-
International Financial Reporting Standards
Grant Thornton International member firms combine broad international experience with technical know-how in audits of IFRS based financial statements
-
Financial Reporting Audit
Our Audit division has the capacity and knowledge to provide an assurance that the Final Financial Statements episodes will be reliable and timely
-
Compliance
We are committed to providing a service with the highest standards of excellence, integrity, and experience
-
Mexican Social Security & Local Tax
Growing businesses need strong tax management to meet current and future tax liabilities and we can help you achieve this, whatever challenges you face
-
International Taxes
Your people are probably your business’ most valuable asset. If you choose to send them overseas you will face certain tax liabilities, social security, and pension obligations
-
Prevention and detection of money laundering and anti-corruption practices
Prevention and detection of money laundering and anti-corruption practices. The process of hiding or disguising the existence, illegal source movement, fate or illegal use of property or funds, proceeding from illegal activities
-
Business consulting
Our business consulting services can help you improve your operational performance and productivity, adding value throughout your growth life cycle
-
Business risk services
Businesses worldwide are facing constant challenges as they try to navigate the wide range of risks involved in complex global markets
-
Forensic services
Fast-growing organizations need advisers that can dig deep into their business and provide detailed solutions
-
Forensic services
Fast-growing organizations need advisers that can dig deep into their business and provide detailed solutions
-
Forensic services
Fast-growing organizations need advisers that can dig deep into their business and provide detailed solutions
-
Forensic services
Fast-growing organizations need advisers that can dig deep into their business and provide detailed solutions
-
Forensic services
Fast-growing organizations need advisers that can dig deep into their business and provide detailed solutions
-
Forensic services
Fast-growing organizations need advisers that can dig deep into their business and provide detailed solutions
-
Forensic services
Fast-growing organizations need advisers that can dig deep into their business and provide detailed solutions
-
Forensic services
Fast-growing organizations need advisers that can dig deep into their business and provide detailed solutions
-
Recovery & reorganisation
We focus on identifying and resolving issues affecting profitability, protecting enterprise value and facilitating a full recovery where possible
-
Transactional Advisory Services
We can help you understand the value drivers behind successful transactions
-
Internal Audit
In today's global economy, organisations - both public and private - must demonstrate that they have adequate controls and safeguards in place
-
Payroll Outsourcing
Payroll and, in addition, personnel administration are the biggest and most time-consuming challenges facing expanding organisations
-
Accounting outsourcing
The goal is to increase the effectiveness of accounting processes, supporting your core business. It was created especially for businesses with high information needs, usually related to working in an international environment
-
Human Capital Services
We provide solutions for your company in order to identify, evaluate, reward and retain the best talent
Responding to COVID-19 has knocked global compliance issues down the agenda exposing multinationals to further risk. By reviewing the management of compliance obligations and the role of outsourcing, you can reduce risk and retain focus on core operations.
Global compliance has always presented a complex challenge for the finance teams of multi-national organisations operating in many territories. Local laws, regulations and other domestic specialities make compliance a risky headache. But, for many finance and compliance teams, the global pandemic has increased the challenge of doing business in multiple jurisdictions, heightening the risk of non-compliance risk. The crisis has shifted the priority for chief financial officers (CFO) and chief accounting officers (CAO) onto the near-term – keeping operations going by enabling and adjusting to a remote working environment and carefully managing cashflow.
Tony Thornbury, head of global compliance and reporting solutions for Grant Thornton and based in Dublin, senses that meeting these requirements is proving increasingly difficult: "Business continuity is the priority. The speed with which the global pandemic arrived forced businesses into remote working environments quickly, and the primary focus of multinationals has been keeping the show on the road."
But the compliance risk is still very much alive. “That hasn’t diminished,” Thornbury says. “In a time of competing priorities, global compliance issues may have been pushed down the list, but the risk of not complying in each country remains. And a lack of attention and adherence to the local requirements raises tax issues, fines and even director prosecutions. You may also face risk to your brand and reputation in those local markets too.”
The activities that may have been immediately de-prioritised in the wake of the pandemic are broad and bear various weight and significance across different jurisdictions. They include local GAAP filing, tax returns for local statutory reporting, sales tax compliance (VAT, GFC etc.), payroll administration, local country filings and myriad statistical returns depending on the territory.
Thornbury says: "Payroll is a particularly acute area at the moment. The speed with which government implemented complex mechanisms to support payroll systems and reduce unemployment posed a big challenge for compliance. These programmes have been pretty varied across different countries."
In these challenging times, with increasing pain points for compliance teams, CFOs and CAO are asking if the structures that they currently have in place are as efficient or as robust as they could be.
Compliance is an enduring challenge
Ordinarily, for large corporates operating out of the US, GAAP reporting is the compliance function’s primary concern, while global compliance, although an essential legal requirement, is a secondary issue that follows.
