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Accountancy-Ireland-MAGAZINE-COVER-V2-april-25
News
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How high-trust cultures drive business success

Strong leadership isn’t just about strategy—it’s about trust. Michael O’Leary explains how leaders can build lasting trust to the benefit of their organisations If we expected that the post-pandemic era would stabilise employee/employer relationships, we were mistaken. Remote work, hybrid working, the “great resignation”, quiet quitting, falling employee engagement, staff shortages, wellbeing challenges and the rise of artificial intelligence all present challenges to organisation cultures and leadership. These pressures may also impact the engagement, purpose and satisfaction experienced by management. According to a LinkedIn survey, the actions of disaffected or poor leaders account for 70 percent of the reasons employees decide to engage or disengage at work. People don’t leave organisations, they leave managers. In Neurosicence of Trust, Paul J Zak shares how employees in high-trust companies enjoy their jobs 60 percent more, are 70 percent more aligned with their organisation's purpose and feel 66 percent closer to their colleagues. Empathy and a sense of accomplishment are higher in such firms, while burnout is 40 percent below that in low-trust cultures. Not only does trust improve organisation performance, but, according to Zak’s report, employees in high-trust companies are paid, on average, 17 percent more than those in other firms. In his research, Zak identified eight management processes that build trust for leaders: 1. Recognise excellence Research indicates that recognition has the most impact when it occurs immediately after the task or goal has been achieved. Recognition from management is most powerful when personalised to the employee and occurs in a public setting. 2. Assign difficult but achievable challenges to teams Pressure to achieve releases neurochemicals which intensify employee focus and strengthen social connections. Zak explains that when team members need to work together to reach a desired outcome, this brain activity coordinates their behaviours efficiently. 3. Employee autonomy Autonomy promotes innovation that management control can inhibit. Being trusted to find solutions to problems is a big factor in an employee’s engagement. Encourage staff to question established practices, especially those that have persisted for years. 4. Enable job crafting Encourage employees to focus their energies towards projects about which they are passionate while ensuring clear expectations, accountability and 360-degree evaluations are in place. 5. Share information broadly Poor management communication remains one of the big employee bugbears. Uncertainty about company direction can lead to stress, which in turn inhibits the release of oxytocin, a natural hormone which drives the social connections necessary for collaboration. Organisations that communicate plans broadly reduce uncertainty and increase teamwork effectiveness. 6. Intentionally build relationships Too often, managers communicate the message to “focus on your tasks” rather than encourage social connections. Zak cites neuroscientific experiments that show that when people intentionally build social bonds at work, their engagement and performance improve. Social events, which may appear to some to be “forced fun”, significantly enhance employee connectivity, particularly when such events include competitive team elements. 7. Facilitate whole-person growth High-trust workplaces help people develop personally as well as professionally. Though setting goals, learning plans and reviewing progress are key to professional growth, understanding how an employee is managing work-life balance or well-being is equally important. Leaders aware of personal challenges their employees face can often help through flexibility, rather than lose a valued contributor. 8. Show vulnerability Asking for help from colleagues is a sign of a confident leader and fosters trust and collaboration from those colleagues. It indicates that the leader is someone who involves everyone in achieving goals while valuing the opinions and expertise of others. High-trust culture boosts inclusion Building trust is a continuous process, and many colleagues and reports will start from different points in their willingness to believe the trust is authentic. Taking the time to understand that starting point and being patient while the trust emerges is essential. Being self-serving, not meeting commitments, being assumptive and jumping to conclusions are sure ways to breach any trust built. A culture characterised by high trust is more inclusive, performs better and is central to organisational success. Michael O'Leary is Chair of HRM Search Partners

Feb 28, 2025
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News
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Managing partners prioritise strategy, talent and technology

