May 2006
- Technical update
- by Various topic: Technical update
- Letter from... China
- by Peta Tomlinson topic: Countries, IAS, International business
- Dispatch
- by Paul Gosling topic: News
- Closer to the edge of prudence
- by Tony Haggar topic: Budgets
- The trauma of SME succession
- by Sarah Perrin topic: Business, SME
- CEOs behaving badly
- by Stefan Stern topic: Business, Management
- RIP IHT?
- by John Newth topic: Tax
- Letter from... Ireland
- by Siobhan Creaton topic: Countries, Industries
- Australia's red hot commodities
- by Janine Mace topic: Countries, Industries
- Asian regulators grow their adult teeth
- by Peta Tomlinson topic: Corporate governance, The profession
- The skill sharers
- by Colette Steckel topic: Members profiles, People
- Regulators grow their adult teeth
- by Peter Williams topic: Corporate governance, The profession
The latest international technical news
China has made a bold move in the right direction by bringing into line its accounting and auditing standards with international rules. Peta Tomlinson reports
Paul Gosling reports on the latest news
Is it the end of the game, with the success of the UK Chancellor’s Budget heavily dependant on getting his economic forecast right? Tony Haggar writes
For family-owned businesses, handing over to the next generation can be a complex process involving many aspects - not just legal, tax and funding technicalities, but personal issues too. Sarah Perrin explains
How on earth do you deal with the CEOs from hell? Stefan Stern reports
John Newth charts the course of the controversial Inheritance Tax
Siobhan Creaton reports on the decline of the sugar industry in Ireland
In the hot, red dust of Australia’s outback there is a new gold rush going on these days, reports Janine Mace
Peta Tomlinson looks at financial regulators post-Enron
ACCA members Mohamed Taha Hammod Al-Hashimi from Yemen, and Abbas Shojaei from Iran, are respected and influential financial professionals in the Middle East. They talk to Colette Steckel
Peter Williams looks at financial regulators post-Enron


