Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Report of the Commission to Study the Public’s Expectations of Audits - June 1988

The Report of the Commission to Study the Public’s Expectations of Audits (Macdonald Commission Report) was released by the Canadian Institute of Chartered Accountants (CICA) in June 1988. The Commission had a threefold mandate: (1) to study the public’s expectations of audits; (2) to determine whether there is a gap between what the public expects or needs from auditors and what auditors can reasonably expect to accomplish; (3) to the extent there is an identifiable gap, to make suggestions as to how the gap might be narrowed.


The  Macdonald Commission Report made numerous recommendations regarding: strengthening the audit environment; accounting standards; extensions of financial disclosure; valuations and estimates; disclosure outside financial statements; exercise of auditor’s judgment; additional auditor responsibilities; clarification of financial reporting responsibilities; professional self-regulation; public input to auditing standards; employee fraud; management fraud; illegal acts; changes of auditors; communication with regulators; accounting standards for financial institutions; auditor reporting on internal control; and, auditor’s knowledge of the business.
A listing of the report’s 50 recommendations is provided in Appendix A (pages 139-146) of the report.