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  • SAFA-IFAC Professional Accountants in Business Forum

    Mumbai, India English
    The South Asian Federation of Accountants and IFAC held a Professional Accountants in Business (PAIB) Forum in Mumbai, India on April 23. The Forum gave professional accountants working in business the opportunity to address significant developments that affect their work. IFAC PAIB and Integrated Reporting Lead Stathis Gould presented on integrated reporting, including advances and new developments as well as updates from IFAC and the International Integrated Reporting Committee. In addition, IFAC Board member Alan Johnson addressed the global accountancy value and how our profession and individual accountants add value globally, regionally, and locally.
     
     

    The Accountancy Profession: Adding Value Globally, Regionally and Locally

  • Summary Report of PAIB Committee Meeting Strives to Enhance Communication, Coordination between IFAC and Member Organizations on PAIB Matters

    English

    Building and maintaining a profession that is relevant to professional accountants in business, trends affecting the finance function, the UN Sustainable Development Goals, and accountants in business perspective on audit quality, risk management, and integrated reporting were some of the topics debated at the recent IFAC Professional Accountants in Business (PAIB) Committee meeting.

    The Committee, made up of an international group of PAIB thought leaders from IFAC member organizations, met in New York March 30-31 for its bi-annual meeting chaired by Charles Tilley, Chartered Institute of Management Accountants Chief Executive.

    Meeting highlights, outcomes, and recommended actions are available online. Insights from the meeting will help raise awareness of emerging trends, challenges, and opportunities affecting the accountancy profession and PAIBs across the globe, and will help the global profession coordinate activities. IFAC plans to issue a similar post-meeting output following each PAIB Committee meeting.

  • 2015 Financial Statements

    IFAC's Financial Statements are prepared in accordance with International Public Sector Accounting Standards® (IPSAS®) and include an independent auditor’s report. 

    IFAC
    English
  • Gender Diversity in Leadership, Making the Breakthrough

    Fayez Choudhury
    IFAC CEO
    Public Accountants and Auditors Board Conference
    Harare, Zimbawbe English

    Ladies and gentlemen, distinguished guests.

    I want to start by acknowledging the leadership of the women on this stage this afternoon: Angeline, Gloria, Ferida, Tsitsi and Tendai.  

    As business leaders drawn from a range of professions, you are making a significant contribution to Zimbabwean corporate life; and as women, you are role-models for girls not just in Zimbabwe, but all over the continent. Thanks for offering me the opportunity to share this platform.

    Yesterday I spoke to this conference about the tremendous importance of a transparent, accountable public sector.

    By necessity, my remarks were focused on improving the nation’s economic health—and the constructive, ethical role accountants must play in delivering a better, more sustainable future for all Zimbabweans.  

    Today, my remarks are focused on improving the economy in a different way: through embracing, utilizing and engaging with all its talents and capabilities.

    The arrival of women as a serious component of the global workforce is a social advance humanity has only achieved in recent decades.

    For almost three-quarters of the twentieth century, women were virtually nonexistent in the accounting field. Shut out by sexism and ignorance, women struggled to break into what was a male-dominated profession.

    IFAC’s president, Olivia Kirtley, tells a story from 1972.  After graduating from college in the United States, she attended a day-long job interview, and felt confident she’d obtained the role. Instead, she was told that while she was qualified for the position, the firm did not hire women as professionals.  

    A few weeks later, she interviewed with the managing partner of a large global accountancy firm who had three daughters who, like her, were seeking job opportunities. Inspired by his own daughters, he took a chance and gave her the entry she needed—and the rest of course is history.

    My guess is that Olivia’s story isn’t unique in the world of accountancy, nor in the other professions represented on this stage: law and engineering.

    But of course beyond there being a lack of women in the profession, there was a distinctly cultural bias too. Finding people who looked and sounded different was near-impossible. In the mid-70’s to early 80’s, when I worked at PriceWaterhouse in London, there were probably only about 20 professional people of color in a staff complement of some 6000 people.

    Had I accepted a partnership when it was offered to me, I would have been the first non-white partner at any of the Big Eight firms that then existed in London.

    In terms of young women and people of color entering the profession today—thank goodness they face a very different world.

    For example, in Asia, female accountants are thriving—with women comprising 75% of accountants in Singapore, and 69% of accountants in the Philippines.

    And in the U.S., women represent half of all new CPAs over the past 20 years.

    These are great strides. However, while women today have an increasing presence in the accountancy profession, advancing to senior roles remains a challenge.

    In the US, while women represent almost half of all professional staff at accounting firms, just 21% of all firm partners are women. This is the high-end for developed countries around the world, where women make up 5% to 20% of partners in accounting firms.

