Audit matters. This, one of the core founding principles at the Centre for Public Interest Audit (CPIA), was reinforced through each difficult moment for the audit profession in the previous decade, writes CPIA executive director Dean Beale
Several well-reported corporate failures, including Carillion, BHS and Patisserie Valerie, significantly impacted the perception of the profession.
In turn, they also raised questions about the reliability of the reporting to the UK capital markets, at a time of geopolitical volatility with the UK’s exit from the EU. As a result, scrutiny has been at an all-time high for the audit profession.
The call for change, following the systemic impact of collapses like Carillion, was immediate. In 2018 Sir John Kingman was asked by government to undertake an independent review of the audit regulator, the Financial Reporting Council. The review called for a move from voluntary funding to a statutory levy, removing any perceived conflicts through being funded by audit firms.
In turn, the Competition and Markets Authority highlighted the concentrated nature of the UK audit market. Finally, Sir Donald Brydon led a review centred on enhancing the effectiveness and quality of audit. The overarching theme? The market was operating ineffectively and action was required.
Driving change requires collective commitment, a willingness to ask the difficult questions, and an evidence-based approach to advancing best practice. Cue the CPIA. We were formally launched in March 2025, and I am delighted to be the executive director alongside our chair, Baroness Margaret Ford of Cunninghame OBE.
At the CPIA, as an independent body we aim to build greater trust in audit through insight and challenging preconceptions, and support improvements in audit quality through evidence-backed research and stakeholder engagement.
We will be the clear driving force behind a resilient and capable audit profession, one that demonstrates integrity, transparency and accountability at its core. From our inception, we have always been clear that one of our main objectives: was to provide the first independent benchmark of audit quality and trust.
The Audit Trust Index (ATI) is the result. An annual survey tracking stakeholder perceptions of audit trust which, over time, will identify emerging trends and challenges facing the profession. Launched in 2024, the Audit Trust Index
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Identifies key drivers and obstacles to achieving high-quality audits;
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Establishes a baseline for stakeholder trust;
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Highlights potential areas for improvement and innovation within the audit profession.


