Audit & Accounting

  • Fifty-five percent of the 688 CFOs and senior controllers surveyed by Grant Thornton said U.S. companies should be permitted to use International Financial Reporting Standards instead of U.S. generally accepted accounting principles.

    October 21
  • The New York State Society of CPAs and its Foundation for Accounting Education plan to hold an auditing conference on Oct. 27.

    October 21
  • Barry Melancon, president and chief executive of the American Institute of CPAs, opened his annual remarks regarding the state of the profession at the Fall Meeting of Council and Members by addressing the current economic crisis and the controversy around fair value accounting.

    October 21
  • The recent surge in financial institution failures has sparked an uptick in governmental investigations into the imploding entities.

    October 20
  • An Internal Revenue Service employee has been sentenced to one year's probation for improperly accessing tax information about one of his acquaintances.

    October 20
  • Nearly half of U.S. companies have made no preparation to adopt International Financial Reporting Standards, according to a new survey.

    October 20
  • If there were any doubt about Americans' urgent need for basic financial enlightenment, the economic meltdown that has been taking its heavy toll on Wall Street and Main Street of late should lay it to rest.But today's rocky environment was probably far from the imagination of the legions of CPAs who responded to the American Institute of CPAs' call in 2003, asking if they'd be willing to participate in a sweeping effort to raise Americans' financial literacy quotient.

    October 19
  • In what can be termed a shift in placement, the Governmental Accounting Standards Board and the American Institute of CPAs are proposing that certain guidance in the latter's literature belongs in the literature of the former.

    October 19
  • One benefit of the academic life is flexibility to spend some time each summer catching up on our reading.

    October 19
  • The Census Bureau estimates that there are nearly 78 million Baby Boomers, many of whom are facing retirement in the next few years with little or no savings.These 40-, 50- and even 60-year-old late-starters have been too busy educating children, caring for parents and making ends meet to properly save for their own retirement. By taking the time to understand their personal needs and goals, and staying on top of changes in relevant plans and laws, advisors can give clients one more reason to rely on them and their financial guidance.

    October 19