As Ireland’s accounting landscape evolves, Mary Cloonan explores how managing partners are embracing strategy, talent and technology to drive sustainable growth Ireland's accounting and advisory landscape continues to change rapidly, driven by shifting client expectations, rising regulatory demands and the relentless advance of technology. In this dynamic environment, managing partners are setting their sights beyond technical excellence, focusing on the strategic priorities underpinning sustainable growth. 1. Strategic growth: moving beyond compliance services Compliance remains the foundation of many firms, but the real opportunities lie in advisory services. Firms that successfully integrate advisory services into their core offering articulate their value beyond audit and tax. Managing partners are doubling down on deepening client relationships, leveraging data-driven insights and building service lines that proactively solve business challenges. The firms leading here don’t just respond to client needs—they anticipate them. Whether operating as a private equity-backed firm or an ambitious, partner-led practice, this forward-thinking approach is essential in a market where maximising opportunities is key. 2. Talent and leadership: expanding the skills at the top table Attracting and retaining top talent remains a pressing challenge. The demand for skilled professionals continues to outstrip supply, making investing in people, once you have them, more critical than ever. Beyond competitive salaries, firms are re-evaluating their reward structures—moving beyond traditional partner compensation models to recognise and incentivise high-performing professionals at all levels. Retention strategies now include structured career development, leadership training and clearer pathways to partnership or senior roles. In response, firms are also reshaping their leadership structures, recognising that sustainable growth demands more than technical expertise. Many are introducing chief operating and growth officers to drive efficiency and business development, allowing partners to focus on client service and strategic direction. This shift doesn’t dilute the role of partners—it strengthens it. Successful firms focus on creating leadership teams with complementary skill sets—bringing together deep technical expertise with strong commercial and strategic oversight to drive long-term success. 3. Technology: a business enabler, not just an efficiency tool Artificial intelligence (AI), automation and cloud-based platforms are reshaping how firms operate. However, the most successful firms view technology as more than an efficiency driver—it is a catalyst for growth. Managing partners are focused on embedding digital tools to enhance client experience, improve decision-making and open new revenue streams. The challenge is not simply adopting technology but ensuring it aligns with long-term strategy and delivers real, tangible value. 4. Evolving client expectations: the shift to proactive advisory Today’s clients expect more than just number-crunching. They want proactive, strategic advice. The firms thriving in this environment prioritise client experience—offering insights beyond compliance, providing forward-looking business advice and positioning themselves as indispensable strategic partners. Accessibility to senior leadership is also becoming a key differentiator. Firms fostering a culture in which partners actively engage with clients—offering guidance, insight and responsiveness—will build stronger, longer-lasting relationships. (Subhead) 5. Sector expertise and the power of visible experts Many firms have deep expertise in key sectors, but too often, this knowledge stays within the firm rather than being shared with the market. Managing partners recognise the need to position their professionals as visible experts, ensuring their insights reach the right audiences. The firms that stand out are those actively showcasing their sector specialisms through thought leadership, media engagement and targeted industry participation. From publishing reports to speaking at events, firms that invest in visibility strengthen their reputation, attract new business and reinforce their position as trusted advisors in specialist fields. 6. Future-proofing: succession, sustainability and the long view Sustainable growth requires thinking beyond the next financial year. Managing partners are placing greater emphasis on leadership development, succession planning and business models that support long-term success. Whether through equity restructuring, alternative fee models or cultural shifts towards more collaborative leadership, firms are reimagining their future. Environmental, social and governance (ESG) also plays a growing role in client advisory services and shaping firms’ strategies. This is particularly relevant as private equity investment reshapes parts of the sector, presenting opportunities for ambitious firms—both partner-led and externally backed—to capitalise on emerging trends. Looking ahead The role of the managing partner is evolving. Success today requires balancing technical expertise with commercial acumen, embracing diverse leadership perspectives and ensuring firms remain agile in a changing landscape. Those who put client care at the heart of their strategy—while fostering accessible, forward-thinking leadership—will be best placed to seize the opportunities ahead. Mary Cloonan is the Founder of Marketing Clever 

Feb 20, 2025
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News
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Getting ahead of Trump’s tariff threats

