Australia: Federal Police Search PwC Sydney Headquarters Over Tax Leak
The Australian Federal Police began searching the Sydney headquarters of accounting firm PwC on Monday as part of its investigation into leaked confidential government tax information.
Facts
- The Australian Federal Police began searching the Sydney headquarters of accounting firm PwC on Monday as part of its investigation into leaked confidential government tax information.[1][2]
- This comes over a year after the Treasury referred the matter to the federal police, which alleged the "unauthorised disclosure of confidential Commonwealth information" by former PwC personnel.[3][4]
- The allegations first emerged in a Senate report that found PwC Australia was using its access to secret government tax proposals to help attract business from corporations such as Google and Facebook.[4]
- CEO Kevin Burrowes said the police are expected to search the headquarters for "several days," adding that the company "introduced significant governance, business and cultural reforms," over the past year and a half.[1][5]
- This has led to the AU$1 (US$0.66) fire sale of PwC Australia's government consulting business, the departure of over 700 staff and dozens of partners, and a government ban on PwC Australia working on government contracts during the probe.[4][6]
Sources: [1]The Guardian, [2]The Australian, [3]Treasury.gov.au, [4]The Sydney Morning Herald, [5]9 News and [6]The Economic Times
Narratives
- Narrative A, as provided by Anthony Howard. PwC Australia will remain a questionable company until it lives up to its stated values. Despite having a code of conduct, the firm has chosen to prioritize profit over ethics so strongly that it chose to become a veritable double agent — using its confidential government business to secretly help corporations avoid paying taxes. Without genuine transformation, the company will continue to undermine public trust.
- Narrative B, as provided by Going Concern. While PwC Australia has received well-deserved criticism over the past year, its recent three-year plan shows a genuine commitment to bettering its corporate culture. Unlike PwC US, the Australian branch is actively working to prioritize clients as they endure economic instability and technological advancements. This plan is a direct response to government audits, which means PwC Australia is working seriously to clean up its scandalous reputation.