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American Institute of Certified Public Accountants
American Institute of Certified Public Accountants
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AICPA offices in Durham, North Carolina

Key Information

The American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) is the national professional organization of Certified Public Accountants (CPAs) in the United States, with more than 428,000 members in 130 countries. Founded in 1887 as the American Association of Public Accountants (AAPA), the organization sets ethical standards and U.S. auditing standards. It also develops and grades the Uniform CPA Examination. AICPA is headquartered in Durham, North Carolina, and maintains additional offices in New York City, Washington, D.C., and Ewing, New Jersey.[3]

History

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AICPA and its predecessors date back to 1887, when the American Association of Public Accountants (AAPA) was formed.[4][5] The Association went through several name changes over the years: the Institute of Public Accountants (1916), the American Institute of Accountants (1917), and the American Society of Public Accountants (1921), which merged into the American Institute of Accountants in 1936.[6] At that time, the decision was made to restrict future membership to CPAs.[7]

The number of committees grew continually over the years. In the 1940s, there were 34 committees. By 1960, there were 89. By 1970, the number had grown to 109.

In 1999, the nearly 120 existing committees underwent a re-organization with approximately half of the standing committees being replaced with a volunteer group model that placed an increased emphasis on the use of task forces. The increased use of task forces allowed for more targeted efforts with the task forces being given a specific assignment then disbanding upon completion of that assignment. Also in 1999, the first tracking and management of task forces began."

In January 2012, the AICPA entered into a joint venture with their equivalent in the UK, the Chartered Institute of Management Accountants (CIMA), a partnership that produced the Chartered Global Management Accountant (CGMA) designation.[8] In 2014, the AICPA and the CIMA co-created the Global Management Accounting Principles (GMAPs).

The AICPA and CIMA membership bodies remain and provide all existing benefits to members.

In August 2019, the AICPA proposed a new standard to give auditors more guidance on auditing accounting estimates.[9] This standard replaced SAS No. 122, Section 540, Auditing Accounting Estimates, Including Fair Value Accounting Estimates, and Related Disclosures.[10][11] It also amended a few other sections of the AICPA Professional Standards.[12][13]

Programs

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Uniform CPA examination

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The Uniform CPA Examination must be taken and passed by all those who wish to be licensed as a CPA.[14] The exam is developed and scored by the Board of Examiners (BOE), a committee that consists of CPAs, state board regulators, psychometricians, and educators.[15]

Professional standards setting

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AICPA sets generally accepted professional and technical standards for CPAs in multiple areas. Until the 1970s, the AICPA held a virtual monopoly in this field. In the 1970s, however, it transferred its responsibility for setting generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) to the newly formed Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB). Following this, it retained its standards setting function in areas such as financial statement auditing, professional ethics, attest services, CPA firm quality control, CPA tax practice, business valuation, and financial planning practice. Before passage of the Sarbanes-Oxley law, AICPA standards in these areas were considered "generally accepted" for all CPA practitioners.

In the early 2000s, in response to events such as Enron's announcement that its financial statements couldn't be relied on and WorldCom's bankruptcy filing, Congress passed the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (SOX).[16]

Credentials, designations, and scholarships

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AICPA offers credentialing programs in certain subject areas for its members. The credentials are similar to state board certifications for attorneys, which also recognize subject matter-specific expertise. The AICPA offers the:

Aong with CIMA, AICPA issues the Chartered Global Management Accountant (CGMA) designation, which was established in 2012.[20] Based on global quality standards for ethics and performance, CGMA designees are considered experts with credibility of advanced proficiency in finance, operations, strategy and management.[21]

The institute offers a number of scholarships for high school students, undergraduate, and graduate students, and working professionals.[22] This includes:[23]

  • The AICPA Foundation High School Scholarship
  • The AICPA Legacy Scholarships
  • The Minority Doctoral Fellowship Program
  • The William (Bill) Ezzell Scholarship Program

Public interest campaigns

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AICPA also runs public interest programs, including the Feed the Pig campaign and the 360 Degrees of Financial Literacy site.[24][25] Feed the Pig, a national public service campaign sponsored by the AICPA and the Ad Council, provides personal finance resources for young Americans.[26] 360 Degrees of Financial Literacy is a national volunteer effort of the nation's CPAs to help Americans understand their personal finances and develop money management skills.[27][28]

In 2022, the AICPA and the National Association of State Boards Accountancy announced that a new Uniform CPA exam would be released in 2024 as part of the CPA Evolution initiative.[29][30] The new exam is based on a “Core + Discipline” model and will include core testing in accounting, auditing, and tax, as well as three Discipline sections (candidates must select one to complete).[31]

WebTrust

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WebTrust is a family of e-commerce assurance and auditing programs co-developed by the AICPA with the Canadian Institute of Chartered Accountants (CICA).[32] Accounting associations in the UK, Australia, New Zealand and Hong Kong also participate in the program.[33][34] A specialized variant of the program exists for certificate authorities.[35][36] A 2005 academic book noted that while cost of a WebTrust seal is considerably higher than that of similar products from its competitors (BBB On-Line, TrustE and VeriSign), the scope of a WebTrust certification is more comprehensive than those of its competitors, although this fact is usually lost on consumers who have trouble differentiating such seal programs, which explains the rather limited market penetration of WebTrust.[37] A 2009 academic paper which chronicled in some depth the adoption followed by the abandonment of the WebTrust seal at a large US telecom company, noted that the management did not find the cost-benefit tradeoff worthwhile: the $100,000 per year cost for WebTrust being about twenty times higher than that of a TrustE seal.[38]

Government relations

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AICPA has an office in Washington, D.C. and a political action committee. On behalf of its members, the AICPA monitors and advocates on legislative and other matters that affect the accounting profession. Working with state CPA societies and other professional organizations, the AICPA provides information to and educates federal, state and local policymakers regarding key issues. Whether serving as an information resource or offering recommendations, the AICPA represents the profession while protecting the public interest.

The AICPA's Political Action Committee is a contributor to U.S. Congressional representatives and Senators from both parties who sit on various legislative committees of relevance to CPAs.

