The Public Company Accounting Oversight Board wants accounting firms to get to the root of their problems.
In a new report, "
"Rather than simply detecting and remediating audit deficiencies, many firms can consider — and we strongly encourage that they do so — focusing more on assessing the underlying root causes of a deficiency, so that the deficiency can be effectively addressed and ultimately eliminated," the report says.
Staff were quick to acknowledge that root cause analysis is not a single, well-defined methodology, but instead any structured approach to uncovering the underlying causes of a particular phenomenon.
"We have observed that a firm's deeper understanding of the underlying root causes of a deficiency can result in incremental improvements to a firm's qualify control system, and may drive further improvements in audit quality," the report says.
As part of the report, the PCAOB staff lay out the hallmarks of a well-designed RCA process:
- Having a dedicated, diverse RCA team (this is more common for larger firms) or individual.
- Having documented guidance and processes (again, this is more common for larger firms).
- Providing internal or external training in RCA processes.
- Using a variety of data-gathering approaches, including interviews; reviewing time and training records, audit workpapers, and audit metrics; and software and proprietary tools.
- Conducting analysis at the individual engagement level, and more broadly across the firm.
- Prioritizing the highest-risk areas.
The report also includes key questions for audit committees to consider, and more.