PICPA | Professional Ethics | ET Section 54 – Article III – Integrity
PICPA - Experience the value!

Log In | About PICPA | Contact | FAQs

Pennsylvania Institute of Certified Public Accountants
 
 Home Practice Areas Member Resources Professional Education Get Involved Government Relations Join Visitors

My Membership
Member to Member
Special Discounts
Career Center
Marketing the Profession
Ethics
Peer Review
Other Resources
FAQs

 

Member Resources

Professional Ethics

PICPA Code of Professional Conduct

ET Section 54 – Article III – Integrity

To maintain and broaden public confidence, members should perform all professional responsibilities with the highest sense of integrity.

.01
Integrity is an element of character fundamental to professional recognition. It is the quality from which the public trust derives and the benchmark against which a member must ultimately test all decisions.

.02
Integrity requires a member to be, among other things, honest and candid within the constraints of client confidentiality. Service and the public trust should not be subordinated to personal gain and advantage. Integrity can accommodate the inadvertent error and the honest difference of opinion; it cannot accommodate deceit or subordination of principle.

.03
Integrity is measured in terms of what is right and just. In the absence of specific rules, standards, or guidance, or in the face of conflicting opinions, a member should test decisions and deeds by asking: "Am I doing what a person of integrity would do? Have I retained my integrity?" Integrity requires a member to observe both the form and the spirit of technical and ethical standards; circumvention of those standards constitutes subordination of judgment.

.04
Integrity also requires a member to observe the principles of objectivity and independence and of due care.

Back to PICPA Code of Conduct

 

 
 
 

Copyright © 1998-2008 PICPA. All rights reserved.

advertising · site map · privacy policy · terms and conditions