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Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting
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Page 1: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases

Chapter 9

Ethical Considerations inJudgment and Decision Making in

Accounting

Page 2: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Presentation Plan

• Objectives

• Professional Ethics– AICPA’s Code of Professional Conduct

• Business Ethics

• Ethics Audit Services

• Individual Ethics

• Ethical Training: The Case Method

• Illustrative Case

Page 3: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Objectives

• AICPA's Code of Professional Conduct and CPA’s responsibilities

• Principles, rules, interpretations, and enforcement of the AICPA's Code of Professional Conduct

• Definition of business ethics• Various components of a business ethics

program

Page 4: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Objectives

• Corporate ethics audits as an area of assurance about effectiveness of a clients’ business ethics programs

• A general framework for individual ethical behavior

• A method of measuring individual ethical reasoning

• Characteristics of an ethical accountant• A model for analysis of ethical dilemmas

Page 5: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Professional Ethics

• AICPA’s Code of Professional Conduct:– To serve the public interest in performing the

highest quality of professional services– Supported by:

• Education

• Certification

• Licensing

• Practice

Page 6: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Professional Ethics

• AICPA’s Code Components:

– Principles of Professional Conduct

– Rules of Conduct

– Interpretations of Rules of Conduct

– Rulings by:• The Professional Ethics Division

• Trial Board

Page 7: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Professional Ethics

• Principles of Professional Conduct (Exhibit 9-1) – Responsibilities– The Public Interest– Integrity– Objectivity and Independence– Due Professional Care– Scope and nature of Services

• A problem: Principles are not enforceable

Page 8: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Professional Ethics

• Rules of Conduct and Interpretations:– 100: Independence, Integrity, and Objectivity – 200: General Standards and Accounting

Principles – 300: Responsibilities to Clients – 400: Responsibilities to Colleagues: No longer

in force (replaced with peer review in 1988)– 500: Other Responsibilities and Practices

Page 9: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Professional Ethics

• Rulings by the Professional Ethics Division:– Professional Ethics Division may:

• levy automatic penalties (e.g., expulsion)

• recommend a course of action (e.g., CPE course)

• refer to Trial Board for a hearing

– Professional Ethics Division rulings are published in AICPA’s publication: the CPA Letter

Page 10: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Business Ethics

• Is the profit motive in conflict with ethical conduct?– Two views: Yes and No!– US Sentencing Guidelines– Psychological tendencies in need of correction

Page 11: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Business Ethics

• Defined:

– A management process comprised of programs, management practices, and systems designed to motivate, measure, and monitor the organization's ethical performance

Page 12: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Business Ethics

Strategies:Code of conduct 208 93.3%

Employee training in ethics 99 44.4%

Social auditing & reporting 98 43.9%

Corporate structural changes 46 20.6%

Ethics committees 40 17.9%

Ombudsman 17 7.6%

Judiciary board 3 1.3%

None of the above 2 .9%

Page 13: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Business Ethics Components(Exhibit 9-2)

Ethical Tone:

– Corporate Culture & Climate

– Board of Directors

– Management

Ethical Guidance– Code of Ethics

– Training and Development

Enforcement– Control Environment

– Ombudsman, Officer, Committee, Board

– Whistle-blowing

– Investigation & Action

Page 14: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Ethical Tone: Corporate Culture & Climate

• To foster an environment supportive of ethical behavior:

• Corporate Culture is – A set of formal and informal understandings that

guide employees in their daily conduct• Corporate Climate is

– Aggregated employee perceptions of organizational values such as providing warmth and support to colleagues and customers

• Ethical climate is a subset of corporate climate

Page 15: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Ethical Tone:Board of Directors

• The company should have:– A process to select BOD members with

reputation for personal integrity• individuals with possible conflicts of interest or

undue influence must be disqualified

Page 16: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Ethical Tone: Management

• The importance of management integrity is recognized in professional standards. – SAS 53 indicates that management is above the

controls that constrain employees, or can override them easily -- thus management integrity is important.

