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Why are the International Education Standards (IES) so often only partially adopted? Why do many jurisdictions struggle to adopt and implement them fully?

With the goal of identifying the challenges and barriers to IES adoption and implementation, IFAC launched a pilot initiative earlier this year. The pilot initiative has helped identify ways to better inform how professional accountancy organizations (PAOs) and the profession can build capacity and how IFAC and our International Panel on Accountancy Education can provide support. The pilot initiative was launched in the Middle East, with plans to expand to the Caribbean and Asia-Pacific next in 2022 & 2023.

To kick the initiative off, in early 2022 13 PAOs from the region completed one-hour interviews and a detailed questionnaire focused on challenges to IES adoption and implementation. Through the interview process and a detailed questionnaire, three PAOs confirmed they now better understand the IES requirements. This improved understanding of the standards and the situation in each jurisdiction revealed that the PAOs have adopted the IES more fully that was previously understood.

PAOs also raised several concerns, which are broadly consistent across the region.:

Overall Challenge: Shortage of high-quality professional accountants in the MENA region

Education-Specific Challenges

  • University curricula is not consistently aligned to IES and/or PAO expectations, which impacts graduate quality and pass-rates in the professional exams.
  • PAOs find it difficult to self-assess their IES compliance, which makes it difficult to identify gaps and areas for improvement.
  • Limited accountancy education resource availability in the region, such as textbooks. Arabic-language resources are even more limited.
  • Limited appreciation amongst students of the wide variety of opportunities for professional accountants and the broader role of the profession in society.

Our starting point

IFAC, the World Bank, and the Arab Federation of Accountants and Auditors hosted a webinar on June 21, 2022, Connecting the Accountancy Education Ecosystem. The webinar provided a forum to encourage regional collaboration, foster collaboration with those influence the accounting education system, and provide access to experts. The event in June attracted more than 1,000 registrants and 500 live participants from our member organizations, regional Network Partners, supreme audit institutions, government and key accountancy education stakeholders.

Key stakeholders in the Middle East as well as other regions shared their unique successes and challenges in fully adopting IES. The speakers’ highlighted structural forces forming the global accountancy ecosystem (universities, governments, and PAOs), and how PAOs can collaborate with universities, governments, and other PAOs to enrich the quality of a jurisdiction’s accountancy education framework.

This is just the beginning! IFAC will continue to encourage this type of collaboration as part of our work in the Middle East region starting with:

  • First Bi-annual Virtual MENA PAO Knowledge Exchange Workshop on Accountancy Education (October 18, 2022)
    If you are interested in sharing your story at a future event, please reach out to Ms. Helen Partridge, Director of Accountancy Education, IFAC: HelenPartridge@ifac.org
  • MENA Outreach in 2023: IFAC will meet with PAOs and other stakeholders in MENA to:
    • Encourage cooperation between educators and PAOs, which can lead to more relevant curricula and high-quality graduates who will be better prepared for the professional exams and workplace
    • Work with PAO education directors to provide support in completing the IES self-assessment tool
    • Raise awareness of readily available education resource (see resources listed below)

What can you do?

Multi-stakeholder accountancy education models exist in many jurisdictions globally, including the MENA region. Each player in these complex models have a role to play in helping develop successful young professionals.

However, for this to happen, the stakeholders with direct and indirect influence over the path that these students take must come together to ensure that the steps to be taken—from university level to competency assessment and examinations and ultimately licensure—are aligned. Coming together will:

  • Develop a profession known for our integrity and commitment to the public interest
  • Attract more students to accounting programs at colleges and universities by reducing barriers to qualification or certification
  • Support organizational resiliency by facilitating the information necessary for strategic decision making.
  • Support capital market and global economy resiliency by facilitating financial and non-financial reporting to stakeholders who require high-quality, transparent information from both the private and public sectors

While our initial focus has been in the MENA region, we are continuing to broaden our outreach to identify how we can impact professionals’ education and development. In the meantime, IFAC continues to play our part in identify opportunities to invite the collaboration necessary and support the standards on licensure or qualification are based on.

We ask that all stakeholders participate in the discussion and be willing to help future generations find successful pathways to employment.

Event Recordings

The full recording and presentation slides are available. Thank you to our speakers, including:

  • Keryn Chalmers, Dean School of Business, Law and Entrepreneurship, Swinburne University of Technology, Melbourne, Australia
  • Dr. Mosaab Aljuaid, Executive Director for Membership and Professional Qualification, Saudi Organization for Chartered and Professional Accountants
  • Dr. Mohammad Nurunnabi, PhD, Chair, Department of Accounting, Prince Sultan University, Saudi Arabia
  • Mousa Sindaha, Board Member, Jordanian Association of Certified Public Accountants
  • Panayiotis Alamanos, CEO, SOL Crowe
  • Amna Abdulaziz Almahri, General Director, Accountants and Auditors Association, United Arab Emirates
  • Malek Sarieddine, Regional Business Development Manager for ACCA Middle East.

Additional Resources

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Helen Partridge

CFO

Helen Partridge was named IFAC’s CFO in April 2023. She leads IFAC’s finance team, manages its sustainability and carbon footprint reporting, and provides counsel to IFAC’s CEO. Ms. Partridge is also IFAC’s Director, Accountancy Education, leading IFAC’s global approach to advancing accountancy education, including working with the International Panel on Accountancy Education and education directors at IFAC’s member organizations and the Forum of Firms member firms. 

Prior to joining IFAC, Ms. Partridge was an accountant in practice, having spent 16 years in audit, advisory and audit systems design in the US and Asia Pacific. She has also served in the controllership function at a large multinational transportation company working with GAAP conversions, financial statement preparations and complex and significant transactions such as business combinations and tax planning. Ms. Partridge also serves on a not-for-profit board and is a CPA licensed in multiple states in the United States.

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Dana Jensen
Dana Jensen

Senior Manager, IFAC

Dana Jensen is a trilingual Senior Manager with more than 10 years of experience working at IFAC to support the development, adoption, and implementation of high-quality international standards. She is primarily responsible for managing engagement with the Middle East North Africa (MENA) and Caribbean regions at IFAC. She is also the lead staff responsible for managing the IFAC Professional Accountancy Organization (PAO) Development & Advisory Group, which actively contributes to IFACs strategic objectives by raising awareness on PAO development, facilitating adoption and implementation of international standards and best practices, and empowering PAOs with guidance, leadership, and technical assistance. Since 2021, Dana has led IFAC’s Islamic Finance thought leadership program to support the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) as it promotes socially responsible development and links to economic growth and social welfare.

Prior to her time at IFAC, Dana was a Policy Coordinator at the United Nations (UN) in the Department for Peacekeeping Operations. She holds an MSc from Columbia University (2011); Prince Sultan University-Banque Saudi Fransi Graduate Fellow in Islamic Finance (2021-2023); and holds a Diploma in Islamic Finance from the Chartered Institute of Management Accountants (CIMA) (2023).

Dana was born in New York to parents that worked at the UN as diplomats. She identifies as a Third Culture Kid with family in Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, Turkey, United Arab Emirates, and Yemen. She lived in several countries in the Middle East including Iraq, Jordan, and Lebanon before settling back in New York for University and Graduate level studies in 2004. While currently residing in New York with her husband and kids, Dana continues to travel to the Middle East regularly.