Accounting firm Arthur Andersen's recent involvement in the spectacular Enron scandal has raised a number of questions about whether
Accounting firms should act as consultants for the same companies that they audit. Clearly, Andersen's experience
shows that is difficult, if not impossible, for an accounting
company to avoid
conflict-of-interest
issues when acting as both a consultant and auditor for a single company. This
paper paper shows that the conflict of interest is only one of the serious
ethical issues faced by the business world in the past years. As such, clients and investors are becoming increasingly aware of ethical issues, a situation that makes reform in the accounting industry a necessity to ensure public confidence in the integrity of the accounting profession.