As US President Donald Trump presses ahead with his tariff-led trade policy, John O'Loughlin considers the Irish, UK and EU response and offers his advice to businesses on managing the risks  On Monday, 10 February, President Trump signed a proclamation imposing a 25 percent tariff on all steel and aluminium imports, irrespective of the country of origin, due to be implemented on 12 March. While tariffs had already been in place for both steel and aluminium, certain countries, including the UK and countries in the European Union (EU), were previously exempted. The introduction of Trump’s new policy measures will now see the 25 percent tariff apply to all third countries, including those in the EU. Additionally, on Thursday, 13 February, President Trump signed a Presidential Memorandum introducing the “Fair and Reciprocal Plan”. This plan instructs the Trump Administration to investigate and produce a report detailing proposed remedies to counter non-reciprocal trading arrangements with trading partners. In the context of this memorandum, the potential introduction of “reciprocal tariffs” would see the US apply tariffs to third country goods matching the tariffs those countries impose on US goods.  For example, the White House Fact Sheet accompanying this memorandum specifically highlighted the disparity between the 10 percent tariff imposed by the EU on imported cars, compared to the US tariff of 2.5 percent. Irish reaction In response to the implementation of US tariff measures on China, and the threat of further tariffs being imposed in the EU, the Irish Government has proposed two new advisory bodies.  The Strategic Economic Advisory Panel would be based in the US and specifically tasked with strengthening US-Irish relations and advising on how to address potential policy changes introduced by the Trump administration. The plan is that the panel would comprise influential professionals drawn from a range of business sectors operating in the US. The second proposed body is the Consultative Group on International Trade Policy, which would facilitate dialogue with key stakeholders in international trade. This group would meet at least once every eight weeks, providing guidance on addressing trade challenges and opportunities. EU commentary European leaders have expressed concerns about President Trump’s recent tariff threats, warning of potential economic harm to EU member states. Spain’s Economy Minister Carlos Cuerpo stressed the need for a united EU response to protect businesses and ensure fair competition.  At a recent summit, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen acknowledged the growing uncertainty surrounding US trade tariffs and affirmed the bloc’s readiness to defend itself. “When targeted unfairly or arbitrarily, the European Union will respond firmly,” von der Leyen stated. Discussions also focused on maintaining transatlantic unity while seeking diplomatic solutions to prevent escalating trade tensions.  French Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot urged the European Commission to take decisive action, arguing that the EU must be prepared to implement retaliatory measures if necessary. His position reflects a broader consensus among EU leaders to stand firm against unwarranted economic actions that could harm European businesses and consumers. More recently, on 10 February 2025, the EU Commission issued an official statement regarding potential US tariffs on EU-sourced steel and aluminium. The Commission emphasised that it would not respond to any announcements without written clarification and reiterated that it sees no justification for imposing tariffs on its exports. Echoing the sentiments of the foreign ministers of EU member states, the Commission affirmed that any future actions would aim to protect the interests of European businesses, workers and consumers against unjustified measures. UK position In contrast to the EU, President Trump has made generally positive comments relating to the UK, suggesting that potential UK tariffs could be “worked out”. This has resulted in a subdued response from the UK, with no clear signs that a trade war could break out between the two nations. Preparing for the future Since the inauguration of President Trump, we have seen increased engagement from businesses on the tariff issue, motivated by a desire to understand the practical implications of these changes and how they might impact business performance. To determine this potential impact, companies should take the following steps: Assess the customs origin of goods shipped to the US to determine exposure to potential tariffs. Gain oversight of the end-to-end supply chain, gathering the right data to assess the impact on material sourcing and tariff exposure for component parts. Understand how tariffs might impact software/service business due to reduced demand from existing customers. Assess the legal structure of the business and how transfer pricing arrangements could be used to mitigate tariff impact. John O'Loughlin is Partner of Global Trade and Customs at PwC Ireland

Feb 20, 2025
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Public Policy
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Adapting Ireland's pension system for a sustainable future