    In developing countries, the story is even worse, with women comprising less than 5% of partners in accounting firms.

    Now, you might say “that’s not right.” But diversity and inclusivity in the accountancy profession—or any profession or workplace—is not just about being morally right. It’s smart business strategy.

    Teams comprised of men and women of all races and socio-economic backgrounds think more creatively and implement strategic solutions to benefit their clients, their business, and the economy.

    According to a recent study, companies with diverse leadership are 70% more likely to capture a new market, and 45% more likely to improve market share.

    Another study found that companies with the most diverse leadership enjoyed a 53% higher return on equity than companies with the least diverse leadership.

    Moving from the private sector to the government, it is striking that 16 African countries have more women in parliament than Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United States.

    Rwanda is ranked number 1, Zimbabwe is ranked 28th, while the United States is ranked a lowly 72nd !

    Some nations—such as Rwanda and Tanzania—have created a constitutional requirement for the government to include a certain number of women.

    But even where there are no quotas, African governments are beginning to include more females.

    And these women are making changes: The large number of women in Rwanda’s parliament has facilitated passage of certain laws, such as stricter punishments for violence against women.

    Building on our dedication to serving the public interest and strengthening the accountancy profession, the International Federation of Accountants has long been committed to diversity and inclusion. Indeed, I’m actually in the minority at IFAC—over 60% of our staff are women, and the majority of our director-level leadership team are women.

    But achieving the breakthrough to greater diversity—both gender and cultural—is a multi-layered effort. Creating real, sustainable long-term change requires a deep, wide focus on inclusion.

    In the mid-2000’s I was working at the World Bank. There was a concerted effort underway to hire more women. The desire was to increase the number of women in professional and managerial roles from around 35% to closer to 50%.

    I recall non-Western staff believing that the Bank should have been more concerned with building geographical diversity. We had done well at building inclusion, but the understanding that different cultures can provide innovative critical thinking was not yet as advanced.

    Their point was simple: the process of hiring a diverse personnel must be complimented by a push to tackle the barriers faced by under-represented groups in having their views and perspectives heard.  

    Finding ways to encourage more women—and men—from different socio-economic backgrounds to put their hand up and offer their views without being embarrassed, or afraid, requires exemplary tone-at-the-top, mood in the middle and buzz at the bottom.

    An organization-wide inclusion effort may take time build, but it will be critical to both enhanced productivity and a long-lasting diversity breakthrough.

    Turning back to the accountancy profession generally, at IFAC we recognize that the global profession achieves its greatest potential when it draws its next generation of leaders from the widest pool of talent. We must recruit the best and the brightest from all backgrounds.

    We are delighted with the work of African Women Chartered Accountants. In 2002, when AWCA opened its doors, there were only 407 black women CAs in South Africa.

    By 2014 this number had climbed to 3,445. In 2014 alone, 665 black women CAs qualified—more in one year than the total number of black women CAs that existed in South Africa in 2002! The AWCA has played a major role in this growth.

    As Sheryl Sandberg, Chief Operating Officer at Facebook and a leading speaker for women’s empowerment, has said, “We cannot change what we are not aware of, and once we are aware, we cannot help but change.”

    Understanding how diversity benefits the profession, we encourage all firms, businesses, agencies, and organizations to support a diverse and inclusive workforce, as well as enact programs that allow women and minorities to ascend to senior roles.

    With that, I’m looking forward now to hearing from the panel, and taking back to New York some of the on-the-ground learnings from Zimbabwe.

  • IFAC Website Features New Integrated Search

    English

    We invite you to experience the newly integrated site-wide search functionality the next time you are exploring the IFAC website. Search now crawls all content across the site—from IFAC, the independent standard-setting boards, Global Knowledge Gateway, and MOSAIC. Users can discover everything the site has to offer on a topic with a single search query. Robust filters now allow users to refine results by date range, type of publication/news, medium (print, audio, visual), language, and more. The sort functionality allows users to display results in order of relevance or date, or alphabetical by first word.

    We would love to know what you think—email communications@ifac.org with questions or comments.

  • IFAC Small and Medium Practices (SMP) Committee Response to the International Ethics Standards Board for Accountants (IESBA) Exposure Draft: Improving the Structure of the Code of Ethics for Professional Accountants—Phase 1

    The IFAC SMP Committee supports the approach to restructuring taken by the IESBA and the general direction of the project. The work undertaken to increase the clarity of the language will help the understandability of the Code, in particular the simpler and shorter sentences and increased use of the active voice. The SMP Committee believes that the needs of the SMP community should be at the forefront as the IESBA takes this project forward in Phase 2.

