As per the resolution passed by the European Parliament in June 2013, broadly entities apart from public interest entities (which is basically those entities whose securities are widely traded in the stock market, lending institutions, insurance providers and any other entity which has been specifically named as such by any of the member countries of the European Union) and medium sized or large undertakings, are not mandated to have their statutory audit done (Axelsen, et al., 2017). This essentially meant that all those companies, which fall under the stated definition of small undertakings, will be exempted from the requirement of statutory audit. There have been thresholds provided as to which are the companies that can be classified as such. A comparative analysis of the thresholds shows that the limits for both balance sheet total and net turnover have been lowered with respected to the figures that were stated in the 2011 and the 2006 amendments. A company to be categorized as a ‘small undertaking’ needs to fulfil at least two out of the three thresholds. Their balance sheet total must not exceed 4 million Euros, Net Turnover shall not exceed 8 million, or average number of employees on the payroll of the companies during the financial year shall not exceed 50 employees. However, owing to the peculiarities in each of the member countries, they have been an option to increase the stated threshold to some extent, which in any case shall not exceed 6 million euros for balance sheet total, and 12 million in case of turnover of the companies. In addition to the above allowable variance, there is also a permissible variation of 5 percent for exchange rate fluctuations between Euro and local currency of the member countries (Belton, 2017).
Despite the provision of permitting increase in thresholds, only one third of the member countries chose to exercise this and increase the limit. This goes to show the increased levels of trust and reliance, the policy makers put on the role of the statutory auditors. They recognize the fact that audit is an important aspect in regulating the economy and safeguarding the value of the stakeholders. It is pertinent to note that it is up to the small undertakings to choose if they want to get themselves audited, i.e., they may voluntarily decide to get statutory audit done (Alexander, 2016).
In case of UK, the thresholds limits are a little higher than the stipulated thresholds. The categories of companies to be qualified as small companies are like those of ‘small undertakings’ classification in the European context. However, in the UK scenario a lot of emphasis is laid out on the definition of companies that form part of a group of companies to be eligible as small companies’ exemption. The regulations in the UK states that those subsidiary companies which may or may not be part of a ‘small group of companies’, if it meets all the conditions laid down under section 479A and does not fall under the classification of companies mentioned under section 479B is also exempt from the mandatory provisions of statutory audit. In case of UK, it is interesting to observe that UK falls under those one-third of European Union members who have increased the threshold limits for balance sheet total and turnover total for small company classification. The increase is significant in percentage when represented in terms of British pounds. Prima facie, this move by the UK lawmakers aims to benefit a large of chunk of companies by savings in audit costs, which may become a burden for some of them and would boost the index ranking of the country in terms of ‘ease of doing business’ (Bumgarner & Vasarhelyi, 2018).
The focus of the above point revolves around whether the audit exemption should be held at its current level or there needs to be a periodic review of it. In my opinion, the ideal scenario would be doing deal with each year separately and carry out a review of the threshold limits on a year-to-year basis. Many factors will put credibility to this argument.
Firstly, the global markets are very dynamic and are shaping every minute. The changing pace of inflation, exchange rates and interest rates act as catalyst to the overall change in dynamics. Assets worth of 4 million euros now may be worth more or less one year down the line depending on the above variants involved and due to changes in government regulations such as custom tariffs, subsidies etc. Similarly, 8 million euros of turnover today may become totally different next year if there is a pick-up in domestic and global demand or a slowdown in the economy instead (Raiborn, et al., 2016).
Secondly, other factors might be of relevance apart from purely the numbers. For instance, there could be case where an industry is of more strategic importance than the other such as manufacturing of defence equipment or drug manufacturing. The government may want to keep a close watch on the financials of these entities regardless of their scale of operations for various other reasons. In that case, they may decide to keep it out of the purview of the thresholds limits and put it under the mandatory class of companies for which statutory audit is required (Kachelmeier, et al., 2018).
Thirdly, there might be some entities which might be covered under the threshold limits but the nature of their operations is such that makes the financial operations more complex for the users of the financial statements difficult to interpret. An expert opinion, like that of the auditor, may be required in such cases which would help the users to get a better picture of the performance of the company. Therefore, in such circumstances the monetary ceilings of balance sheet total and turnover are of not much significance.
Fourthly, there needs to be a review of number of threshold employees each year. This primarily because of two factors. One can be attributed to the fact that there might be certain kinds of business models that may not be labour intensive. They might have a significant degree of dependence on automated processes but by using the provisions, they are falling outside the purview of mandatory statutory audit. In technologically driven companies, there is significant requirement of audit of to be done regardless of the employee headcount. The other possible reason is the ever-changing job scenarios in the global and domestic employment market. Due to constant technology upgradation, innovation and amendments in labour laws, the threshold on number of employees cannot be kept constant and should be subjected to reviews on an annual basis (Fukukawa & Mock, 2011).
Lastly, it is rarely seen that the law, rules or regulations will stay as it was framed originally without modifications and alterations in line with the environmental changes in which it regulates. It is a human nature that they will find out ways to circumvent or adjust the laws to suit their needs by analysing the loopholes or possible gaps in the provisions. To counter these measures, the policy makers are bound to act accordingly and review the law after specific periods of time to address these gaps and cater to any issues or hardship that might arise unknowingly because of the provisions.
References:
Alexander, F., 2016. The Changing Face of Accountability. The Journal of Higher Education, 71(4), pp. 411-431.
Axelsen, M., Green, P. & Ridley, G., 2017. Explaining the information systems auditor role in the public sector financial audit. International Journal of Accounting Information Systems, 24(1), pp. 15-31.
Belton, P., 2017. Competitive Strategy: Creating and Sustaining Superior Performance. London: Macat International ltd.
Bizfluent, 2017. Advantages & Disadvantages of Internal Control. [Online]
Available at: https://bizfluent.com/info-8064250-advantages-disadvantages-internal-control.html
[Accessed 07 december 2017].
Bumgarner, N. & Vasarhelyi, M., 2018. Continuous auditing—a new view.. Continuous Auditing: Theory and Application, 20(1), pp. 7-51.
Choy, Y. K., 2018. Cost-benefit Analysis, Values, Wellbeing and Ethics: An Indigenous Worldview Analysis. Ecological Economics, p. 145.
Fukukawa, H. & Mock, T., 2011. Audit risk assessments using belief versus probability. Auditing: A Journal of Practice & Theory, 30(1), pp. 75-99.
Goldmann, K., 2016. Financial Liquidity and Profitability Management in Practice of Polish Business. Financial Environment and Business Development, 4(3), pp. 103-112.
Kachelmeier, S., Schmidt, J. & Valentine, K., 2018. The disclaimer effect of disclosing critical audit matters in the auditor’s report. SSRN, 2(1), pp. 1-39.
Linden, B. & Freeman, R., 2017. Profit and Other Values: Thick Evaluation in Decision Making. Business Ethics Quarterly, 27(3), pp. 353-379.
Raiborn, C., Butler, J. & Martin, K., 2016. The internal audit function: A prerequisite for Good Governance. Journal of Corporate Accounting and Finance, 28(2), pp. 10-21.
Sonu, C., Ahn, H. & Choi, A., 2017. Audit fee pressure and audit risk: evidence from the financial crisis of 2008. Asia-Pacific Journal of Accounting & Economics , 24(1-2), pp. 127-144.
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