External roles

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The AICPA is a leading member of the International Federation of Accountants[39] and the Global Accounting Alliance, and the Tax Professionals United for Taxpayer Relief Coalition.[40]

The AICPA is an affiliate of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of the Caribbean.[41]

Code of professional conduct

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Members of the AICPA must attest annually to meeting the requirements for their membership types, complying with the AICPA's bylaws and upholding the AICPA's Code of Profession Conduct. Members are subject to audit and, if found to be non-compliant, may be expelled from the AICPA.

AICPA personal financial satisfaction index

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Since Q3 of 2018, AICPA has been publishing the personal financial satisfaction index on a quarterly basis that indicates the general understanding of economic factors affecting the financial standing of a typical American.[42] As the COVID-19 pandemic has strained the U.S. economy and put millions out of work, Americans have experienced the biggest drop in their personal financial satisfaction in more than a decade. The AICPA's Q1 2020 Personal Financial Satisfaction index (PFSi) measures 32.9, a 20 percent (8.29 point) decrease from the previous quarter. This is the largest quarterly drop the PFSi has experienced since the Great Recession (Q4 2009).[43]

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) is the principal national professional membership association for certified public accountants (CPAs) in the United States, founded in 1887 as the American Association of Public Accountants to advance the practice of accountancy amid growing demands for reliable financial reporting following industrialization and corporate expansion. Headquartered in , it now operates as part of the AICPA & CIMA global alliance formed in 2017 with the UK's , representing approximately 580,000 members, candidates, and registrants across 150 countries who adhere to its ethical and professional standards. The AICPA's core functions include developing and maintaining the Uniform CPA Examination in collaboration with the National Association of State Boards of Accountancy, which tests candidates on auditing, financial reporting, taxation, and regulation to ensure competence in public practice. It also establishes authoritative guidance on auditing standards through its Auditing Standards Board, ethical conduct via the Code of Professional Conduct, and tax practice rules, influencing financial transparency and regulatory compliance for public and private entities. Historically, the organization has responded to criticisms of self-regulation and —such as those raised in the 1970s and 1990s over conflicts in non-audit services—by enhancing processes and supporting the creation of independent bodies like the in 2002, though government audits have periodically questioned the rigor of its internal oversight mechanisms. Key achievements encompass for legislative reforms, such as uniform state licensing reciprocity, and contributions to international convergence of standards, positioning CPAs as essential gatekeepers against financial in an era of complex capital markets. Despite these advancements, the AICPA has faced scrutiny for ethical lapses in member firms, including instances of exam cheating and independence violations, underscoring ongoing challenges in enforcing professional integrity amid competitive pressures.

History

Founding and Early Development (1887–1916)

The American Association of Public Accountants (AAPA) was founded in 1887 in New York as the first national organization for professional accountants in the United States, initially comprising 22 members who were predominantly Scottish and English chartered accountants that had established practices after immigrating. This formation responded to the demands of post-Civil War industrialization, corporate expansion, and increasing financial complexity, which necessitated standardized auditing and reporting to foster trust in business transactions. The AAPA's constitution emphasized ethical conduct and professional competence, though early membership relied more on demonstrated practical experience than formal qualifications. In its initial decades, the AAPA advocated for uniform principles and lobbied state legislatures for licensing laws, contributing to the passage of early statutes in New York (1896) and other states. To broaden its influence, the organization merged in with the Federation of Societies of Public Accountants in the United States of America, a grouping established in 1902 to coordinate regional bodies and promote national cohesion amid fragmented local practices. These efforts laid groundwork for elevating accountancy from a skill to a regulated profession, addressing inconsistencies in that had enabled frauds like those exposed in the 1905 Hyde Amendment hearings on government . By 1916, AAPA membership had grown to approximately 1,150, reflecting rising demand for certified expertise amid economic expansion and preparations. Seeking to enforce higher and distinguish qualified practitioners, the AAPA reorganized as the Institute of Public Accountants that year, introducing mandatory examinations and educational prerequisites to replace experience-based admission and thereby enhance professional credibility and public protection. This transition marked a pivotal shift toward merit-based , influencing subsequent state CPA laws modeled on institute standards.

Institutional Evolution and Expansion (1917–1950s)

In 1917, the organization adopted the name American Institute of Accountants (AIA), succeeding the Institute of Public Accountants, with membership numbering approximately 1,150 at the time of the preceding transition in 1916. This rebranding underscored efforts to professionalize the field amid post-World War I economic recovery and rising demand for standardized auditing in an expanding industrial economy. The AIA prioritized uniform qualification criteria, including oversight of state-administered CPA examinations that had begun adopting national elements earlier in the decade. The 1920s witnessed institutional expansion driven by the U.S. boom and proliferation of public corporations, which heightened the need for independent verification of . To safeguard professional integrity, the AIA in 1922 prohibited members from issuing opinions on statements they had personally prepared in certain non-independent roles, reinforcing barriers against self-review biases. Membership grew alongside the profession's footprint, as larger firms scaled operations to serve national clients, though exact figures remained modest compared to later decades, reflecting the era's selective entry standards focused on experienced practitioners rather than mass certification. The of the late 1920s and 1930s catalyzed regulatory scrutiny and prompted the AIA to advocate for enhanced disclosure and verifiability in financial reporting. In 1930, the AIA partnered with the to propose revisions aimed at greater transparency in corporate accounts, anticipating federal intervention. The ensuing and , which established the SEC, positioned the AIA as a key collaborator in bridging private standards with public oversight; in response to the SEC's Accounting Series Release No. 4 (1938) on inventory verification, the AIA expanded its Committee on Accounting Procedure to issue guidance bulletins starting that year. The 1939 McKesson & Robbins fraud, involving falsified inventories, further spurred formation of the AIA's Committee on Auditing Procedure, which promulgated the inaugural Statements on Auditing Procedure (SAP No. 1) in 1939, mandating direct confirmation of receivables and physical observation of inventories where practicable. These measures addressed causal gaps in prior practices, such as reliance on management representations without corroboration, thereby elevating empirical rigor in audits. World War II in the 1940s accelerated the AIA's role in governmental accounting, with members contributing to cost-determination systems for defense contracts and excess-profits taxation, expanding the profession's scope beyond traditional audits. In 1941, the AIA formalized its first comprehensive code of professional conduct, explicitly codifying independence requirements to mitigate conflicts in an era of wartime fiscal pressures. Postwar economic resurgence fueled further institutional growth, as returning capital markets demanded scalable standards; by the early 1950s, the AIA established a committee on the economics of accounting practice to analyze practice viability and a committee on management services in 1954, signaling diversification into advisory roles while maintaining core auditing primacy. These developments laid groundwork for broader standardization, with the AIA's influence evident in state-level reciprocity agreements that facilitated interstate mobility for certified practitioners.

