Washington, D.C. (Dec. 15, 2014) – Unveiling a thought-provoking vision of what peer review could become, the American Institute of CPAs has issued a concept paper that seeks input on the CPA profession’s practice monitoring of the future. The paper, “Evolving the CPA Profession’s Peer Review Program for the Future,” paints a picture of how the existing peer review program for firms’ accounting and auditing engagements could be transformed into a technology-driven, near-real time practice monitoring process.

“Peer review is at the heart of the profession’s commitment to enhancing the quality of accounting and auditing services. It has evolved over the course of 35 years to ably serve the profession and the public,” said AICPA President and CEO Barry C. Melancon, CPA, CGMA. “The concept paper, provocative by design, presents a significant leap forward in practice monitoring. It challenges the profession and its stakeholders to imagine a more timely and transparent process that offers insights into quality, in some instances even before an engagement is completed.”

The concept as currently envisioned will morph based on feedback from the paper and from pilot participants, and as technology evolves. The concept’s primary goal is to increase public protection through enhanced accounting and auditing effectiveness by:

Highlighting potential quality risk indicators and detecting engagement issues earlier;
Reviewing all firms that perform accounting, auditing and attestation engagements; and
Monitoring all engagements subject to review
As currently designed, the concept would be powered by five activities:

Continuous analytical evaluation of engagement performance
Human review when system-identified concerns are raised
Involvement of external monitors, when necessary
Periodic inspection of system integrity
Oversight of the system’s operating effectiveness
“We believe this visionary concept has the potential to elevate the quality of the profession’s work by using new technological approaches, creating greater transparency and establishing more connection points between the CPA firm, the reviewer and the AICPA,” explained AICPA Senior Vice President, Public Practice & Global Alliances Susan S. Coffey, CPA, CGMA. “I urge all interested parties to join the dialogue to help shape practice monitoring of the future.”

The AICPA expects that the practice monitoring concept would be developed and implemented in multiple phases. During the first phase, monitoring tools would be developed and piloted by a select voluntary group of small, medium and large firms. Throughout the pilot, the Institute would work with the pilot firms and peer reviewers to consider how to incorporate the concept’s new tools into a more robust interim peer review process.

Stakeholders are invited to provide comments and respond to questions on the AICPA Community site (aicpa.org/futurepracticemonitoring). You may also email comments to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. The comment deadline is June 15, 2015.

About the AICPA

The American Institute of CPAs (AICPA) is the world’s largest member association representing the accounting profession, with more than 400,000 members in 145 countries, and a history of serving the public interest since 1887. AICPA members represent many areas of practice, including business and industry, public practice, government, education and consulting.

Stakeholders are Invited to Submit Comments until June 15, 2015

The AICPA sets ethical standards for the profession and U.S. auditing standards for private companies, nonprofit organizations, federal, state and local governments. It develops and grades the Uniform CPA Examination, and offers specialty credentials for CPAs who concentrate on personal financial planning; forensic accounting; business valuation; and information management and technology assurance. Through a joint venture with the Chartered Institute of Management Accountants (CIMA), it has established the Chartered Global Management Accountant (CGMA) designation which sets a new standard for global recognition of management accounting.

The AICPA maintains offices in New York, Washington, DC, Durham, NC, and Ewing, NJ.

Comments powered by CComment