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ID087754
Title ProperAudit for whom? time to review roles of independent auditors in Hong Kong
LanguageENG
AuthorTat Chee Tsui
Publication2009.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The Hong Kong government has been reforming its laws regarding accounting practices in recent years, to pre-empt problems similar to that of Enron. It correctly recognizes an opportunity to enhance and distinguish the financial system in Hong Kong and create a competitive advantage for Hong Kong. The sixty-five billion dollar question is: what is the right approach for accounting practice reform? One obvious approach is to model reform after the Sarbanes Oxley Act (SOX). The SOX increases personal liabilities of senior management and introduces extremely cumbersome compliance processes (s 3 (b)(ix) of Minutes of Bills Committee of Financial Reporting Council Bill. (19 July 2005)). While this approach may be the right move for the United States, because rescuing investor confidence is paramount, a similar approach may not be optimal for Hong Kong. Hong Kong relies, to a great degree, on foreign investments and a heavy-handed approach may scare investments away (Charles E. Schumer & Michael R. Bloomberg To Save New York, Learn from London, Wall Street Journal 1 Nov 2006). This paper, argues that failure of independent auditors was mainly caused by bad incentives. In particular, auditors were hired by and responsible to the management of companies. Thus, there is no surprise that auditors were less diligent in finding problems caused by management. Furthermore, proposing of an alternate to the SOA's approach. Specifically, a new legal approach should be enforced that allows shareholders to sue auditors when failure to uncover accounting issues causes loss of shareholders' values.
`In' analytical NoteEast Asia: An International Quaterly Vol. 26, No.1; Mar2009: p21-39
Journal SourceEast Asia: An International Quaterly Vol. 26, No.1; Mar2009: p21-39
Key WordsAuditors' Responsibility ;  Fiduciary Duty ;  Financial Reporting Requirement ;  Listed Rule ;  Professional Duty ;  Professional Negligence ;  Sarbanes - Oxley Act ;  Auditors’ Responsibility