible to allow you to choose to follow your other body's CPD programme instead of ACCA's CPD programme, as long as:you are a full member of that professional accountancy body;your other member body is a member of IFAC; andyour other member body's CPD policy is compliant with IFAC's International Educational Standard (IES 7).If you can answer 'yes' to these three statements, you are eligible to follow the IFAC body route, and, if doing so, can indicate this when making your annual CPD declaration to ACCA.
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PAOs’ obligations to members cont’dWhat is CPD? What activities count
as CPD?Providing Evidence Complete any
required CPD Activity
Unlike some professional bodies, we don’t dictate how much CPD members must do. There are no set hours or points to attain. You simply need to complete as much development activity as you feel is required to remain competent in your role(s).
You don’t necessarily need to attend training courses to maintain CPD compliance. We recognise that people learn in different ways, through several different channels. These are the popular ways members stay up to date:Read the ICAEW email alert – it contains updates and news relevant to your role Attend a workshop, conference, seminar or webinar Read a book or journal, such as a faculty publication Participate in the ICAEW community Arrange an informal training session with a colleague
ICAEW randomly select members for review on an annual basis. If you are asked for evidence, you will need to show how you have complied.Your CPD evidence will need to mirror the steps described above, and further information will be provided in therequest letter:How you record your evidence is up to you, but you will need to demonstrate the three steps of reflect, act andimpact. You can record evidence using ICAEW’s record form or you can keep your CPD details in Word or Excel and upload them to www.icaew.com/cpd
On an ongoing basis, and using your professional judgement, you should:Reflect• reflect on the knowledge and skills required for your role(s);• consider your responsibilities and the expectations placed upon you;• identify your learning and development needs; these should be relevant toyour role(s) and your future career development; they may include technicalknowledge, business awareness, IT skills and ‘soft’ skills such as negotiation, time management, team leadership skills.
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PAOs’ obligations to members cont’dWhat is CPD? What activities
count as CPD?Providing Evidence
Complete any required CPD Activity
Act
when appropriate, take action (reading, online research, focused discussion,courses, etc.) to keep up to date and remain fully competent.
Impact• assess the effectiveness of these activities (how the learning has made youmore competent and effective, what you can do now which you couldn’tdo before) and consider whether your learning and development objectiveshave been met.
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PAOs’ obligations to members cont’d The table below shows the
different ways other PAOs i.e. ACCA and ICAEW administer their CPD
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PAOs’ obligations to members cont’d IES 7 ACCA ICAEW
CPD Approach Recommends either:Input-based; Output-based; orCombination of both Output-based but
requiring individual professional accountant’s judgement
Output-based but requiring individual professional accountant’s judgement
CPD hours 120 hours only if input-based approach is adopted
120 hours CPD activities achieved over three (3) years60 hours verifiable
40 hours annually21 hours verifiable
Activities must be based on relevance on current role and career ambitions
CPD hours or units not specifiedIndividual judgement but CPD activities must be relevant to current role(s) and future career development.
CPD Programmes provision
IES 7 para. 17 states that member bodies may directly provide relevant CPD programmes for professional accountants and facilitate access to programmes offered by others, encompassing all learning methods.
Deploys four (4) streams for accomplishing yearly CPD requirement but ACCA does not directly provide CPD programmes but encourages acquisition through approved routes.
Encourages acquisition of CPD hours through several different channels but emphasis is on current roles and future career development.
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PAOs’ obligations to members cont’d In its discussion paper titled: “A global
debate on preparing accountants for finance leadership” IFAC pointed out the role and expectations of a Chief Finance Officer (CFO).
It notes under the heading: “preparing professional accountants for finance leadership” the following five principles guiding the role and expectation of a CFO:
be an effective organisational leader and key member of senior management;
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PAOs’ obligations to members cont’d balance the responsibilities of
stewardship with business partnership;
act as the integrator and navigator for the organisation;
be an effective leader of the finance and accounting function; and
bring professional quality to the role of CFO and the organisation.
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PAOs obligations to members cont’d The paper further notes four typical
roles accountants in business have been found and relate to value management which encompasses:
creating value- engaged in developing strategies for sustainable value creation;
enabling value- supporting the governing body and senior management in making decisions and facilitating the understanding of performance of organisational functions or units;
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PAOs’ obligations to members cont’d preserving value-asset and liability
management, managing risk in relation to setting and achieving the organisation’s objectives and implementing and monitoring effective internal control systems; and
reporting value- this, the paper notes is in respect of ensuring relevant and useful internal and external business reporting.