Post-War Growth and Standardization (1960s–1990s)

Following the economic expansion of the post-World War II era, the accounting profession experienced substantial growth, driven by increasing business complexity, regulatory demands, and corporate expansion. The ratio of accountants to workers improved from one per 294 in 1960 to one per 197 by 1970, reflecting heightened demand for certified professionals amid booming industrial and commercial activity. The 1957 merger forming the modern AICPA had unified fragmented state societies, enabling more cohesive national advocacy and membership expansion; by the mid-1990s, members employed in business and industry surpassed those in public practice for the first time, signaling diversification beyond traditional auditing roles. In standards setting, the AICPA's Accounting Principles Board (APB), established in 1959, issued authoritative opinions through the 1960s, such as Opinion No. 2 in 1962 addressing investment tax credits, though debates over implementation persisted with SEC oversight. Criticism of the APB's part-time structure and perceived influence by large firms prompted the AICPA-sponsored Wheat Committee study in 1971, culminating in the 1973 creation of the independent (FASB) under the Financial Accounting Foundation; the AICPA ceded primary financial reporting authority to the FASB while affirming its standards as . This shift emphasized and independence, reducing AICPA dominance in principles but preserving its influence via representation on FASB oversight bodies. The AICPA maintained leadership in auditing standardization, establishing the Auditing Standards Board in October 1978 to promulgate Statements on Auditing Standards (SAS) for non-public entities, succeeding earlier ad hoc committees. In the 1980s, the organization expanded professional services by creating divisions for tax, personal financial planning, management consulting, and information technology, accommodating evolving member needs in a deregulated economy. Educational standardization advanced with the 1988 approval of a 150-semester-hour requirement for CPA licensure entry after 2000, aiming to enhance competency amid growing complexity. By the 1990s, the AICPA launched the CPA Vision Project in 1995 to project the profession's future amid technological and global shifts, emphasizing core competencies like assurance and advisory services. Membership composition evolved, with industry roles dominating by 1996, and credentials like Personal Financial Specialist (introduced 1987) and Accredited in Business Valuation (1997) formalized specialized expertise. These developments solidified the AICPA's role in professionalizing accounting amid economic liberalization and international harmonization pressures.

Response to Major Crises and Reforms (2000s–2010s)

Following the in late 2001 and the subsequent revelation of accounting irregularities at WorldCom in June 2002, public trust in the auditing profession declined sharply, prompting congressional action. The American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) responded by launching campaigns to reaffirm the profession's commitment to integrity and independence, emphasizing voluntary enhancements to auditing practices amid criticism of prior self-regulation. On July 30, 2002, President signed the Sarbanes-Oxley Act (SOX) into law, which dissolved the AICPA's Public Oversight Board—its self-regulatory arm for peer reviews—and established the (PCAOB) to assume inspection, standard-setting, and enforcement authority over audits of public companies. The AICPA endorsed key SOX provisions, including Section 404 on assessments, which it later defended as essential for bolstering financial reporting reliability and investor protection, despite implementation costs. Post-SOX, the AICPA redirected efforts toward nonpublic entities, retaining authority to issue Statements on Auditing Standards (SAS) applicable to private company audits and compiling interim PCAOB standards where gaps existed. In October 2002, the AICPA's Auditing Standards Board released SAS No. 99, "Consideration of in a Audit," incorporating expanded procedures for detecting material misstatements due to , directly addressing deficiencies highlighted by the scandals. Amid the 2008 global financial crisis, which exposed vulnerabilities in and valuation practices, the AICPA issued targeted guidance to support auditors navigating distressed entities and measurements. In November 2008, the Auditing Standards Board finalized two SAS updates on reporting, enhancing risk-based approaches for audits under economic uncertainty. From 2004 to 2012, the AICPA undertook a comprehensive clarification project for its auditing standards, converging them with International Auditing and Assurance Standards Board (IAASB) frameworks to improve clarity and applicability, with the revised standards (codified as AU-C sections) becoming effective for audits beginning after December 15, 2012. These reforms prioritized substantive improvements in audit quality over mere compliance, reflecting the AICPA's adaptation to heightened regulatory scrutiny while maintaining its core role in for the majority of U.S. CPAs serving private clients.

Organizational Structure and Governance

Membership Composition and Leadership

The American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) restricts regular membership to individuals holding or previously holding an active U.S. CPA license, requiring adherence to the AICPA Code of Professional Conduct and completion of 120 hours of qualifying continuing professional education (CPE) every three years. Associate membership is available to those who have passed the Uniform CPA Examination but have not yet satisfied all licensure requirements in their , while other tiers such as student affiliates target aspiring professionals. AICPA membership numbers have grown steadily, with the organization reporting over 429,000 members as of recent estimates, though the broader Association of International Certified Professional Accountants (jointly operated with CIMA) serves approximately 580,000 members, candidates, and registrants across 150 countries. The composition reflects the U.S. CPA profession's structure, with members spanning public accounting firms, and industry, , and ; however, demographic data indicate persistent challenges, including an aging workforce where roughly 75% of members are at or nearing retirement age, contributing to talent pipeline pressures. Representation of underrepresented groups remains low, with only about 2% of CPAs in U.S. accounting firms identifying as as of 2020, though hiring of diverse graduates has shown modest increases in subsequent years. Governance resides with the AICPA Governing Council, comprising approximately 265 elected and appointed representatives from each U.S. state, the District of Columbia, , the U.S. Virgin Islands, and , which convenes biannually in May and October to establish policies and programs. The Association , consisting of 26 volunteer leaders from the profession and public sectors, oversees strategic interests and promotes high standards of practice. Key executive roles include the CEO, currently Mark Koziel, CPA, CGMA, who assumed leadership of the AICPA and the Association in late 2024 following a global search to succeed Barry Melancon; other senior positions encompass chiefs for public accounting (Susan Coffey), (Andrew Harding), and advocacy (Mark Peterson). Board and council members are typically selected through nominations and elections by peers to ensure representation of diverse practice areas and expertise.

