Great Deals on Used Textbooks & New Textbooks!               
My Account | Help Desk | Market Place Shopping Cart
Free shipping. Click here for details.
No items in cart.
Total: $0.00
Textbooks Sell Textbooks Books Supplies Medical Books College Apparel Movies Clearance
Search  Advanced >>
Related Topics: Business & Economics
Ethics and the CPA: Building Trust and Value-Added Services,9780471184881
Other versions by this Author

Ethics and the CPA: Building Trust and Value-Added Services


Author(s): Charles H. Calhoun; Mary Ellen Oliverio; Philip Wolitzer
ISBN10:  0471184888
ISBN13:  9780471184881
Format:  Hardcover
Pub. Date:  11/1/1998
Publisher(s): Wiley

Buy in Bulk
Send to a friend
New Price  $4.32
List Price $165.00
eVIP Price  $4.11
New Copy:  In Stock Usually Ships in 24 Hours.
Only 8 left at this sale price!
Order Now!
add remove
Marketplace Price $239.95
List Price $165.00 Available in the eCampus Marketplace
Take 90 Days to Pay on $250 or more
with Quick, Easy, Secure
Subject to credit approval.
SummaryTable of ContentsAuthor Biography
"A society without truth--and the related quality of trust--will not long endure." --from the Preface

Ethics in corporate America has become a bottom-line issue. Scandals such as the junk bond debacle in the late '80s and the recent bankruptcy of Orange County, California, graphically illustrate just how devastating losses from corrupt business practices can be. Closing the rift between a company's public and private face, its avowed as opposed to actual behavior, is now more than ever the concern of the accountant.

Examining a firm's business records and practices has traditionally placed the accountant in the role of watchdog. And in a corporate world where ethical ambivalence can complicate even the most routine business decision, a trusted accountant can guide a company toward a revived sense of purpose, showing it how to live up to its own expressed ethical standards--leading the way to new business, increased profits, and cost savings. Ethics and the CPA details just how an accountant can assess a company's ethical health as part of a rigorous accounting regimen--and institute corrective measures.

The book begins by clearly defining the accountant's role in the area of "ethical services," with specifics on establishing and performing an audit on an ethics-based program for business, governmental, and not-for-profit entities. Issues such as the specific knowledge, competencies, and attitudes essential to the professional providing ethical services are also discussed.

The second part of the book takes the ethical pulse of the contemporary business environment, analyzing some notable ethical failures in well-known companies as well as the range of regulatory demands on CPAs, including the requirement for finding unethical/illegal behavior (SAS 82) and SEC oversight responsibilities. Also included are the results of an ethics survey report on CPAs given to state CPA societies, regulatory bodies, and industry.

Finally, part three looks at the framework and issues surrounding developing and leading an in-house ethics program, as well as the elements of an effective ethical program, developing an ethical oversight committee, benchmarking an ethics program, marketing ethical services, and the ethical challenges in the new millennium.

Ethics and the CPA is a practical handbook for the accountant on guiding one's clients toward an improved bottom line and financial stability--through impeccable conduct from the boardroom on down.

Ensuring your client's continued financial prosperity --with an in-house ethics program.