– Management must exercise constant vigilance and timely intervention to foster the firm's ethical standards (Aguilar, 1994, 95).

Page 17: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Ethical Guidance:Code of Ethics

• A code of ethics provides a frame of reference

• defines areas of ethical concerns • defines core values that are to

guide action.

Page 18: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Ethical Guidance: Training and Development

• Formal training program is needed for: – developing employees' understanding,

competence, and commitment with respect to ethical behavior on the job. (Aguilar, 1994, 104)

– Similar to any other training program, an ethics training program must have clear objectives to accomplish.

Page 19: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Enforcement: Control Environment

• Per COSO, 1992, sets: – the tone of an organization– providing discipline and structure integrity– ethical values – competence of ... people – management's philosophy and operating style– the way management assigns authority and

responsibility, and organizes and develops its people – and the attention and direction provided by the board of

directors.

Page 20: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Enforcement: Ombudsman, Ethics Officer, Ethics Committee,

Judiciary Board

• Ombudsman, ethics officers, ethics committees, or judiciary boards play an important role in the development and enforcement of ethical processes.

Page 21: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Enforcement: Whistle-Blowing

• The disclosure by organization members of illegal, immoral, or illegitimate practices

• "Co-workers who are willing to monitor their peers' behavior and report violations to management represent a potentially important supplemental control resource for organizations." (Trevino & Victor, 1992, p. 38).

Page 22: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Ethics Audit Services

• An Area of Assurance Services Identified by the AICPA (Elliott & Pallais, 1997)

• An ethics audit is similar to the audit performed for ISO 9000 certification and is a "positive confirmation of the existence and effective implementation of best ethical practices." (KPMG, 1996).

• Also applicable are a host of SASs (e.g., SAS 78 and SAS 82)

• But no SAS directly on Ethics Audits

Page 23: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Examples of Ethics Items/Audit Tasks

• From Culture & Climate:– Does the client have a positive moral

atmosphere ... [i.e., is individual diversity tolerated, encouraged)? (Ponemon, 1994)

• From Board of Directors:– Is the board of directors actively involved in the

evaluation of management's enforcement of corporate ethical code?" (POB, 1994, 13).

Page 24: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Examples of Ethics Items/Audit Tasks

• From management:– Assess ethical behavior of management

because, "Knowledge that the CEO has 'done the right thing' ethically when faced with a tough business decision sends a strong message to all levels of the organization" (COSO, 1992, 21).

Page 25: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Examples of Ethics Items/Audit Tasks

• From the Code of Ethics:– Does the code provide guidance on acceptance

of gifts from vendors in violation of company policy

• From Training and Development:– Does the client have clear cut policies with

respect to employee ethics training? (Sears, 1993)

Page 26: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Examples of Ethics Items/Audit Tasks

• From Control Environment:– Assess organizational structure (SAS 55 Guide,

2.22).

• From Ethics Officer:– Does the client have a Report Recipient Office?

(Miceli & Near, 1992, p.176)

• From Whistle-blowing:– Is anonymity assured? (Miceli & Near, 1992)

Page 27: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Individual Ethics

• Definition:– The study of what is right in human behavior– Focuses on ultimate goals that ought to be

pursued and the actions that ought to be taken to achieve those goals

– “Ought to be” has different interpretations based on the ethical principles adopted

Page 28: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Individual Ethics

• Ethical Principles– “Self-interest”, but not selfishness: not to the

point that other people’s interests are unduly harmed

• Example: do not trade on insider information because it harms the interest of others

– Harm minimization -- “self control” so that physical or psychological harm to others is minimized

Page 29: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Individual Ethics

• Ethical Principles– Utilitarianism. Optimize public interest:

greatest good for the greatest number of people– Universality. Consistency in actions under

similar circumstances– Human rights. Justice principle where the

freedom and human rights of all others are respected.