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PAOs’ obligations to members cont’d The issues raised in the discussion
paper would appear to provide some pointer to PAOs where they would have to develop their members competencies (e.g. via CPD) and also ensure reasonable knowledge and understanding of the issues by their qualifying members if they are to build competent individuals for leadership in finance and accounting role in the future for private and public sector respectively. Premier Training & Consulting
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PAOs’ obligation to the public
Accountancy profession has in the last five or so decades, witnessed a plethora of professional indiscretions and other acts of unethical practices leading to high profile corporate collapses.
The concerns of investors and indeed, the public, remain that the preparers of financial statements and the auditors are all professional accountants.
Questions that have become recurring in the minds of many investors and the public at large are:
Where were the financial auditors (who are all professional accountants) when the indiscretions and unethical practices were perpetrated?
Were they aware of the wrong doings of those charged with the governance of the corporate bodies?
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PAOs’ obligations to the public What action did they take to prevent the
incidents of indiscretions? What action have the accountancy regulatory
bodies taken to instill ethical values in members of the PAOs that they regulate?
How are ethical values and professional competence of professional accountants monitored by the PAOs including their members’ practices and the conduct of the individual members in practice or in employment?
What measures should the PAOs put in place to enforce ethical values, professional skills and professional competency?
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PAOs’ obligations to the public cont’d A major aspect of a professional accountant’s life
that has changed in the last five decades is that which prevents him or her from operating autonomously without shepherd.
Professional accountants have become globally regulated in addition to regulations required within their own jurisdictions
Globally, all professional accountants are regulated through IFAC, which comprises 159 members and associates in 124 countries worldwide with approximately 2.5 million accountants across public practice, industry and commerce, public sector and education and stresses that its objective is to serve the public interest.
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PAOs’ obligations to the public cont’d IFAC stresses that to serve the public
interest, it aims to: strengthen the worldwide accountancy
profession; and contribute to the development of strong
economies by establishing and promoting:(i) adherence to high-quality professional standards;(ii) furthering the international convergence of such standards; and(iii) speaking out on public interest issues where the profession’s expertise is most relevant
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PAOs’ obligations to the public cont’d While PAOs are directly working also to meet
obligations placed on them for the public interest as set out in points (i) and (iii) above in their own jurisdictions, they are obliged indirectly, to also play major part in fulfilling the role required to achieve point (ii) but in this case, ensuring the smooth convergence of those standards with their local standards.
It is believed that in fulfilling the three obligations noted above, PAOs would also be strengthening the world accountancy profession and contributing to the development of, and establishing a strong economies in their jurisdictions
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PAOs’ obligations to the public cont’d But what role should PAOs play in ensuring
adherence to high-quality professional standards?
PAOs must ensure that their members understand and are able to apply the high-quality international standards produced through extensive due process that have converged with their local standards
For example in Nigeria: (i) do they understand and are able to
apply IFRS/IAS; IFRS for SMEs; IPSAS (Cash and/or accrual basis) appropriately?
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PAO’s obligations to the public cont’d for those members in practice, have
they also complied with the following standards as they relate to them:
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Overall framework of Assurance Engagement
International Standards on Quality Control (ISQC 1)
International Framework for Assurance Engagements International
Standards on related Services(ISRSEs)
International Standards on Auditing
(ISAs)
International Standards on Review Engagements(ISREs)
International Standards on Assurance Engagements(ISAEs)
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PAO’s obligations to the public cont’d In drawing their accountancy education
programmes and CPD activities, have PAOs integrated the provisions of the following IES where appropriate?
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IES Title
1 Entry requirements to a programme of professional accounting education
2 Content of professional accounting education programme
3 Professional skills and general education
4 Professional values, ethics and attitudes
5 Practical experience requirements
6 Assessment of professional capabilities and competence
7 Continuing professional development: a programme for lifelong learning and development of professional competence
8 Competence requirements for audit professionals
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PAO’s obligations to the public cont’d It is believed that compliance and
adherence to the various high quality standards shown above as well as the PAO’s territorial laws and regulatory requirements, the PAO would have been serving the public interest.
In addition, PAOs must not be averse to making public statements where the profession’s expertise is most relevant as well as also on issues that it judges will enhance public awareness on legal and regulatory matters e.g. the recent publication by ANAN on “Whistle Blowing”.
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Conclusion
Contents of this presentation shown on slides 4 to 68 are the various obligations of Professional Accountancy Organisations (PAOs) to their:
Students Members; and the Public.
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End
Thank you for Listening
Emmanuel Ogbonnaya CEO/Director, Technical & Training (PTC)
Premier Training & Consulting