Keeping a firm financially healthy has become more and more a question of monitoring its ethical pulse. Assessing the on-the-job behavior of managers and employees and how closely it measures up to their expressed codes of conduct has now become part of a CPA's overall financial review function. And building an in-house ethics program that both leads and inspires has become one of the key measures of an accountant's success. Ethics and the CPA describes how to make "ethical services" part of the accounting regimen, with specifics on establishing and performing an audit on an ethics-based program for business, governmental, and not-for-profit entities. It also surveys the contemporary business environment, analyzing some notable ethical failures in well-known companies as well as the host of regulatory demands on CPAs, including selected laws and regulations illustrating the range of compliance expected in the United States. The book also provides the specifics of setting up an effective ethical program, developing an ethical oversight committee, benchmarking an ethics program, marketing ethical services, and the ethical challenges in the new millennium. The essential guidebook on how to incorporate ethical services into an existing accounting practice, Ethics and the CPA shows accountants how to make their clients' bottom line an ethical one.
Preface xi
Part 1: Ethics Services CPAs Can Provide 1(36)
Chapter 1 Ethics Services Needed
3(18)
1.1 Perceived Need for Credibility
4(1)
1.2 Representations About Integrity
5(2)
1.3 Continuing Challenges to Ethical Behavior in Business
7(4)
1.4 Conference Board: Surveys and Proceedings
11(5)
1.5 Potential for Improvement Not Assured
16(1)
1.6 Focus on Ethical Conduct or Penalty Avoidance
17(1)
1.7 An Area for Development
18(1)
1.8 An Overview of This Book
19(2)
Chapter 2 Knowledge, Competencies, and Attitudes Relevant for New Ethics Services
21(16)
2.1 Critical Knowledge That Independent Public Accountants Have
22(4)
2.2 Critical Competencies Public Accountants Possess
26(5)
2.3 Attitudes Needed to Provide Ethically Related Services
31(2)
2.4 Significance of a Public Accounting Firm's Culture
33(2)
2.5 The Dynamic Interaction of Knowledge and Experience
35(2)
Part 2: Contemporary Ethical Environment: Problems and Demands 37(62)
Chapter 3 Confusion Regarding the Value of Ethics
39(16)
3.1 The Overriding Problem
40(1)
3.2 Levels of Attitudes and Commitment to Ethical Standards
40(2)
3.3 Perceptions of Ethical Conduct in the United States
42(4)
3.4 Prevailing Problems Preceived in the Late 1970s
46(3)
3.5 Fraudulent Behavior Disclosed
49(4)
3.6 Implications of Cases for Ethical Standards
53(1)
3.7 The Contemporary Challenge
54(1)
Chapter 4 Regulatory Demands
55(20)
4.1 Perceptions of Regulatory Burden
57(2)
4.2 Opportunity for the Certified Public Accountant
59(1)
4.3 Selected Laws and Regulations That Illustrate Range of Compliance Expected in the United States
59(3)
4.4 SEC Oversight Responsibilities
62(2)
4.5 Foreign Corrupt Practices Act
64(1)
4.6 Federal Sentencing Guidelines
65(3)
4.7 Representative Regulatory Agency Requirements
68(4)
4.8 The CPA's Requirement for Finding Unethical/Illegal Behavior (SAS 82)
72(3)
Chapter 5 Private Sector Response to Regulatory Oversight of CPAs
75(7)
5.1 The National Commission on Fraudulent Financial Reporting (Treadway Commission)
76(2)
5.2 Committee of Sponsoring Organizations (COSO)
78(1)
5.3 Peer Review
79(3)
Chapter 6 Ethics Survey Reports on CPAs
82(17)
6.1 Business Ethics: Some Survey Results
82(1)
6.2 Survey of Ethics: Perceptions
82(1)
6.3 Sample Selection and Questionnaires Used
82(2)
6.4 General Perception
84(1)
6.5 CPAs' Behavior in Practice
84(2)
6.6 Ethical Behavior in Business
86(1)
6.7 Discrimination and Sexual Harassment
