Australia and New Zealand put new pressure on the Big Four

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Big Four accounting is facing significant challenges in Oceania that stem from both policy and people.

Australian regulators are considering sweeping reforms after a series of misconduct scandals involving major accounting firms. And, at the same time, Deloitte’s latest workforce survey in New Zealand suggests younger professionals are becoming more selective about the careers they pursue and the trade-offs they are willing to make.

The developments underscore two issues the firms will need to quickly navigate simultaneously across the region: Rebuilding confidence with regulators while convincing the next generation that a career in public accounting remains an attractive choice.

Australia considers sweeping reforms for the Big Four

Australia’s government is considering some of the most significant changes to the accounting profession in decades following a series of misconduct scandals involving the Big Four.

Last week, the Australian Securities and Investments Commission said it would review internal and whistleblower complaints involving audit conduct at PwC, Deloitte, EY and KPMG. The review will examine allegations involving the misuse or sharing of confidential information while ASIC continues a separate investigation into claims that KPMG Australia employees improperly used confidential client information to pursue new business.

The latest review builds on the fallout from the PwC Australia tax leaks scandal, which emerged in 2023 after former tax partner Peter-John Collins disclosed confidential government information obtained while advising Australia’s Treasury on new multinational tax avoidance laws. Internal emails later showed the information had been circulated within PwC before the legislation became public, allowing partners to market advice to prospective clients before the rules took effect.

The scrutiny has continued to widen. Earlier this year, KPMG Australia, which recently announced major job cuts among staff and partners, disclosed that more than two dozen employees, including a partner who was fined 10,000 Austrailian dollars, had used AI to cheat on internal training exams. The firm has also been engulfed by allegations that it misused confidential client information to pursue audit and consulting work, prompting the departures of KPMG Australia CEO Andrew Yates and Chief Operating Officer Eileen Hoggett, the latter of whom remains on as a partner with the firm, from their executive roles.

Separately, ASIC is investigating allegations involving KPMG’s handling of confidential client information and its whistleblower process. At EY Australia, an employee was dismissed after allegedly accessing the bank account information of Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, his wife and an EY partner while working on an audit engagement for Commonwealth Bank.

The accumulation of scandals has prompted Australia’s Treasury to reconsider how the country’s largest accounting firms are regulated. In the options paper released this month, the Treasury wrote that “we have seen behaviour from large accounting, auditing, and consulting firms in Australia that is not fair and honest,” adding that the conduct “has undermined trust in the firms themselves and raised broader questions about the resilience of the frameworks meant to uphold market integrity.”

The Treasury also said feedback from stakeholders and recent events had confirmed that “gaps exist in the regulation of the audit sector in relation to independence and ethics, audit firm culture and values, firm-wide monitoring systems and internal controls, and prioritisation of audit quality.”

The paper outlines several options to address those concerns, including separating audit and consulting businesses, expanding ASIC’s authority over partnership-based firms, strengthening governance requirements and introducing mandatory tendering of audit engagements every 10 years. Among the most significant proposals is mandatory audit firm rotation after 20 years.

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