Ireland’s pension system stands at a critical juncture driven by evolving market conditions and demographic shifts. Rav Vithaldas delves into the details The pension market in Ireland is characterised by a growing shift towards defined contribution (DC) schemes, consolidation and regulatory compliance. Our pension system comprises a basic state pension, employer-provided occupational schemes and private personal plans, all incentivised with tax benefits and options for voluntary contributions. According to the Central Bank of Ireland (CBI), the total assets of the Irish pension fund sector increased by 2.4 percent in the third quarter of 2024 to total €142 billion. The most prominent pension funds among our occupational pension schemes include master trusts, designed to provide a governance structure that allows multiple employers to participate in a single, centrally administered, pension arrangement. This can be particularly beneficial for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) that may not have the resources to manage their own standalone pension schemes. The introduction of master trusts is part of a broader trend towards pension consolidation and is in line with the EU’s Institutions for Occupational Retirement Provision (IORP) II Directive, which aims to improve the governance and transparency of occupational pension schemes. Challenges in the Irish pension system Ireland’s pension system faces two challenges: rising occupational pension coverage and consolidating DC funds. Auto-enrolment is the main strategy employed to expand coverage, targeting about 800,000 workers without employer pensions, but its implementation has been delayed. With auto-enrolment on the horizon, master trusts are expected to manage more assets in the coming years, largely driven by regulatory changes. Initially, SMEs were the ones transitioning to master trusts, but as trust in this market strengthens, larger entities are also increasingly opting for master trusts. Consolidation is also progressing, driven by the IORP II Directive, which reduced the number of defined benefit (DB) schemes from 766 to 480 within a year. The industry goal to reduce group DC schemes to 500 or fewer indicates that about 12,000 schemes are yet to be consolidated. Age of retirement Along with these structural changes, the Irish pension market is increasingly integrating environmental, social and governance factors, driven by regulatory compliance and a desire to align with beneficiary values. Pension funds are updating policies, conducting ESG analyses, practising active stewardship and applying exclusionary screens. They are also investing in ESG assets, exploring impact investments, focusing on enhanced transparency and education, and participating in global initiatives like Principles for Responsible Investment (PRI). Despite these trends, Ireland continues to grapple with challenges arising from the absence of a legally mandated retirement age. This situation has led to issues such as a lack of clarity regarding retirement timing, inconsistent retirement ages in different companies (complicating the prediction of pension liabilities and funding), the potential for age-based discrimination and challenges for trustees managing delayed benefit payouts. In 2025 and beyond, Ireland's pension sector will likely be shaped by several key themes: Auto-enrolment rollout: From 30 September 2025, employers will be required to integrate auto-enrolment systems, which will require careful planning for compliance and a smooth transition. State pension sustainability: With demographic changes, there will be more focus on the financial sustainability of state pensions and retirement age policies, necessitating vigilance and flexibility. Flexible retirement: Employers and trustees must accommodate varying retirement preferences while adhering to regulations. DB scheme challenges: Financial pressures and solvency requirements for DB Schemes demand proactive risk management and member protection. Governance and investment strategies: Evolving market conditions and changes to the Standard Fund Threshold call for improved governance and investment strategies, with a growing emphasis on ESG factors. Digital resilience: Cybersecurity and data protection will become more critical, requiring ongoing investment in technology and strict operational standards. AI in pension administration: Artificial intelligence will bring process enhancements to pension administration but must be implemented with careful ethical and regulatory considerations to maintain trust and integrity. While these new trends in the Irish pension market address challenges arising from the lack of a statutory minimum retirement age, our perspective on Ireland’s pension system is that it currently stands at a critical juncture whereby: An ageing population necessitates reforms for better pension coverage and retiree adequacy; The shift from DB to DC schemes offers flexibility and improved risk management; Auto-enrolment pension schemes aim to boost participation and secure retirement for more workers; Master trust consolidation in Ireland indicates a move towards more efficient and professional pension management, driven by regulatory changes, cost pressures and a push for better governance; and Sustainable investing within pension funds showcases a commitment to ESG, aligning with responsible investing trends and mitigating ESG risks. Overall, these developments reflect a proactive approach to evolving market conditions and demographic shifts, aiming to ensure the sustainability and adequacy of retirement provisions for Irish citizens. Rav Vithaldas is Partner and Pensions Assurance Leader at EY Ireland 

