Álit: tímarit löggiltra endurskoðenda - 01.01.1993, Side 14

Álit: tímarit löggiltra endurskoðenda - 01.01.1993, Side 14
leaders’ attention will become more and more focused on the membership negotiations and the fundamental challenge that we face of bringing the new countries of the east and central European continent into a wider European architecture. Of course there will be residual problems in establishing a genuinely frontier-free single market. And one of the cases in point is precisely your profession. So let me be so brave as to venture just one comment on accountancy and the auditing professions and say that it is in this area that the commission perhaps has so far shown singular failure to bring those professions into the intemal market. We have so far failed miserably to persuade member govemments that those professions could be part and parcel of the single market. But also your profession, in Europe, in the member state countries, is riven with considerable disagreement itself and you could see this in the failure of the Accounting Advisory Forum, which has been meeting for the last two years, to agree on practically anything. The third comment which I would address to you is perhaps not covered either and that is a word about the growing importance of the lobbying elements as regards the Community institutions. We now have about 2000 lobbyists and consultants in Brussels. Nearly all of the major companies, the major accounting firms, major auditing firms are represented in the Belgian capital. But unlike the law or the engineering profession or medicine, until very recently there were no particular guidelines and certainly there does not exist a MBA course in lobbying, but lobbying will represent, in my view, a considerable growth area in the future. And that is a reflection of what I was referring to earlier, which was the greater intervention of the Community, in a whole number of areas. So finally, the EEA is both a signpost of how far we have come, but also a signpost of how far we still have to go. And I was thinking if you look back, historically, we have already had a frontier- free Europe and a single market, centuries ago. Students, just as we are trying now with the Erasmus program, were able to move easily from university in one country to university in another country. We had a single language and language is already becoming a major headache with us, and is becoming worse when we have to take in Swedish, Norwegian perhaps, Nynorsk perhaps, Finnish. But Latin was the lingua franca, centuries ago. Craftsmen, soldiers, painters, musicians were all able to offer their skills and services throughout Europe. We had a common currency. Gold and silver coins. You could change them wherever you travelled in Europe in those days. They might have been called marks or florins or whatever, but gold and silver coins you could change with ease anywhere. And we also were able to travel without showing an identity card or a passport. Passports were only invented and introduced in the 19th century. So maybe we have both got a bit to leam from history and face the challenges of the future.

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Álit: tímarit löggiltra endurskoðenda

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