In January 2001, the
Association of Chartered Certified Accountants (ACCA) published a
members’ survey on fraud and the small company.
This survey, called Fraud and the Smaller Company, can be
downloaded from the ACCA’s website. The ACCA’s response to the consultation can also be viewed.
RESEARCH ON SMALL COMPANY AUDIT THRESHOLD
On 11
December 2002 the Department announced it was carrying out a
programme of research to assess the impact of the increase to
£1 million in the threshold below which most small companies
are exempt from the requirements of an independent financial
audit, and which came into force in July 2002.
The
Department is seeking evidence from key stakeholders and interested
parties, and is particularly keen to obtain statistical information
on the costs and benefits of the last increase. The information
provided will be used to inform a further consultation proposed
for the summer of 2003 on whether the audit threshold should
be increased or maintained at the current level.
Comments
should be sent to:
Bill
Murphy
Senior Policy Advisor
Company Law and Investigations Directorate
Department of Trade and Industry
Area 4100
1 Victoria Street
London SW1H 0ET
or by
e-mail to
william.murphy@dti.gsi.gov.uk
STATUTORY
AUDIT FOR SMALLER COMPANIES, DORMANT COMPANY SIMPLIFICATIONS
AND COMPANIES ACT 1985 DEFINITIONS OF SMALL AND MEDIUM-SIZED
COMPANIES
In his speech to the British Chambers of Commerce on Tuesday 4
April 2000 Stephen Byers, Secretary of State for Trade and Industry,
announced changes to the thresholds below which companies may
opt to dispense with auditing their accounts. This followed a
wide consultation in which four out of five respondents favoured
a significant increase in the thresholds.
He also announced the results of two other
separate consultation exercises on simplifications to the regulations
relating to dormant companies and on the Companies Act 1985 small
and medium-sized company accounting thresholds.
The regulations implementing these changes
– 2000 No. 1430: "The Companies Act 1985
(Audit Exemption) ( Amendment) Regulations 2000" – have
been approved by Parliament and came into force on Friday 26 May
2000. The new thresholds will apply to annual reports and accounts
in respect of financial years ending on or after 26 July 2000.
Copies of the regulations may be obtained
from the Stationery
Office.
Details of the announcements are outlined
below:
Audit exemption
Dormant companies
Accounting
threshold levels for small and medium-sized companies and groups
Press Release
The press release accompanying the Secretary
of State’s announcement on 4 April 2000 can be viewed online by
clicking here.
-
Summaries of the responses to
the consultations and consultation documents
Summaries of the responses to the consultations
can be obtained from:
Simon Masterton-Smith
Company Law and Investigations Directorate
Department of Trade and Industry
1 Victoria Street
London, SW1H 0ET
Tel: 020 7215 0412
Email: simon.masterton-smith@dti.gsi.gov.uk
Or can be viewed online by clicking here audit
exemption responses
( 37kb),
dormant company responses
(18kb),
small company accounting responses
(12 kb).
The original consultation documents can be
viewed online: audit exemption thresholds
( 71 kb), dormant companies
(44 kb),
small company accounting thresholds.

Audit exemption
thresholds
In October 1999 the Department issued a consultation
document on raising the threshold below which small companies
(subject to some exemptions) are able to opt to dispense with
having their accounts audited. The announcement made on 4 April
2000 proposed raising this threshold to £1,000,000 this year and
considering a further move to £4.8 million in the light of the
proposals of the Company Law Review.
The immediate change to increase the audit
threshold to £1,000,000 will apply to annual accounts and reports
for financial periods ending on or after 26 July 2000.
