Accountancy firm Ernst and Young has appointed three non-executive directors, the first recruitment move of its kind in the companys history, according to the Financial Times.
The newspaper reports that the Big Four firm has taken on three senior industry figures who will sit alongside partners on its global advisory boards.
They are Mark Olson, a former chairman of the US Public Company Accounting Oversight Board; Sir Richard Lambert, former director general of the Confederation of British Industry; and Klaus Mangold, a former executive at DaimlerChrysler.
Ernst and Young first announced in July last year that it would make non-executive appointments in order to comply with the UK's Audit Firm Governance Code.
The announcement follows similar recent moves by rivals PwC, KPMG, BDO and Grant Thornton .
Ernst And Young Recruits Non Executive Directors
Thu, 10 Feb 2011
Recommended links
Find accountancy servicesAccounting and auditing information
Accounting software and books
Personal accountants
Accountancy training courses
Accountancy jobs
HMRC To Consider Calls To Delay iXBRL Tax Filing Deadline
CIMA Student Intake Hits Record High
PwC Seeking More Female Partners
Sage Boosted BY SME Market Recovery
Accountant Makes Racial Discrimination Case Against PwC
KPMG To Fund Degree And Pay Salary To Young Recruits
Ernst And Young Hit With US Lawsuit Over Lehman Collapse
Ernst And Young To Recruit 1,000 Staff To Advisory Division
| Accountancy news |
|---|
| Accountants Warn that Taking away Child Benefit from Middle Classes will be Disastrous - Thu, 17 May 2012 |
| Survey Highlights UK Companies are Optimistic - Wed, 16 May 2012 |
| Accountants Salaries Rise by Ten Per Cent - Thu, 10 May 2012 |
| More News |