87(1)
6.8 Prevention and Deterrent to Unethical Behavior
88(3)
6.9 Solutions to Unethical Behavior
91(1)
6.10 An Overview of the Findings
91(1)
6.11 Implications of Findings
92(1)
6.12 Ethics in Contemporary Organizations: The View from Young Workers
93(4)
6.13 Implications of Findings
97(1)
6.14 Consideration of the Findings of the Two Surveys
97(2)
Part 3: Providing Value-Added Ethics Services 99(70)
Chapter 7 Promoting Ethics in the CPA Firm
101(16)
7.1 Keeping One's Own House in Order
103(2)
7.2 "Window Dressing"
105(1)
7.3 Conflicts of Interest
105(1)
7.4 Substance versus Image
106(1)
7.5 Code of Professional Conduct
107(1)
7.6 Principles of Professional Conduct
107(2)
7.7 Public Interest
109(1)
7.8 Integrity
110(1)
7.9 Rules
110(1)
7.10 Independence, Integrity, and Objectivity
111(1)
7.11 General Standards and Accounting Principles
112(1)
7.12 Responsibilities to Clients
113(1)
7.13 Other Responsibilities and Practices
114(1)
7.14 Advertising
114(1)
7.15 Form of Organization and Name
115(1)
7.16 Continuing Professional Education
115(1)
7.17 Built-in Process of Review
116(1)
Chapter 8 Providing the Ethical Services
117(28)
8.1 Ethics Services
117(19)
8.2 Engagements to Benchmark Ethics Programs (Example 3)
136(2)
8.3 Reviews by Internal Auditors
138(2)
8.4 Independent Reviews of Ethics
140(1)
8.5 Attestation Engagements of Ethics
140(3)
8.6 Attestation Engagement (Example 4)
143(1)
8.7 Opportunities Abound
143(2)
Chapter 9 CPAs Facing the Future
145(24)
9.1 Importance of Ethics in the Public Accounting Profession
147(2)
9.2 Determining whether to Provide Ethics-Related Services
149(2)
9.3 Organizations Enhancing Ethics in the Workplace: Positive Emerging Developments
151(1)
9.4 Growing Interest in Assessing Ethical Environments
152(3)
9.5 Developments to Enhance Quality of Ethical Environments
155(3)
9.6 Possible Role for Education
158(2)
9.7 Erosion of Ethical Standards
160(1)
9.8 Challenge to CPAs in Sustaining Trust and Profitability
161(4)
9.9 Providing Services in a Techno-Information Age
165(1)
9.10 CPAs Encountering the New Millennium
166(3)
Appendixes 169(82)
A. AICPA Code of Professional Conduct 171(6)
B. Institute of Management Accountants Standards of Ethical Conduct for Practitioners of Management Accounting and Financial Management 177(3)
C. The Institute of Internal Auditors Code of Ethics 180(2)
D. Phillips-Van Heusen: A Shared Commitment 182(3)
E. Kronos: Code of Conduct and Business Ethics 185(6)
F. National Association of State Boards of Accountancy 191(17)
G. 1997 Federal Sentencing Guidelines 208(43)
Index 251
CHARLES H. CALHOUN, CPA, CIA, CFE, is a consultant and corporate trainer specializing in ethics, fraud examination, litigation support, and expert testimony. MARY ELLEN OLIVERIO, CPA, is Professor of Accounting in the Lubin School of Business, Pace University, New York City. PHILIP WOLITZER, CPA, is Professor Emeritus of Accounting at Long Island University.

Check Out These Items!
eCampus.com Pink Backpack eCampus.com Pink Backpack
Retail Price $28.95
Our Price $10.00
eCampus.com T-Shirt eCampus.com T-Shirt
Retail Price $14.99
Our Price $2.00
eCampus.com 4GB USB Drive eCampus.com 4GB USB Drive
Retail Price $32.95
Our Price $25.00
  Buy Textbooks
  Sell Textbooks
  College Apparel
  Shop by School
  Virtual Bookstores
  Order Status
  Shipping Rates
  Return Policy
  Marketplace Info
  F.A.S.T.
  Contact Us
  Privacy Policy
  Legal Notices
  Site Security
  Employment
  Help Desk
  eCampus Blog
  Affiliate Program
  Bulk Orders
  College Marketing
HACKER SAFE certified sites prevent over 99.9% of hacker crime.
eCampus.com blog follow eCampus.com on twitter find eCampus.com on facebook RSS Need Help? eService@ecampus.com   Copyright© 1999-2008     
.