PwC Australia: Accounting giant splits business after tax leak scandal

1 year ago 81
ARTICLE AD BOX

The PwC logo seen in the lobby of their offices in Barangaroo, Australia.Image source, Reuters

By Annabelle Liang

Business reporter

PwC Australia says it will sell its government business for A$1 ($0.70; £0.50) after a scandal over the misuse of confidential government tax plans.

The accounting giant has also announced the appointment of a new chief executive.

The move will allow the firm "to move forward with predictability and focus," PwC Australia said in a statement.

In January, it emerged that a former PwC Australia partner had leaked the classified information.

The ex-partner, who was advising the Australian government, had shared drafts of corporate tax avoidance laws with colleagues, who used it to pitch to potential clients. The leaks occurred between 2014 and 2017.

The company has said that no confidential information had been used to help clients pay less tax.

However, politicians and officials have called for PwC Australia to be banned from being awarded government contracts until it satisfactorily responded to the scandal.

On Sunday, PwC Australia said it had appointed Kevin Burrowes as its new chief executive. He was previously PwC Network's global clients and industries leader.

"He will work with his colleagues and management team to re-earn trust with PwC Australia's stakeholders," said Justin Carroll, the chair of PwC Australia's governance board.

The company also said it would sell its Australian federal and state government business to private equity firm Allegro Funds, with the aim of reaching a binding agreement for the deal by the end of next month.

The sale will create two independent firms without any "disruption in vital services to public sector clients," PwC Australia said.

In May, Tom Seymour, the previous chief executive of PwC Australia, stepped down after he admitted to being one of at least 67 recipients of the sensitive information at the centre of the scandal.

Later that month, the company put nine partners on leave and overhauled its governance board.

Australia's Treasurer Jim Chalmers called the revelations a "shocking breach of trust".

For the current financial year, the Australian government is committed to contracts with PwC worth A$255m, according to official data.

Since the scandal first emerged, major pension funds including AustralianSuper, as well as the country's central bank, have said they would not sign any new contracts with PwC.

Read Entire Article