Joint Venture with CIMA and Global Expansion

In 2012, the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) and the (CIMA) established a to launch the (CGMA) designation, aimed at unifying credentials and enhancing professional mobility across borders. This initiative combined AICPA's expertise in financial reporting and auditing with CIMA's focus on accounting, creating a requiring AICPA membership, at least three years of relevant professional experience, and completion of specified competencies. The expanded in scope following member approvals in , with proposals to integrate operations, strategy, and management between the two bodies, thereby deepening collaboration beyond the initial CGMA framework. By 2017, AICPA and CIMA formalized their partnership as AICPA & CIMA, establishing an international alliance to promote and finance professions globally through shared resources, research, and educational programs. This alliance facilitated AICPA's global expansion by leveraging CIMA's established presence in regions such as , the , , and , where CIMA operates training centers and partnerships, enabling joint delivery of qualifications like the CGMA Professional Qualification. For instance, the partnership supports localized initiatives, including in and , and corporate partnerships that extend AICPA's influence to international firms seeking unified professional standards. Recent developments, such as the 2025 syllabus upgrade for the CGMA qualification effective in 2026, emphasize strategic decision-making and , further aligning the venture with global business demands.

Core Professional Functions

Uniform CPA Examination Administration

The American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) owns and leads the development and scoring of the Uniform CPA Examination, a required by all U.S. state boards of accountancy for CPA licensure, ensuring it assesses entry-level competencies in public accountancy. In collaboration with the National Association of State Boards of Accountancy (NASBA) and , the AICPA maintains the exam's integrity through content creation, psychometric validation, and policy oversight via its Board of Examiners (BOE), which aligns the test with evolving professional standards. Under the CPA Evolution model, effective January 10, 2024, the exam comprises three mandatory four-hour Core sections—Auditing and Attestation (AUD), Financial Accounting and Reporting (FAR), and Taxation and (REG)—plus one four-hour Discipline section chosen by the candidate from and Reporting (BAR), Information Systems and Controls (ISC), or Compliance and (TCP), totaling 16 hours of computer-based testing. Each section features multiple-choice questions (MCQs) and task-based simulations (TBSs), with scoring weighted 50% MCQs and 50% TBSs for most sections, except ISC at 60% MCQs and 40% TBSs; candidates must achieve a scaled score of at least 75 on each within an 18- or 30-month window, depending on . The AICPA's Examinations team, comprising certified public accountants, psychometricians, statisticians, and test developers, annually updates exam blueprints to reflect current practice surveys from practicing CPAs and stakeholders, ensuring and without compromising or fairness. Questions are pretested for statistical reliability, and the BOE sets passing standards based on standard-setting studies, historical pass rates, and candidate performance data, rather than a fixed or . While handles test delivery at secure centers worldwide and NASBA manages candidate eligibility and score distribution, the AICPA oversees question preparation, scoring algorithms, and continuous improvements, such as the shift to year-round testing since January 2021 to enhance accessibility. This structure, transitioned to computer-based format in April 2004, has facilitated over 1 million administrations by emphasizing higher-order skills like and amid technological and regulatory changes in .

Development and Issuance of Professional Standards

The American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) develops and issues professional standards governing auditing, attestation, accounting and review services, quality control, and ethical conduct for certified public accountants (CPAs), primarily applicable to nonissuers—private companies not subject to Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) reporting requirements. These standards establish (GAAS) and related guidance to ensure consistency, reliability, and public trust in financial reporting and . The AICPA's standards complement those issued by the (PCAOB) for public entities and the (FASB) for (GAAP), focusing instead on non-authoritative interpretations and procedures for smaller engagements. Central to this process are senior AICPA committees designated by its governing Council. The Auditing Standards Board (ASB), the highest authority on auditing matters, promulgates Statements on Auditing Standards (SAS), Statements on Standards for Attestation Engagements (SSAE), and Statements on Quality Control Standards (SQCS). For instance, SAS apply to the preparation and issuance of reports for nonissuers, with recent updates including clarity standards issued in 2011 to enhance understandability and a shift to risk-based under SQCS No. 10, effective December 15, 2025, replacing input-focused approaches with scalable risk assessments. The Accounting and Review Services Committee (ARSC) issues Statements on Standards for Accounting and Review Services (SSARS), governing compilations, reviews, and preparations of unaudited , as exemplified by SSARS No. 26 on for such engagements, issued June 4, 2025. Additional guidance includes Statements on Standards for Tax Services (), enforced for tax practice, and the AICPA of Conduct, adopted by membership in 2014 and updated periodically to address threats like in non-attest services. Standards development follows a rigorous to incorporate stakeholder input and promote transparency. The ASB and other committees deliberate in open meetings, draft proposed standards, issue exposure drafts for public comment—typically allowing 60-120 days for feedback—and revise based on responses before final issuance. This procedure, rooted in AICPA bylaws, ensures standards reflect practical realities and evolving risks, such as those from technology or economic shifts, while maintaining independence from . Historically, the AICPA led early standard-setting through the Committee on Accounting Procedure (established 1939), which issued 51 Accounting Research Bulletins until 1959, and the Accounting Principles Board (APB, 1959-1973), which produced 39 opinions on ; authority transferred to the FASB in 1973 amid criticisms of insufficient conceptual rigor and industry influence. Post-transfer, the AICPA concentrated on auditing and non- services, codifying standards in its annual Professional Standards publication for member compliance and state board adoption.