Feb 20, 2025
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News
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“Internal auditing is at a crossroads, both practical and conceptual”

In his book The Closing of the Auditor’s Mind?, David J. O’Regan, FCA, examines how an erosion of trust in modern auditing might be remedied and reversed. Increasingly fragmented patterns of accountability and social trust are in the ascendant and there are implications for a crucial area of our socio-economic existence—internal auditing. Internal auditing faces not only a challenge of adaptability to emerging patterns of accountability and social trust, it is also confronted by broader challenges of reforms required to encourage such adaptability. One might prefer the term “crises” to “challenges” but let us avoid leavening our analysis with hyperbolic language. Nonetheless, the severity of internal auditing’s two contemporaneous and interconnected challenges discussed is not to be underestimated. Should the challenges remain unaddressed, they may well develop into profound crises. Regarding the first challenge of adaptability, internal auditing has failed to keep pace with global trends toward a flattening of traditional, vertical hierarchies of the command-and-control variety, and their replacement with complex patterns of horizontally distributed accountability and social trust. Our trust in traditional institutions and in politicians, business leaders and the cultural elite is eroding. We are increasingly placing trust in non-hierarchical networks, both digital and human. And where trust has been displaced, flows of accountability adapt accordingly. The emergent patterns of accountability and social trust are so far-reaching that they threaten to leave internal auditing marooned, like a shipwreck, in the detritus of history. Internal auditing is therefore at a crossroads, both practical and conceptual. The most demanding needs of accountability and social trust increasingly fall into three domains – in the inner workings of organisations; in transitional spaces at organisational boundaries; and in extra-mural activities. Internal auditing remains fixated on the innards of traditional, bureaucratic structures and is ill-positioned to address the assurance demands arising at both the liminal spaces at the fringes of formal organisational structures and from locations beyond institutional boundaries. The peripheral and external domains are characterised by an absence of clear markers of responsibilities, and by fast, flexible and disorienting flows of accountability that bear little resemblance to the shape of traditional bureaucracy. Their records of accountability are typically digital rather than tangible, and the significance of their assurance demands defies easy evaluation. Importantly for our analysis in this book, we encounter the new patterns of accountability and social trust where the writ of internal auditing, as well as external auditing, runs weakest. The versatility of both internal and external auditing is hampered by restraints. The external auditor’s opinion on an organisation’s annual financial statements once satisfied the assurance needs of traditional hierarchies of accountability and social trust, but it is ill-equipped to meet the demands of the emergent, horizontally distributed accountability paradigm. In contrast to external auditing, internal auditing’s activities are framed in more elastic terms, and internal auditing therefore offers, on paper at least, a greater scope for adaptation. Yet internal auditing, like external auditing, faces an uncertain future, owing to the need for the types of reform without which the necessary agility and adaptation are unlikely to develop. At this point, a word of caution is in order. Even amid the newly emerging patterns of horizontally distributed accountability, bureaucratic organisations characterised by command-and-control structures will continue to exist. A demand for external and internal auditors’ services will therefore remain, as long as stakeholders continue to be interested in financial statements and in the inner workings of organisations. But the real action on accountability and social trust will increasingly be found elsewhere on the fringes of organisations and in extra-mural locations. Already, assurance is becoming increasingly piecemeal. We can expect the emergence, in the near future, of innovative, diffuse assurance mechanisms to address the pressing demands of the new patterns of accountability and social