Audit and accountancy firms who devise tax-avoidance schemes
ruled unlawful have never faced official reprimand, The Independent revealed.
None of the so-called “Big Four” firms –
PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC), KPMG, Deloitte & Touche and Ernst & Young
– has ever faced regulatory investigation for such schemes. Court rulings
condemning unlawful avoidance schemes are regularly overlooked by regulators.
The Financial Reporting Council (FRC) and the Institute of
Chartered Accountants in England and Wales (ICAEW) cannot act because they are
dominated by the very firms they are meant to police. The UK is increasingly
seen as an international “soft touch” for tax-avoidance abuses as government
departments and regulators show little or no appetite to investigate these
schemes.
Prem Sikka, Professor of Accountancy at Essex University,
said: “Successive governments have failed to investigate the firms. Instead,
the partners of major accountancy firms are given peerages, knighthoods, public
accolades and government consultancies. The same firms have colonised
regulatory bodies, fund political parties and provide jobs for former and
potential ministers. This has brought them political insurance and their
anti-social practices continue to inflict enormous social damage.” The FRC, he
says, is too close to the big four firms. “Its committees are dominated by
personnel from the big four firms,” he argues. “The involvement of Big Four
firms is routinely highlighted by court cases, parliamentary hearings, etc. So
the FRC has had plenty of opportunities to take action on the tax-avoidance
front. It will not be able to refer you to even one example. Even after court
judgments it does not do anything.”
Former Labour MP Austin Mitchell, who made an official
complaint in 2012 against Ernst & Young about its involvement in a tax
scheme later ruled to be unlawful by a tax tribunal. The ICAEW could not
comment on Mitchell’s complaint as it was still “live” three years on. It is a
common tactic for regulators to announce investigations under pressure and then
quietly drop them.
“It is time to scrap self-regulation of accountancy and
audit and replace it with an independent regulator and an ombudsman. The FRC
and the ICAEW are essentially regulation of the big four by the big four for
the protection of the big four. Each time I’ve raised an issue with them they
either invent a litany of excuses to avoid dealing with it or bury it quietly
in the hope that it will go away,” Mitchell said.
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