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Beyond bean counting: Establishing high ethical standards in the public accounting profession

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Abstract

Business professions are increasingly faced with the question of how to best monitor the ethical behavior of their members. Conflicts could exist between a profession's desire to self-regulate and its accountability to the public at large. This study examines how members of one profession, public accounting, evaluate the relative effectiveness of various self-regulatory and externally imposed mechanisms for promoting a climate of high ethical behavior. Specifically, the roles of independent public accountants, regulatory and rule setting agencies, and undergraduate accounting education are investigated. Of 461 possible respondents, 230 questionnaires (a 49.6% response rate) indicated that the profession's own rule setting body (The American Institute of Certified Public Accountants) and the use of peer review were perceived as the most effective mechanisms, while government regulation was ranked least. Respondents also evaluated the extent to which ethics should be covered in the accounting curriculum. For every course, the CPAs believed a greater emphasis on ethics is appropriate than presently exists. Suggestions for more effectively integrating ethics into accounting courses are made. Finally, respondents were also asked whether in answering the questionnaire they used a definition of ethics as either the “Professional Code of Conduct” or a “moral and philosphical framework for guiding beliefs.” Those who viewed ethics as abiding by a professional code had more confidence in the mechanisms addressed in this study to aid the public accounting profession's ability to ensure high ethical standards of conduct. Methodological implications of this distinction for future studies in business ethics are discussed.

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Jeffrey R. Cohen is Assistant Professor of Accounting at Boston College. He received his Ph.D. from The University of Massachusetts at Amherst. He is a C.M.A. and a Peat Marwick Research Fellow. His articles have appeared in the ‘Journal of Accounting Research’, ‘Decision Sciences’ and ‘The Organizational Behavior Teaching Review’. His work on Ethics has appeared in ‘Issues in Accounting Education, Management Accounting’, and ‘The CPA Journal’.

Laurie W. Pant is Assistant Professor of Accounting at Boston College. She holds an M.B.A. and a D.B.A. from Boston University and an M.Ed. from Emory University. She serves on the editorial board of ‘Issues in Accounting Education’. Her articles on Ethics have appeared in ‘Issues in Accounting Education’, ‘Management Accounting’ and ‘The Organizational Behavior Teaching Review’.

An earlier version of this paper was presented at the 1989 American Accounting Association National Meeting.

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Cohen, J.R., Pant, L.W. Beyond bean counting: Establishing high ethical standards in the public accounting profession. J Bus Ethics 10, 45–56 (1991). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00383692

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