trust. Both external and internal auditing therefore face a future of marginalisation as they remain shackled to the outdated frameworks of bureaucratic institutions. Internal auditing faces not only a challenge of adaptability. It also contends with a second challenge arising from its increasing tendency toward algorithmic and mechanistic activities. In particular, the dangers arising from a swelling tide of amoral and pedantic literalism in internal auditing are difficult to overstate. A humane approach to internal auditing founded on creativity, individual judgment, and critical thinking. In this context, there is a sense of loss that seems an inevitable accompaniment to progress. Or, perhaps more accurately, an accompaniment to misplaced notions of progress. Internal auditors today have at their disposal vast pools of data, along with powerful technological tools that mine and arrange the data into auditable information. Technological advances encourage internal auditors to approach well-worn topics in fresh ways and to explore newfangled activities. Only a Luddite would be hostile to technological advances in internal auditing, from data analytics to the use of drones for the purposes of aerial surveillance of dispersed inventory. But internal auditing’s technological achievements have come at a high cost – as an addictive substitute for critical thinking. Internal auditors are increasingly gripped by an algorithmic mindset, and they tend to look at technology, not as a means to an end, but as an end in itself. This technologically driven approach has crowded out arduously gained humane aspects of internal auditing. The relentless, metallic clatter of technological advance does not therefore necessarily imply improvements in understandings of underlying concepts. Our collective faith in data analytics and sampling software has created the seductive but dangerous myth that we are better auditors than our predecessors. We seem unaware that accretions of prowess in data handling and number-crunching often offer little more than illusions of certainty, if not groundless uncertainties. The technology of internal auditing may progress, but the cogency of the concepts and principles of internal auditing remain enduring. Diagnostic acumen, analytical rigor, inferential precision, a healthy scepticism, and a resistance to transient faddism are unchanging prerequisites for good internal auditing, and our progressive internal auditing environment now needs them more than ever. Modern internal auditing does not lack energy. However misplaced, its enthusiasm is in constant motion, exuding an exaggerated sense of industriousness. But the blustering, frenetic pace of internal auditing today masks an underlying intellectual inertia, a kind of hallucinatory lassitude in which highly agitated activity serves only to endow clockwork routines with decreasing significance. Beneath whirlwinds of risk assessments, data analytics, and trending buzzwords, and beyond the dubious recommendations that often flow from such mechanisms, we see process increasingly triumphant over substance. It is at internal auditing’s eerily muted core where the absence of timeless concepts of validity and truth are most keenly felt. A technocratic conformity is descending on internal auditing like a smothering shroud, leaving us with muffled reverberations of futile routines, hollow platitudes, and a steady decline in the public’s trust. Only a fundamental overhaul of internal auditing’s self-understanding and methodologies, driven by a tempering of its algorithmic mindset, will open the door to a return to a style of auditing marked by creativity and judgment. Without such an overhaul, internal auditing is unlikely to survive a take-over by automated auditing software and machine-processed artificial intelligence, let alone adapt to the evolving paradigm of accountability and social trust. About the author David J. O’Regan has authored nine books on auditing and related themes. A Fellow of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales, he earned a doctorate in accounting and finance from the University of Liverpool and his auditing experience spans more than three decades, in the private, public and academic sectors. O’Regan joined the United Nations system in 2005, working initially at the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons at The Hague in the Netherlands. He has served as Auditor General to the Pan American Health Organization in Washington D.C. since 2009. For more, see davidoregan.com.