Credentials, Designations, and Educational Programs

The AICPA administers several specialty credentials and designations exclusively available to CPAs in , designed to recognize advanced expertise in specific areas of and . These designations require candidates to meet , experience, and examination criteria set by the AICPA, often involving rigorous testing and peer-reviewed work product submission. For instance, the Accredited in Business Valuation (ABV) credential certifies proficiency in for purposes such as mergers, acquisitions, and litigation support, requiring at least 10 years of valuation experience or equivalent, passage of a , and submission of a work product demonstrating valuation competency. Similarly, the Certified in Financial Forensics (CFF) designation focuses on investigative skills for detection, , and litigation, necessitating 1,000 hours of forensics experience, completion of a skills assessment, and an exam on forensic principles. Other notable designations include the Personal Financial Specialist (PFS), which validates expertise in comprehensive personal financial planning encompassing tax, estate, retirement, and investment strategies, requiring five years of planning experience and passage of an exam; and the Certified Information Technology Professional (CITP), aimed at IT advisory and , with requirements including three years of IT-related experience and an exam on technology controls and risks. The (CGMA) designation, jointly awarded with the (CIMA) since 2012, emphasizes strategic management accounting and business leadership, available via an experience pathway for CPAs with three years of relevant practical management experience or through CIMA's qualification exams, alongside maintaining AICPA membership. These credentials must be renewed periodically through continuing professional education (CPE) credits, ensuring ongoing professional development. In addition to designations, the AICPA offers a suite of educational certificate programs to build specialized in evolving practice areas, comprising over 35 self-paced online courses that culminate in digital badges or certificates upon completion of assessments. These programs cover topics such as (IFRS) implementation, COSO frameworks, environmental, social, and governance (ESG) reporting, data analytics, cybersecurity, , and not-for-profit . For example, the Personal Financial Planning Certificate Program includes targeted modules on , investment planning, , , and tax planning, enabling CPAs to earn sub-certificates that align with PFS requirements. Launched to address skill gaps in emerging fields, these programs provide up to 50% discounts for AICPA members and emphasize practical application through case studies and real-world scenarios, without prerequisite CPA licensure for enrollment.

Ethics and Regulatory Framework

Code of Professional Conduct Enforcement

The American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) enforces its Code of Professional Conduct primarily through the Professional Ethics Division, which handles investigations into alleged violations by members, including failures to maintain integrity, objectivity, due professional care, or in attest engagements. The Code, originally adopted by AICPA membership and revised periodically—most notably effective December 15, 2014—sets binding rules on ethical responsibilities, with non-compliance potentially leading to disciplinary measures aimed at upholding in the profession. The Professional Ethics Executive Committee (PEEC), a senior AICPA body, interprets the Code's principles and rules, providing authoritative guidance on applications while overseeing enforcement consistency. Enforcement operates via the Joint Ethics Enforcement Program (JEEP), a cooperative framework established between the AICPA and nearly all state CPA societies since the early 2000s, enabling coordinated investigations and reciprocal discipline to avoid fragmented oversight across jurisdictions. Complaints, which can be submitted by the public, clients, or peers via online forms or mail with details on the alleged violator and incident summary, undergo initial review by AICPA staff to assess merit; frivolous or untimely claims are dismissed, but actionable ones trigger formal investigations involving evidence gathering and respondent notifications. If exists, cases may escalate to hearings before a joint trial board under JEEP procedures, where respondents can present defenses; outcomes are binding on AICPA members and often shared with state boards for licensure impacts. Sanctions range from admonishments (public reprimands without membership loss) to suspensions (up to two years) or expulsions, with terminations of firm memberships occurring for severe or repeated breaches, such as in when 26 firms lost AICPA status. Between 1980 and 2014, the AICPA issued 958 documented sanctions, with a shift post-1988 toward more suspensions and expulsions amid heightened scrutiny following regulatory reforms like the Sarbanes-Oxley Act. Annual disciplinary reports, published since at least , detail case volumes and resolutions, emphasizing public protection through transparency, though actual enforcement efficacy depends on complaint volumes and investigative rigor, as state boards retain primary licensing authority.

Continuing Professional Education Requirements

The American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) requires all regular members to complete 120 hours—or an equivalent amount—of qualifying continuing professional education (CPE) during each three-year reporting period to maintain membership status. This mandate aims to ensure CPAs sustain professional competence amid evolving standards in , auditing, and related fields. Compliance may be met through formal group programs, self-study, nano-learning, or other approved formats, with credits measured on a 50-minute instructional hour basis (or 100 minutes for self-study in some cases). AICPA's CPE framework is outlined in the Statement on Standards for Continuing Professional Education Programs, developed jointly with the National Association of State Boards of Accountancy (NASBA). These standards specify criteria for program development, delivery, measurement, and reporting, including requirements for learning objectives, qualified instructors, and participant assessments to verify knowledge retention. They emphasize relevance to professional practice, prohibiting credits for personal development activities unrelated to accounting expertise unless tied to specific competencies. Revisions approved in December 2023 incorporated modern delivery methods like asynchronous learning, while a September 2025 exposure draft proposes further updates to address emerging technologies and adaptive learning models. Separate from AICPA membership, state licensing boards impose their own CPE obligations for CPA credential renewal, often aligning with but not identical to AICPA rules—typically requiring 120 hours over three years, with minimum annual thresholds like 20 or 40 hours and dedicated training (e.g., 4 hours per cycle). AICPA members must satisfy both sets of requirements, with non-compliance risking membership suspension or disciplinary action under AICPA's enforcement mechanisms. The organization offers CPE courses through its learning platform and endorses sponsors adhering to the standards, facilitating credit tracking via NASBA's National Registry.

