Law Articles
To search for a particular term please use the following search box.
Law Topics
Click on a Topic to see available articles for that topic.
- Accidents
- Administrative Law
- Admiralty Law
- Articles
- Banking
- Bankruptcy Law
- Canon Law
- Case Law
- Civil Law
- Civil Rights
- Class Action Lawsuits
- Commercial Law
- Common Law
- Comparative Law
- Constitutional Law
- Consumer Law
- Contracts
- Corporate Law
- Courts
- Criminal Law
- Cyber Law
- Dispute Resolution
- Employment Law
- Equity
- Evidence
- Family Law
- Fiduciary Law
- General Practice
- Government
- Health Law
- Immigration Law
- Insurance Law
- Intellectual Property
- International Law
- Jurisprudence
- Labor Law
- Law and Economics
- Maritime Law
- Military Law
- Natural Law
- Personal Injury Law
- Philosophy of Law
- Property Law
- Public Law
- Real Estate Law
- Social Security
- Space Law
- Statutory Law
- Tax Law
- Traffic Law
- Trusts and Estates
- Water Law
Return to Law Dictionary Index
Accounting Community Supports KPMG
by Thomas Johansmeyer
With the US government�s case against KPMG settled, the battered firm can refocus its efforts on its core businesses. Enabling this refocusing is a series of internal mandates that have rippled across Deloitte & Touche, Ernst & Young, and PricewaterhouseCoopers.
No poaching.
Leadership in each of these firms has instructed the respective partners not to take advantage of KPMG's weakened condition. There does not appear to have been any collusion between the other members of the Big Four, and smaller accountancies have supported this position.
Deloitte & Touche, Ernst & Young, and PricewaterhouseCoopers agree on the importance of KPMG�s continued success. The large accounting firms have received intense criticism since the implosion of Andersen as to the lack of competition and increased concentration
of service providers.
The collapse of KPMG would have been problematic both for public companies and the Big Four. http://www.big4.com - an exclusive website for passive and active Big4 professionals - receives regular updates on the latest news at the Big Four Accounting and Management Consulting firms. With audit fees already soaring as a consequence of
Sarbanes-Oxley, the loss of a competitor in the Big Four would have resulted in a concentration of power that could only drive the price of audit and tax services upward.
Further, the Big Four feared that the loss of KPMG would bring unwanted government intervention.