Page 30: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Individual Ethics

• Kohlberg Stage Model of Moral Development (Exhibit 9-3)– Level I - Pre-conventional. Ethics of

Convenience and self-interest:

• Stage 1: Avoid punishment

• Stage 2: Seek personal rewards

Page 31: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Individual Ethics

• Kohlberg Stage Model of Moral Development (Exhibit 9-3)– Level II - Conventional. Ethics of

Conformity:• Stage 3: Group loyalty and acceptance

• Stage 4: Belief in obeying the civic or religious laws and professional regulations

Page 32: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Individual Ethics

• Kohlberg Stage Model of Moral Development (Exhibit 9-3)– Level III - Post-Conventional. Ethics of

Conviction:• Stage 5:Commitment to high order principle

such as utilitarianism• Stage 6: Commitment to the highest order

principles such as justice, duties and equal human rights

Page 33: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Individual Ethics

• Measures of Ethical Cognition:– Kohlberg’s Moral Judgment Interview (MJI)– Rest’s Defining Issues Test (DIT)

• The P-score

– Provides norms for various strata of the society (e.g., mean of 31.03 for high school graduates)

– Business versus liberal arts students

– Men versus women

Page 34: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Individual Ethics

• Rest’s Model of Moral Behavior:– Component I: Moral sensitivity – Component II: Moral Judgment (or reasoning)– Component III: Moral Motivation– Component IV: Moral Character

Page 35: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Individual Ethics

• Ethical Training: The Case Method– Identify stakeholders

– Identify ethical issues

– Identify alternative solutions

– Make a decision: Select a preferred solution

Page 36: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Antelope Financial: Facts

• Explosion of the number and variety of financial instruments in recent years;

• A practice known as “gain-on-sale accounting” is used for transactions– Borrowing money at a low rate, and lending at

a higher rate and recognize the spread as profit by discounting to present value all scheduled future cash flows for a given sale.

Page 37: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Antelope Financial: Facts

• Antelope is interested in buying One firm, Put-You-In-Housing Financial (PYIHF). – PYIHF lends to individuals for the purchase of

trailer homes, manufactured housing, and small houses

• PYIHF has relied on gain-on-sale accounting, securitizing all of its loans for sale, booking profits, and loaning the proceeds to additional customers. PYIHF has over one billion dollars on the books in this manner.

Page 38: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Antelope Financial: Facts

• As a CFO you are asked to closely inspect PYIHF’s books and report to the CEO – You find high risk of default because

• PYIHF’s borrowers have poor credit histories with high rates of default.

• The residences are at risk to fire and hurricane due to their small size and construction, yet few homeowners have fire and casualty insurance.

• PYIHF has many loans on the books yet to be securitized.

Page 39: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Antelope Financial: Facts

• You ask that a note be added to the financials and to the SEC Form 8-K, but the CEO disagrees, stating that the board would bar the transaction

• What do you do?

Page 40: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Antelope Financial: Discussion

• Identify Stakeholders– CFO, CEO, Creditors, Stockholders, etc.

• Identify ethical issues– Discuss self interest, harm minimization,

utilitarianism, universality, and human rights related to each of the stakeholders

Page 41: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Antelope Financial: Discussion

• Identify Alternative Courses of Action– Agree with acquiring PYIHF, but spin-off bad

loans• Difficult given the poor quality of PYIHF’s loans

– Report your concern privately to Antelope’s board

• CEO will be mad at you for sure

– Blow the whistle and resign!

Page 42: Applied Research in Financial Reporting: Text and Cases Chapter 9 Ethical Considerations in Judgment and Decision Making in Accounting.

Antelope Financial: Discussion

• Choose the more preferred option:– The third option, resign, may be preferable

under the circumstances• This requires a personal sacrifice, but you have little

choice– If you stay and try to spin-off PYIHF’s bad loans and it

does not work, Antelope may be in trouble blaming you for it, and perhaps firing you.

– If you report to the board, the CEO will be mad at you and may try to make life difficult for you or fire you.


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