Exemption from audit for individual
companies: The regulations implementing the increase –
The Companies Act 1985 (Audit Exemption) ( Amendment) Regulations
2000 – amend section 249A of the Companies Act 1985
so that a small company, subject to certain other exclusions,
need not have its annual accounts audited if it meets the following
criteria:
- It qualifies as a small company in relation
to that year in accordance with section 246 of the Companies
Act 1985 – Click here for small company
thresholds;
- Its turnover in that year is not more than
£1 million; and,
- Its balance sheet total for that year is
not more than £1.4 million
Charitable companies:
The thresholds below which a small charitable
company may claim exemption from audit remain unchanged i.e. total
exemption where gross income of £90,000 or less: gross income
between £90,000 and £250,000, reporting accountant's report required.
Exclusions: Certain types of
small company are not able to take advantage of the exemption
from audit and these will remain as in the current legislation.
These are public companies, special register bodies or employers’
associations under the Trade Union and Labour Relations (Consolidation)
Act 1992, and certain financial services companies (banking
or insurance companies, companies enrolled in the list maintained
by the Insurance Brokers Registration Council under the Insurance
Brokers (Registration) Act 1977, authorised persons or representatives
under the Financial Services Act 1986).
Exemption from audit for companies which
are members of groups: The consultation paper examined
the existing ability for a company which is a member of a group
to take advantage of exemption from audit where the total turnover
of the group does not exceed the threshold for individual company
exemption. It was decided in the light of consultation not to
change this provision, other than to increase the group threshold
in line with the threshold for individual companies.
Companies which are subsidiary undertakings
may claim exemption from audit for a financial year where they
are dormant throughout the period in that year for which they
were subsidiary undertakings.
Otherwise, companies which are members of
groups may only take advantage of exemption from audit where they
fulfil the following criteria:
- The group qualifies as a small group in
relation to that year in accordance with section 249 of the
Companies Act 1985 and was, at no time during that year,
an ineligible group as defined in section 248(2) – Click
here for small group thresholds;
- The group’s aggregate turnover in that
year, calculated in accordance with section 249, is not more
than £1 million net (or £1.2 million gross) (the group thresholds
where the company claiming exemption is a charitable company
remain unchanged),
- The group’s aggregate balance sheet total
for that year, calculated in accordance with section 249, is
not more than £1.4 million net (or £1.68 million gross).
The regulations also amend the Companies Act
1985 so that exemption from audit for small groups may apply to
small groups where not every member of the group is a company
within the meaning of section 735 of the Act.
Estimated savings: It was estimated
that the increase in the threshold to £1 million would enable
up to an additional 150,000 companies to take advantage of exemption
from audit this year. Responses to the consultation exercise indicated
that cost of a typical audit for companies of this size would
be in the region of £1,200. This would produce a potential saving
for business in the order of £180 million. The further move to
£4.8 million, taking into account the Company Law Review's proposals,
would affect up to an additional 75,000 companies.
Related issues: The consultation
paper also examined the safeguard that 10% of shareholders in
a company can require an audit . It was decided not to change
that provision.
Company Law Review: The Steering
Group of the Company Law Review published their latest set of
proposals in March 2000. The proposals relating to small company
audit consider whether, for companies in the range of £1 million
to £4.8 million turnover, the audit should be replaced by a lighter,
less costly form of assurance. The Review is due to produce its
final recommendations next year.

Dormant
companies
Dormant status is designed to distinguish
between those companies that are actively trading and those that
are not. It allows dormant companies to claim exemption from audit.
Companies must satisfy various criteria to be eligible for dormant
status.
In March 1999 the Department published a consultative
document on the legislative framework for dormant companies. It
set out a number of proposals to simplify the provisions which
apply to dormant companies and sought views on dormant companies
which act as agents. The changes announced by the Secretary of
State on 4 April 2000 which have been implemented by The Companies
Act 1985 (Audit Exemption) (Amendment) Regulations 2000 :
- remove the need for companies to pass a
special resolution to gain exemption from audit;
- allow 10% of shareholders in a dormant
company to require an audit;
- exclude certain payments to Companies House
from the definition of a "significant accounting transaction"
for the purposes of determining dormant status. The transactions
exempted by the regulations are:
- payment of change of name fee;
- payment of re-registration fee;
- payment of late filing penalty;
- payment of annual return filing fee.
