This document discusses ethics in accounting. It defines accounting as the practice of recording financial transactions and keeping financial records. Accountants play roles like auditing, taxation, and financial advising. Ethics refers to moral principles that govern behavior. Accounting ethics deals with what is morally right and wrong behavior for accountants. Unethical behavior can include fraud, falsifying documents, and tax evasion. Threats to ethical behavior include self-interest, self-review, advocacy, familiarity, and intimidation. Unethical environments can harm companies through loss of reputation and fines. To promote ethics, organizations can implement policies, training, oversight, and codes of conduct.
3. Content Layout
What is “accounting” and what are the “works of accountants”?
What are “Ethics” in accounting?
Fraud in Accounting Statements .
Threats to Ethical Environment.
Harms of Unethical Environment.
How to make ethical Environment?
Conclusion
4. Accounting
Practice and body of knowledge concerned primarily with
Methods for recording transactions,
Keeping financial records,
Performing internal audits,
Reporting and analyzing financial information to the management, and
Advising on taxation matters.
5. Role of Accountants
The traditional external audit function.
Tax
Corporate finance advice.
Finance, accounting and treasury functions in industry and commerce.
Analysis & decision making for top level management.
6. Ethics
• Moral principles that govern a person's behavior or the conducting of
an activities.
• An area of study that deals with ideas about what is good and bad
behavior .
• A branch of philosophy dealing with what is morally right or wrong.
7. Ethics in Accounting
Accounting ethics is primarily a field of applied ethics and is part of
business ethics and human ethics, the study of moral values and
judgments as they apply to accountancy. It is an example of
professional ethics.
Provides fair and accurate reporting of the financial position of a
business.
8. Ethical issues
Reporting False Income
Falsifying Documents
Allowing orTaking Questionable Deductions
Illegally Evading IncomeTaxes
Engaging in Frauds
Pressure on Employs
9. Fraud in financial statement can be
committed in 5 ways
Fictitious revenue-revenues not actually earned
FraudulentTiming differences
Concealed liabilities and expenses
Fraudulent disclosures or Omissions
Fraudulent asset valuation-false statement of the inventory available
11. Self-interest threat
• The threat that a financial or other interest will
inappropriately influence the professional
accountant’s judgment or behavior
12. Self-Review Threats
• The threat that a professional accountant will not appropriately
evaluate the results of a previous judgment made or service
performed by the professional accountant, or by another individual
within the professional accountant’s firm or employing organization,
on which the accountant will rely when forming a judgment as part of
providing a current service
13. Advocacy Threat
• The threat that a professional accountant will promote a client’s or
employer’s position to the point that the professional accountant’s
objectivity is compromised
14. Familiarity Threat
• FamiliarityThreat occurs when, by virtue of a close relationship with a
client, its directors, officers or employees, an auditor becomes too
sympathetic to the client’s interests.
15. Intimidation Threat
• The threat that a professional accountant will be deterred from acting
objectively because of actual or perceived pressures, including
attempts to exercise undue influence over the professional
accountant
16. Harms of Unethical Environment
• Loss of Repute
• Loss of Company in monetary terms.
• Loss of Country
• Restrictions in International Markets
• Pressure on Organizational Stakeholders
17. Example
On July 21, 2015,Toshiba (OTCBB:TOSBF) CEO HisaoTanaka
announced his resignation in the face of an accounting scandal tied to
about $1.2 billion in overstated operating profits.
18. How to make ethical Environment?
• Safeguards created by the profession, legislation or regulation
• Educational, training and experience requirements for entry into the
profession
• Continuing professional development requirements
• Corporate governance regulations
• Professional or regulatory monitoring and disciplinary procedures
• External review by a third party of the reports, returns,
communications or information produced by a professional
accountant
19. How to make ethical Environment?
• Leadership that stresses the importance of independence and the
expectation that members of the teams will act in the public interest
• Policies and procedures to implement and monitor quality control of
the engagements
• A regular monitoring of the accounting firms
• Reasonable trade-off between the degrees of responsibility and the
audit cost to society
20. How to make ethical Environment?
• Making sure that the funds are allocated to different activities on the
basis of their importance
• Frame rules that have a positive effect on business activities
• To identify the training necessary for the employees
• Establishing ethical conduct of business to attract valuable
investments
• Establish code of conduct
• Helps the shareholders to evaluate the performance of the directors
and vice vers
21. Conclusion
• It is in the profession's self-interest to maintain public trust in the
competent performance of the accounting profession
• Ethics, in general, is made up of smaller parts that all work together
to build the moral fabric of society.