Advocacy and Public Engagement

Government Relations and Policy Influence

The American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) operates a dedicated U.S. advocacy division, including the Congressional and Political Affairs team and & Team, to engage federal, state, and local policymakers on issues affecting the accounting profession and . This effort is supported by a office at 1455 , NW, which facilitates direct , regulatory monitoring, and collaboration with state CPA societies. The organization maintains a bipartisan approach, leveraging member networks in every congressional district for input and participating in coalitions like the for Responsible Professional Licensing to promote uniform standards such as CPA mobility across states. AICPA's policy influence centers on tax legislation, IRS administration, auditing oversight, and professional standards independence. In tax policy, the institute advocates for principles emphasizing simplicity, neutrality, and , influencing outcomes such as the 2025 modifications to H.R. 1 (Omnibus Budget and Acceleration Act), which adjusted 1099-K reporting thresholds, expanded bonus depreciation eligibility, established a permanent qualified business deduction for pass-through entities, and enhanced state and local deductions. Earlier efforts contributed to the 2024 Federal Disaster Relief Act (P.L. 118-148), enabling casualty loss deductions based on state governor declarations without federal disaster designations, and the extension of Section 174 research and experimentation expensing through 2026 via the Relief for American Families and Workers Act. In regulatory spheres, AICPA advocacy shaped the IRS's 10-year strategic plan by prioritizing taxpayer services and modernization, and informed 19 /IRS guidance items in 2024, including removal of the zero-basis rule for certain deductions. On professional standards and workforce issues, AICPA opposes legislative threats to the independent accounting standard-setting process and supports recognition of as a STEM-designated field to address talent pipelines, endorsing bipartisan bills like those introduced in 2023 and advanced in 2025. At the state level, it has blocked measures such as Florida's 2025 proposal to dissolve licensing boards and influenced enactments in , Georgia, and adopting recommended tax provisions. Looking to 2026, priorities include monitoring implementation of recent tax changes, advancing AI ethics guidelines, regulations, and opposing taxes on professional services. AICPA's lobbying activities, tracked by the Center for Responsive Politics, involved expenditures of approximately $260,000 in recent federal efforts, focusing on accountants' interests amid broader industry spending. These engagements extend to oversight reforms and initiatives under evolving administrations.

Public Interest Initiatives and Campaigns

The AICPA has prioritized public interest through programs emphasizing financial education and volunteer service by certified public accountants. A initiative is the 360 Degrees of program, launched to provide free, unbiased financial guidance tailored to life stages from childhood through retirement, drawing on volunteer CPAs for resources like budgeting tools, management advice, and basics. By September 2025, the program engaged CPAs nationwide to address gaps, including a "Money Doctor" panel offering consultations during economic hardships such as those in 2021. Complementing education efforts, the AICPA facilitates accounting services via Volunteer Central, connecting approximately 2,500 members with nonprofits and low-income individuals for tasks like preparation and financial audits. This includes support for Low Income Taxpayer Clinics, where CPAs provide free representation and training on IRS compliance, enhancing access to services for underserved populations since at least 2015. Such volunteerism aligns with the profession's ethical obligations, with large firms often granting paid time off to participate, as noted in AICPA-endorsed practices from 1999 onward. To bolster public trust and workforce quality, the AICPA runs awareness campaigns highlighting CPAs' societal role. The #RealCPA campaign targets students by showcasing diverse career paths in , aiming to counter talent shortages while underscoring contributions to . Similarly, the Accounting Opportunities initiative, piloted in 2022 with 35 state CPA societies, deploys CPAs to high schools for career , expanding annually to inspire future professionals and sustain integrity for public benefit. These efforts support broader advocacy, such as a 2025 survey revealing strong public backing for designating as a STEM field to enhance educational pipelines.

Impact and External Roles

Contributions to Auditing and Financial Reporting

The American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA), through its Auditing Standards Board (ASB)—established in October 1978—issues authoritative guidance on , attestation, and standards applicable to non-public entities, filling a critical gap left by the (PCAOB), which oversees public company audits. The ASB's Statements on Auditing Standards (SAS) update (GAAS), originally codified in 1972 as 10 foundational standards encompassing general qualifications, fieldwork, and reporting requirements to promote consistent and . These standards have evolved to address emerging risks, such as the ASB's clarity , which issued SAS Nos. 122–126 from 2010 to 2011 (effective for periods ending after December 15, 2012), restructuring guidance into objectives, definitions, requirements, and application material for enhanced usability and auditor judgment. In financial reporting, the AICPA historically advanced standards before the FASB's creation in 1973; its Committee on Accounting Procedure (1939–1959) issued 51 Accounting Research Bulletins on topics like reserves and consolidations, while the subsequent Accounting Principles Board (1959–1973) produced 39 opinions establishing precedents for areas such as business combinations and pension accounting. Contemporarily, the AICPA's Statements on Standards for Accounting and Review Services (SSARS), developed by the Accounting and Review Services Committee, regulate non-audit services like compilations and reviews for non-issuers, with SSARS No. 21 (issued October 2014, effective for periods ending after December 15, 2015) introducing scalable engagement types, including preparations without management involvement, to accommodate smaller entities' reporting needs while mitigating misrepresentation risks. The AICPA's Financial Reporting Executive Committee (FinREC) supports GAAP implementation through nonauthoritative guides on specialized topics, such as under ASC 606 and reporting by entities without equity ownership, ensuring practical uniformity across diverse reporting frameworks. Complementing these, AICPA Audit and Accounting Guides—over 20 volumes covering industries like entities, not-for-profit organizations, and employee benefit plans—provide interpretive applications of standards, endorsed by the ASB for planning and evidence evaluation, thereby bridging theoretical rules to real-world complexities. Recent updates, including SAS No. 142 (issued September 2023, effective for audits after December 15, 2023), mandate rigorous evaluation of evidence regardless of source, reflecting adaptations to data analytics and remote auditing amid technological shifts. Collectively, these efforts have standardized private-sector practices, fostering reliability in used by lenders, investors, and regulators outside public markets.

Economic and Professional Influence

The American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) exerts substantial professional influence as the world's largest membership association dedicated to the (CPA) profession, representing approximately 397,000 members who perform auditing, tax, and advisory services across public practice, industry, government, and education. Through its Auditing Standards Board (ASB), the AICPA issues authoritative standards for auditing, attestation, and quality control applicable to non-public entities, thereby shaping consistent practices that enhance the reliability of financial reporting for private companies and ensuring professional uniformity outside SEC oversight. The organization also maintains the Code of Professional Conduct, which governs ethical behavior and independence requirements for CPAs engaged in attest services, reinforcing trust in the profession's judgments. AICPA's advocacy efforts further amplify its professional sway, including lobbying for policies that address talent pipelines, tax compliance, and regulatory burdens on CPAs, often in coordination with state societies to advance licensure and initiatives. By developing content for the Uniform CPA Examination in partnership with the National Association of State Boards of Accountancy (NASBA) and mandating continuing professional education (CPE), the AICPA ensures a steady influx of qualified practitioners, mitigating shortages projected to affect up to 75% of current CPAs retiring within 15 years while upholding competency standards. Economically, AICPA members underpin U.S. market stability by delivering independent audits that verify the fair presentation of , facilitating capital allocation, lending decisions, and investor confidence essential for business expansion and . The organization's quarterly Economic Outlook Survey, drawing from CPA financial executives in executive roles, serves as a leading indicator of U.S. economic health, tracking metrics like revenue growth projections (e.g., a median 6.7% increase in firm revenues reported in ) and hiring intentions to forecast trends in optimism, inflation impacts, and policy effects such as tariffs. This data informs policymakers and businesses, while AICPA's historical role in supporting independent standard-setters like the (FASB) contributes to transparent financial reporting that bolsters overall economic resilience.