- require that dormant companies which act
as agents disclose in the notes to their annual accounts the
fact that during that financial period they have acted as agents.
They will not be required to identify the principal on whose
behalf they have acted.
The changes to the provisions applying to
dormant companies will apply to annual accounts and reports for
financial periods ending on or after 26 July 2000.

Accounting
threshold levels for small and medium-sized companies and groups
Individual
companies: Currently companies which meet the criteria
for small and medium-sized status may take advantage of the ability
to prepare less detailed accounts for their shareholders and to
and file abbreviated accounts. The Department also consulted on
this in 1999. The current conditions are that a company should
meet two out of the following three requirements:
|
Small company
|
|
1. Turnover
|
|
not more than £2.8 million
|
|
2. Balance sheet total
|
|
not more than £1.4 million
|
|
3. Number of employees
|
|
not more than 50
|
| |
|
|
|
Medium sized company
|
|
1. Turnover
|
|
not more than £11.2 million
|
|
2. Balance sheet total
|
|
not more than £5.6 million
|
|
3. Number of employees
|
|
not more than 250
|
Groups of companies:
Thresholds also exist under the Act which allow the parent
of a group of companies not to prepare group accounts for the
group provided that during the financial year in question the
group headed by that company is not an ineligible group (i.e.
none of its members was: a public company or another form of corporate
vehicle allowed under its constitution to offer its shares or
debentures to the public; an authorised institution under the
Banking Act 1987; an insurance company to which Part II of the
Insurance Companies Act 1982 applies; or, an authorised person
under the Financial Services Act 1986) and qualifies as small
or medium sized. The current conditions are that a group should
meet two out of the following three requirements:
|
Small group
|
|
1. Aggregate turnover
|
|
not more than £2.8 million net (or
£3.36 million gross)
|
|
2. Aggregate balance sheet total
|
|
not more than £1.4 million net (or
£1.68 million gross)
|
|
3. Aggregate number of employees
|
|
not more than 50
|
| |
|
|
|
Medium sized group
|
|
1. Aggregate turnover
|
|
not more than £11.2 million net (or
£13.44 million gross)
|
|
2. Aggregate balance sheet total
|
|
not more than £5.6 million net (or
£6.72 million gross)
|
|
3. Aggregate number of employees
|
|
not more than 250
|
|
Note:
"net" refers to the set-offs and other adjustments
required by Schedule 4A of the Companies Act 1985 in the
case of group accounts and "gross" means without
those set-offs and other adjustments.
|
Company Law Review: The Secretary
of State will also consider increasing the individual and group
thresholds to the maxima allowed under EU law taking account of
the Company Law Review's final recommendations on small group
accounts. The current maximum threshold levels allowed under EU
law are:
|
Small company
|
|
1. Turnover
|
|
not more than £4.8 million
|
|
2. Balance sheet total
|
|
not more than £2.4 million
|
|
3. Number of employees
|
|
not more than 50
|
| |
|
|
|
Medium sized company
|
|
1. Turnover
|
|
not more than £19.2 million
|
|
2. Balance sheet total
|
|
not more than £9.6 million
|
|
3. Number of employees
|
|
not more than 250
|
|
Small group
|
|
1. Aggregate turnover
|
|
not more than £4.8 million net (or
£5.76 million gross)
|
|
2. Aggregate balance sheet total
|
|
not more than £2.4 million net (or
£2.88 million gross)
|
|
3. Aggregate number of employees
|
|
not more than 50
|
| |
|
|
|
Medium sized group
|
|
1. Aggregate turnover
|
|
not more than £19.2 million net (or
£23.04 million gross)
|
|
2. Aggregate balance sheet total
|
|
not more than £9.6 million (or £11.52
million gross)
|
|
3. Aggregate number of employees
|
|
not more than 250
|

| index