Count down : the past, present and uncertain future of the big four accounting firms

Author(s)

    • Peterson, Jim

Bibliographic Information

Count down : the past, present and uncertain future of the big four accounting firms

by Jim Peterson

(Studies in the development of accounting thought / Gary John Previts and Robert J. Bricker, series editors, v. 19)

Emerald, 2015

Available at  / 7 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The post-Enron disintegration of Arthur Andersen in 2002 reduced the number of international accounting firms that audit nearly all of the world's largest public companies to the surviving Big Four -- Deloitte, EY, KPMG and PwC. Despite market dominance, double-digit annual growth and annual global revenue above $120 billion in 2014 - the viability of the Big Four and their business model faces serious threats:- Widespread dissatisfaction with the standard form and language of their core product -- the traditional "pass-fail" auditor's report. - The persistent "expectations gap" between their perceived performance quality and the stated desires of information users.- And especially, the questionable ability of the Big Four and their partners to survive a "black swan" financial shock - a litigation judgment or law enforcement sanction on the scale that destroyed Arthur Andersen. Count Down looks at the complex challenges facing the Big Four, questions the feasibility and achievability of the various proffered "solutions", and proposes an evolved model for Big Audit that would be both sustainable for the large firms and fit to serve the capital markets of the 21st century.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1. Introduction Chapter 2. The present state of big audit Chapter 3. A taxonomy of the non-solutions Chapter 4. The Acts and attitudes of the players in big audit Chapter 5. The uncertain future of the big four

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