Criticisms and Controversies

Responses to Financial Scandals and Regulatory Pushback

The , revealed in October 2001, and the subsequent WorldCom fraud disclosure in June 2002, implicated major AICPA member firms in auditing failures that enabled billions in misstated financials, eroding public trust in the profession's self-regulatory model. In response, the AICPA launched campaigns to reaffirm ethical standards and independence, emphasizing enhanced peer reviews and voluntary disclosures to rebuild credibility without immediate statutory overhaul. These efforts, however, proved insufficient amid broader scrutiny, culminating in the Sarbanes-Oxley Act (SOX) of July 30, 2002, which critics of self-regulation, including congressional leaders, viewed as essential to curb conflicts like those involving Andersen's dual advisory and audit roles for . SOX established the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB) on July 30, 2002, stripping the AICPA of standard-setting authority for public company audits and imposing federal inspections, a direct rebuke to the Institute's historical oversight via its Auditing Standards Board. While the AICPA endorsed SOX provisions strengthening internal controls (Section 404) and , it opposed others, such as outright bans on non-audit services, arguing they overlooked beneficial consulting without evidence of inherent bias and could drive expertise away from audits. This partial acceptance reflected pragmatic adaptation, as the Act's mandates—enforced through PCAOB registration of over 2,000 firms by 2003—shifted the profession toward mandatory compliance, with AICPA retaining influence over private entity standards. Post-2008 , the AICPA intensified advocacy against regulatory expansion, testifying in September 2009 for exemptions from mandates in proposed reforms like the Dodd-Frank Act, contending that excessive rules burdened CPAs' advisory roles without proportional risk mitigation. In recent years, pushback has targeted PCAOB overreach; for example, on December 19, 2024, the AICPA urged the SEC to reject proposed rules on audit firm metrics and reporting, citing undue administrative loads—estimated at thousands of hours annually for midsized firms—that divert resources from core audit quality. Similarly, in April 2025, amid House Financial Services Committee drafts to defund the PCAOB and revert duties to the SEC, the AICPA advocated for structural reforms to alleviate persistent compliance costs exceeding $1 billion annually across the profession, while cautioning against abrupt dissolution that could unsettle markets. These positions underscore the Institute's critique that post-SOX frameworks, though addressing scandal-era lapses, have fostered regulatory layering disproportionate to ongoing risks in non-issuer audits.

Credential Reforms and Member Dissatisfaction

In response to persistent shortages of certified public accountants, attributed in part to the 150-semester-hour education requirement for CPA licensure—adopted by all U.S. states between 1983 and 1996 to bolster professional competence following financial scandals—the AICPA and the National Association of State Boards of Accountancy (NASBA) have pursued reforms to licensure pathways. Empirical analyses indicate the rule contributed to a 14% overall decline in new CPAs and a 26% drop among minority entrants after state adoptions, exacerbating supply constraints amid rising demand. Critics, including professional associations and educators, argue the additional hours impose undue financial burdens (averaging $27,940 in extra costs) without proportional gains in core accounting knowledge, disproportionately affecting lower-income and minority candidates while failing to address broader deterrents like stagnant starting salaries around $50,000 and poor work-life balance. The AICPA and NASBA initially resisted wholesale elimination, launching the Experience, Learn, and Earn (ELE) initiative in January 2024 in partnership with , allowing candidates with 120 credit hours to earn up to 30 online credits for $5,000 while employed full-time at sponsoring firms. This program, however, drew dissatisfaction for sidestepping the root barrier, competing directly with university master's programs, and offering non-degree credits that do not fulfill core requirements, potentially accelerating enrollment declines at higher education institutions already reporting reduced majors. By October 2024, amid state-level legislative pushes—such as Ohio's 2024 law permitting alternatives—the organizations advanced a competency-based pathway, enabling licensure via a plus two years of verified experience, subject to state adoption and a 60-day public comment period. As of April 2025, seven states had enacted variations supplementing or undoing the strict 150-hour mandate, reflecting market pressures but sparking debate over whether such flexibility erodes credential rigor without of sustained competence gains. Member dissatisfaction has also surfaced in AICPA's adjustments to proprietary credentials, exemplified by the 2018 expansion of the Accredited in Business Valuation (ABV) designation to non-CPAs, which required passing the exam and meeting experience criteria but eliminated the CPA prerequisite established in 1998. This decision, approved by the AICPA Council in May 2018 without broad consultation of affected members, prompted swift backlash, including an open letter from 32 CPAs decrying it as a potential dilution of specialization signaling and a revenue-driven move overlooking the CPA's foundational role in valuation expertise. Professional bodies like the New York State Society of CPAs objected, arguing it undermined the credential's value as a CPA-exclusive marker, while some defended the change for broadening access without compromising standards. These reforms highlight a professional : proponents of cite causal links between rigid entry barriers and a 30-year stagnation in CPA supply relative to , urging first-principles prioritization of market responsiveness; traditionalists counter that competency shortcuts risk public trust, absent longitudinal data validating alternatives' efficacy. The AICPA's navigation of this tension has fueled perceptions of reactive policymaking, with feedback on Uniform Accountancy Act drafts revealing entrenched divides between innovation advocates and quality guardians.