    IFAC
    English
  • IFAC Announces New Partnership in Zimbabwe to Strengthen Accountancy Capacity in the Public Sector

    New York and London English

    The International Federation of Accountants® (IFAC®) today announced the selection of the Chartered Institute of Public Finance and Accountancy (CIPFA) to partner with the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Zimbabwe (ICAZ) and the Public Accountants and Auditors Board, Zimbabwe (PAAB), to strengthen the capacity of public sector accountancy.

    “This partnership will enhance the ability of Zimbabwe’s accountancy profession to fully support the needs of the country’s public sector,” said Alta Prinsloo, IFAC Executive Director, Strategy, and Chief Operating Officer. “Stronger accountancy capacity in the public sector will contribute to transparency and accountability, which are crucial for all nations.”

    The partnership will have two main components: establishing a project stakeholder advisory group and developing a comprehensive roadmap to strengthen accountancy capacity in the public sector.

    “We are looking forward to working with our colleagues in Zimbabwe to help improve public services for the people who need them,” said Gillian Fawcett, Head of CIPFA’s Governments Faculty. “As the world’s only professional accountancy body dedicated to public finance, we can offer insight into best practice from around the globe. Our work, such as conducting public financial management readiness assessments for the World Bank, including in Zimbabwe in 2011, means we are geared up for this challenge. Working with our partners, ICAZ and PAAB, we have a real opportunity to strengthen public financial management in Zimbabwe.” 

    In 2014, IFAC received almost £5 million from the UK Department for International Development (DFID) to fund professional accountancy organization (PAO) capacity building in ten emerging countries over a period of seven years. The selection of CIPFA was made following a global Call for Expressions of Interest and an extensive proposal and review process involving multiple global organizations and the IFAC PAO Capacity Building Program Oversight Committee and Independent Selection Panel. This new partnership will continue to build on the funding agreement and Zimbabwe will join Ghana, Rwanda, and Uganda, where projects making use of the funding are underway.

    About IFAC
    IFAC is the global organization for the accountancy profession, dedicated to serving the public interest by strengthening the profession and contributing to the development of strong international economies. It is comprised of more than 175 members and associates in more than 130 countries and jurisdictions, representing almost 3 million accountants in public practice, education, government service, industry, and commerce. ‘International Federation of Accountants’ and ‘IFAC’ are registered trademarks of IFAC in the US and other countries.

    About CIPFA
    CIPFA, the Chartered Institute of Public Finance and Accountancy, is the professional body for people in public finance. Our 14,000 members work throughout the public services, in national audit agencies, in major accountancy firms, and in other bodies where public money needs to be effectively and efficiently managed. As the world's only professional accountancy body to specialise in public services, we champion high performance in public services, translating our experience and insight into clear advice and practical services. Globally, CIPFA shows the way in public finance by standing up for sound public financial management and good governance. We work with donors, partner governments, accountancy bodies and the public sector around the world to advance public finance and support better public services

    About DFID
    The UK Department for International Development (DFID) leads the UK’s work to end extreme poverty. They are ending the need for aid by creating jobs, unlocking the potential of girls and women and helping to save lives when humanitarian emergencies hit. For more information, visit www.gov.uk/dfid.

    Chartered Institute of Public Finance and Accountancy to Partner with the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Zimbabwe and Public Accountants and Auditors Board, Zimbabwe to Improve Accountancy Skills

  • Third Regional Forum for Professional Accountancy Organizations

    Third Regional Forum for Professional Accountancy Organizations
    Vienna, Austria English

    IFAC representatives participated in the Third Regional Forum for Professional Accountancy Organizations (PAOs) in Europe and Central Asia in Vienna, Austria, on April 28. The event was organized by the World Bank Center for Financial Reporting Reform as part of the “Road to Europe: Program of Accounting Reform and Institutional Strengthening” and the “Strengthening Auditing and Reporting in the Countries of the Eastern Partnership” programs (also known as EU-REPARIS and STAREP, respectively).

    The Forum brought together representatives from over 20 PAOs from countries in Central, Southeast, and Eastern Europe, as well as experts from the World Bank and the International Accounting Standards Board.

    IFAC staff shared the IFAC Member Compliance Program Strategy for 2016-2018, which focuses on producing both qualitative and quantitative analyses of standards adoption, enhanced monitoring of compliance with the IFAC Statements of Membership Obligations, and revising its enforcement framework.

    In addition, representatives of IFAC member organizations from Ireland and Singapore, as well as the Chair of the Forum of Firms, participated in panel discussions on the role of PAOs in economic growth and the challenges they face in developing a sustainable business model.