Feb 10, 2025
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Ethics and Governance
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State bodies and the Statement on Internal Control

The Statement on Internal Control is critical to the effective risk management and governance of Ireland’s State bodies. Tom Ward and Níall Fitzgerald offer their best practice insights Recent challenges faced by Irish entities in the public, non-profit and private sector have emphasised for many boards (and, where relevant, their funding bodies) the critical importance of the adequacy and operational effectiveness of internal controls, risk management and governance. Ultimately, a systematic and proactive approach to testing and reviewing controls, addressing weaknesses and implementing remedial actions in a timely manner, can only enhance confidence in public sector governance and best practice. In this regard, the Statement on Internal Control (SIC) plays a crucial role. State bodies in Ireland are required to report on all of their internal controls, risk management and governance in their annual SIC in accordance with the Irish Code of Practice for the Governance of State Bodies 2016 (Code of Practice).  Such reporting encompasses financial, business, operational and compliance controls and State bodies are subject to a swathe of such controls as standard, spanning: The discharge of public business. Project delivery and cost management. Monitoring and control of assets. Fraud prevention and detection. IT systems and technology (including cybersecurity).  Procurement. Additional controls specific to the nature of each bodies’ activities include clinical governance for public hospitals, infrastructure guidelines for large infrastructural projects and controls relating to onward funding to other public bodies or non-profits. The SIC must acknowledge the Board’s responsibility for ensuring that effective internal control systems are in place, the approach taken to reviewing these systems to ensure they are working (including steps taken by the Board and its Committees) and must identify any significant weaknesses or breaches. While the format for the SIC is prescribed, the content should be tailored according to the size and complexity of the organisation. However, there is limited guidance on the extent to which the Board should tailor this approach and content. At a recent SIC event co-hosted by Chartered Accountants Ireland and the Institute of Public Administration’s Governance Forum, Andy Harkness, from the Comptroller and Auditor General (C&AG) Office, provided examples of SIC best practice for State bodies, including the need for:  Good documentation clearly explaining the work carried out to support the review of controls; Assurance statements provided by senior managers; The involvement of the internal audit team, including key changes arising from their reviews and recommendations; and  If appropriate, an assurance statement from  independent assurance service providers.  Within this approach, the C&AG highlighted the importance of documenting any issues that may arise and adequately supporting any work undertaken to ensure that significant risks have been identified, including risks arising from changes to the control environment. Also emphasised was the importance of assessing the effectiveness of the controls in place, the assurance results and the effectiveness of follow-up steps taken in response to any control deficiencies identified.  Board and board committees should minute their review and conclusions with regard to the effectiveness of the systems of internal controls under review, and record recommended changes to governance, internal controls and risk management matters arising from the review. Also speaking at the recent SIC event, several experienced non-executive directors provided examples of the approaches they have taken to preparing the SIC within their organisation. In particular, they noted challenges associated with the absence of formal guidance and the ambiguity surrounding the term “operating effectiveness”, which is typically associated with Sarbanes–Oxley applying to companies listed on the US Stock Exchange.  In an Anglo-Irish context, assurance on the effectiveness of controls has traditionally been limited to financial and reporting controls. This is, however, changing. To achieve best practice in SIC reporting, the Boards of State bodies in Ireland may currently rely on: Guidance issued by the Financial Reporting Council (FRC) in Britain in relation to the UK Corporate Governance; International Standards on Assurance Engagements (ISAE) 3402 Reports; Sarbanes–Oxley literature for directors and auditors;  Guidance or circulars issued by the Department of Public Expenditure, Infrastructure, Public Services, Reform and Digitalisation or the C&AG; and General assurance standards and guidance. Some best practice insights for State boards arising from the recent SIC event include: The benefit in defining, adopting and communicating a common framework for performing the review of internal controls. The importance of the work needed to support and underpin the SIC. The need to ensure that the findings reported in the SIC are consistent with other supporting documentation approved and minuted by the Board. The need to disclose any scope limitations encountered in the processes necessary to support the SIC and to consider their impact on the directors’ assertion on compliance with the Code and SIC requirements. Above all, the importance of understanding that the reporting of significant weakness is just one part of the equation—this must be accompanied by reporting on the steps since taken (or to be taken) to address these weaknesses. The focus on robust internal controls, comprehensive risk management and effective governance remains a critical requirement for State bodies.  The SIC is not just a compliance requirement; it also serves as a reflection of the organisation’s commitment to transparency, accountability and continuous improvement.  As State bodies navigate evolving challenges and expectations, adopting a standardised yet adaptable framework, combined with clear guidance, will strengthen overall SIC governance practice.    Dr Tom Ward is Senior Governance Specialist, Professional Development, with the Institute of Public Administration Níall Fitzgerald, FCA, is Head of Ethics and Governance at Chartered Accountants Ireland

Feb 10, 2025
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House, 47-49 Pearse St,
Dublin 2, Ireland

TEL: +353 1 637 7200
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The Linenhall
32-38 Linenhall Street, Belfast
Antrim BT2 8BG, United Kingdom.

TEL: +44 28 9043 5840

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