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‘Totally unacceptable’: PwC boss issues public apology

PwC has announced hundreds of jobs will go as the consultancy firm looks to "simplify" its business.

PwC has announced hundreds of jobs will go as the consultancy firm looks to "simplify" its business. Photo: AAP

The new head of PwC Australia has issued a public apology for the embattled firm’s role in a tax advice scandal.

Chief executive Kevin Burrowes appeared before a parliamentary inquiry into consultancy firms on Thursday, where he is being grilled by senators over its conduct.

The inquiry was set up following revelations partners at PwC passed on confidential Treasury information to boost its private sector business.

Mr Burrowes said the conduct of staff and the actions of PwC should not have occurred and issued a mea culpa.

“What happened is totally unacceptable, for this I am sorry,” he told the inquiry.

“We cannot apologise strongly enough for breaching the trust placed in us and we accept the justifiable questions about our trustworthiness and integrity … we were meant to serve and help you but we have let you down.”

Thursday’s inquiry is the first time PwC executives have answered questions from parliament about the tax advice scandal since the controversy became public.

Inquiry chair, Liberal senator Richard Colbeck, said the appearance of PwC had been held back in order to allow the Australian Federal Police to carry out investigations.

While an internal company report on the conduct of PwC and how its culture should change has been completed, Senator Colbeck said it painted a bleak picture of it operated.

“It was almost depressing every time I started a new section of the report because it basically reinforced at each level how crap things were inside your business,” he said.

“I find it hard in polite terms to describe how offended I am as a member of the then-government that was introducing significant tax changes in the interest of the Australian people.”

The report, by former Telstra boss Ziggy Switkowski, found PwC had developed a “whatever it takes attitude” that allowed poor behaviour to be overlooked.

Mr Switkowski was also scathing of an overly collegial culture within the firm, which made it easier for blind spots to be overlooked and for the chief executive’s power to be amplified.

Mr Burrowes told the inquiry steps should have been in place to avoid the tax advice scandal from taking place.

“I’m not going to sit here and defend what happened,” he said.

“It’s inappropriate, it should never have happened, they breached their confidentiality agreements … we should have had processes and controls to catch that, prevent it from happening.

“We apologise to you and we apologise to the people of Australia that we’ve fallen short of the standards.”

Labor senator Deborah O’Neill, who is on the inquiry, said the probe by Mr Switkowski was not enough to get to the bottom of the tax advice scandal.

“We need to see some proper, independent investigation of what’s happened – everybody’s talking about the Switkowski review as if it’s the end game,” she told ABC Radio on Thursday.

“While PwC are trying to draw a line in the sand, we are definitely not past this.”

The inquiry will also hear from former PwC CEO Luke Sayers about what he knew of the scandal during his tenure as leader between 2012 and 2020.

Financial watchdog ASIC and representatives from Treasury and the Professional Standards Councils will also give evidence.

– AAP

Topics: PwC
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