Exam Integrity and Professional Shortages

The AICPA, in collaboration with the National Association of State Boards of Accountancy (NASBA), administers the Uniform CPA Examination, which has faced challenges to its integrity through instances of and unauthorized disclosure of content. In June 2022, (EY) agreed to pay a $100 million penalty to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) after admitting that numerous audit professionals cheated on the ethics component of the CPA exam and internal CPE courses over multiple years, involving the use of leaked answers shared via an internal tool. Similar misconduct has been documented in other firms, with the (PCAOB) fining affiliates of , EY, , and a combined $8.5 million in June 2025 for exam in Dutch operations, highlighting systemic risks from shared answer keys and unauthorized reproductions. To counter such threats, the AICPA maintains an Examinations Compliance Office that investigates violations, including copying or recording exam content, and issues notices emphasizing prohibitions on via any means. In September 2024, the AICPA filed a lawsuit against a CPA exam candidate accused of leaking questions on , alleging and breach of nondisclosure agreements to safeguard exam security. These integrity efforts occur amid a persistent shortage of certified public accountants, with U.S. firms reporting over 300,000 unfilled positions projected by 2025, driven by declining exam candidacy rates—down 20% from 2016 peaks—and retirements outpacing new entrants. Contributing factors include the exam's rigorous structure, requiring 150 semester hours of education and passing four sections with pass rates averaging 45-50%, alongside competition from less demanding career paths in and that offer comparable compensation without licensure barriers. The AICPA has responded through the National Pipeline Advisory Group (NPAG), established in July 2023, which recommended in August 2024 strategies such as expanding high school outreach, designating as a STEM discipline for visa advantages, and enhancing support for underrepresented candidates to broaden the talent pipeline. Additionally, AICPA and NASBA proposed CPA licensure model revisions in February 2025, including core plus discipline pathways, to reduce entry barriers while preserving competency standards, though feedback revealed tensions between modernization for supply growth and maintaining exam rigor. These reforms aim to balance with accessibility, as unchecked shortages risk audit quality declines and increased regulatory burdens on existing CPAs.

Recent Developments

CPA Exam and Certification Evolutions (2020s)

In response to the evolving demands of the profession, including increased emphasis on , , and specialized competencies, the AICPA and NASBA approved the CPA Evolution initiative in 2020, which introduced a revised licensure model featuring a core curriculum plus candidate-selected disciplines. This framework requires candidates to pass three core exam sections—Auditing and Attestation (AUD), and Reporting (FAR), and Taxation and (REG)—along with one discipline section chosen from and Reporting (BAR), Information Systems Auditing and Controls (ITS), Personal Financial Planning (PFP), or Tax Compliance and Planning (TCP). The updated Uniform CPA Examination under this model launched on January 1, 2024, replacing the prior four-section structure to better align with practice analysis findings that identified gaps in skills like IT and regulatory knowledge. To enhance candidate flexibility amid the , the AICPA, NASBA, and implemented for the CPA Exam starting July 1, 2020, allowing year-round administration without quarterly windows in most jurisdictions. This shift added over 75 testing dates annually, enabling candidates to schedule sections based on availability rather than fixed periods, though site capacity constraints applied. Following the 2024 exam redesign, core sections temporarily reverted to quarterly windows to ensure scoring reliability, but in 2025, they returned to , while discipline sections gained an additional quarterly window in June for five total opportunities per year. Certification pathways also evolved, with the AICPA and NASBA extending exam credit validity from 18 months to a minimum of 30 months (or three years in select states) to accommodate the new model's structure and reduce candidate attrition. A June 30, 2025, deadline was set for extending credits earned under the pre-2024 exam to transition candidates. In May 2025, the organizations approved model legislation introducing a third licensure pathway: a baccalaureate degree with an concentration, plus two years of supervised experience and passing the CPA , as an alternative to the traditional 150-semester-hour requirement, aiming to address workforce shortages without diluting competency standards. These reforms, informed by periodic practice analyses, reflect empirical assessments of professional needs, though initial 2024 pass rates declined in core sections like FAR due to expanded content on topics such as data and IT controls.

Quality Management and Tax Policy Updates

In May 2022, the AICPA Auditing Standards Board issued three new Statements on Standards (SQMS), effective December 15, 2025, to replace the prior Statements on Quality Control Standards (SQCS No. 8). SQMS No. 1 requires firms to design, implement, and operate a system of using a scalable, risk-based approach that emphasizes ongoing monitoring and remediation of deficiencies. SQMS No. 2 addresses engagement quality review responsibilities, mandating eligibility criteria for reviewers and procedures to enhance reliability. SQMS No. 3 updates standards to align with the new framework, with final revisions released on December 19, 2024. To facilitate implementation, the AICPA has provided resources including practice aids for small- and medium-sized firms, crosswalks from SQCS to SQMS, and frequently asked questions, urging firms to begin transitions early due to the standards' emphasis on firm-specific risks over prescriptive inputs. In August 2025, the AICPA updated its SQMS No. 1 practice aid, introduced guidance on monitoring and remediation processes, and scheduled webcasts to assist compliance ahead of the deadline. These standards aim to elevate audit quality amid regulatory scrutiny, though implementation challenges for smaller firms include for risk assessments and . On tax policy, the AICPA has actively advocated for reforms through comment letters and congressional outreach, submitting 183 recommendations to the IRS in June 2025 for its 2025-2026 Priority Guidance Plan, covering areas like basis-shifting and reporting. In March 2025, it outlined priorities to , including expanding uses for postsecondary workforce training, restoring qualified business income deductions, raising 1099-K reporting thresholds, and enhancing disaster relief provisions. The organization welcomed the October 2025 passage of the IRS Math and Help Act, which mandates clearer IRS notices for mathematical errors on returns to reduce taxpayer confusion and administrative burdens. Additional 2025 efforts include urging IRS guidance on deductibility of qualified tips and under recent , and pressing for clarification on domestic expense deductions under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), allowing eligible 2024 costs to be claimed on original returns with disclosures. The AICPA also submitted comments on proposed regulations for under Section 162(m) in May 2025 and on previously taxed earnings and profits adjustments, advocating for practical compliance amid complex international rules. These positions reflect the AICPA's focus on simplifying administration while preserving incentives for , drawing from member input on real-world application challenges.

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