The minister wanted to make the move in the wake of independent reports flagging poor financial controls, fruitless and wasteful expenditure, and mismanagement
In his report, Chief Justice Raymond Zondo said Kwinana either had no clue about or dishonestly pretended she did not know some of the basic obligations of her profession
A Wits University accounting professor has returned from his Amazon expedition he undertook to fight climate change
The accountancy profession must push the integration of climate change and corporate risk in integrated reporting, and ensure that corporate social responsibility indexes include climate change as part of the weighting to determine company rankings
Yakhe Kwinana, the former chairperson of SAA Technical, has been asked to make representations to Saica, but has not responded
The former chairperson of SAA Technical received R4.3-million in kickbacks from a supplier
A panel member who approved diverting health department funds has denied a conflict of interest
The South African Institute of Chartered Accountants has urged companies to heed the new tax rules, which replace the secondary tax on Companies.
No image available
/ 16 February 2012
The SA Institute of Chartered Accountants has proposed that Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan introduce changes for taxpayers in his budget speech.
No image available
/ 31 January 2011
SAICA is determined to increase the number of qualified accountants in South Africa by identifying high school learners who are doing well in maths.
No image available
/ 5 November 2008
South Africa’s financial management and auditing sector is searching in vain for 22 030 qualified accountants, the SAICA said on Wednesday.
Thuthuka initiative helps students financially, socially and academically, writes Cornia Pretorius.
A record number of black chartered accountant (CA) candidates passed the final exams in 2007, the Association of Black Accountants of Southern Africa (Abasa) said on Friday. More than 300 (67%) black candidates passed the final qualifying exam, compared with 64% the previous year, Abasa said in a statement.