Even at the best of times managing compliance is complicated and can distract business leaders from the core business operations. On top of the regulations in individual jurisdictions organisations face wider complexity including different languages, time zones, and multiple professional services firms in different countries supporting primary reporting, corporate tax and sales tax. “Managing the myriad of issues with multiple suppliers is a headache,” says Thornbury, “especially if you’re dealing with 50 or 60 countries with maybe 30 or 40 different local suppliers.”
Centralise expertise across your international operations
As businesses assess the economic impact of COVID-19, there will be a period of reflection on future strategic opportunities and operating priorities, alongside how they build the resilience to recover. Addressing global compliance responsibility and the process can be an integral part of building that resilience by mitigating risk.
Thornbury says: “Anywhere that you have multiple jurisdiction trading require rigorous project management. So having someone that can take compliance off your hands and manage it for you can be invaluable. Having a single point of contact within an international network firm who is available, close by and who speaks your language gives you confidence in the coordination and quality of your compliance reporting at a time when it’s difficult to feel in control.”
For many international businesses, introducing a global compliance solution, can help provide additional support. A good outsourced global compliance solution can help CFOs and CAOs have visibility of where and when all the filing requirements are coming up, help liaise with statutory auditors, get statutory accounts prepared, audited and tax filed and paid.
Drawing on their compliance expertise and experience with other businesses, a trusted outsourced partner can also help identify insight on how to enhance compliance processes and oversight.
Outsource to support international growth
For fast-growth firms who move across borders quickly, or those that expect international expansion once recovery returns, the need for outsourced support is most significant. Many corporates will enter markets with just a small sales team and may not want to – or indeed have the time – to set up a fully operational local compliance team whether for accounting or payroll. In these situations, outsourcing can prove a useful tactic helping international businesses take leaps forward with speed and agility.
Indeed, the more countries a business goes to the more it makes sense to outsource. The prevailing model for multinationals now is to try and centralise accounting administration functions. And as much as possible minimise the accounting and administration requirement in the local territory.
In the current crisis, agility and scalability are critical attributes of resilience and recovery. “At the moment, you may be looking to scale down rapidly,” says Thornbury, “but you will probably have to scale up again, relatively or equally as quickly. Doing so with your people in a market that is not familiar can be challenging, and you may not be able to do that as fast as you want. Outsourcing supports that, allowing the business to respond fast, taking all the related legal and labour issues out of the equation.”
Acquisitions multiply compliance complexity
Businesses bedding in following recent international acquisitions before the pandemic may be struggling even more with group structures which in multiple jurisdictions. There are several things to consider, following a recent acquisition, including establishing a stable support function and back-office services.
Thornbury says: “When we started working with a market leading global internet service provider, they had acquired four major acquisitions in the past two or three years. Their group structure was massively complex, and they held multiple entities in each jurisdiction; so you might have four or five in France, Germany and as you went into Asia Pacific and Latin America, it was replicated there too.”
Simplification became an essential objective. “But it takes time, and to get to a position where you can do simplification you have to have everything under control. You have to have to be up to date in your filing.”
Another challenge following acquisitions is managing the number of service providers gathered through the process. Each acquisition has a layer of service providers which make compliance more complicated. There is a risk in such instances that audit and filing deadlines get missed, and overruns and fines mount up.
Are you ready to outsource compliance?
For businesses looking to outsource their global compliance function, the more consistency they already have in their reporting processes, the simpler it becomes to engage any service provider, particularly one service provider in multiple jurisdictions.
Thornbury says: “If you have a consistent process around the bridge between your US GAAP reporting and your local GAAP reporting, and a similarly consistent process and pulling your corporation tax return out of that it helps. And the more consistency you have across your jurisdictions, country-by-country, the more it lends itself to having an efficient solution from a compliance point of view. The more variants you have in those processes, the more inefficient it becomes.”
Too often, global compliance is an afterthought that does not get prioritised because it is not the primary function of reporting. Because it is not anybody’s prime job, it easily gets ignored. However, if there is chaos going on in the background, that can be extremely expensive and time-consuming to put right. When businesses start getting significant fines from tax people and local reputations are on the line, global compliance rises sharply up the Boardroom agenda.
Businesses have the option to remove the pain of compliance by centralising processes and handing management to a dedicated specialist with access to a network of local experts allowing flexibility across your territories at a time of unprecedented change.
- Have you identified the weak or high-risk areas in your global compliance framework?
- Do you have multiple service providers creating control challenges and inefficiencies?
- Do you have sufficient time, skills, knowledge and resources available within your network to manage an efficient centralised global compliance function?
- Do you have a consistent process around the bridge between your US GAAP reporting and your local GAAP reporting?
- Do you have visibility of all the compliance and reporting deadlines across your territories and can you monitor these on a real time basis?
- What is your strategy for further international growth? Will your compliance partner have knowledge of the potential jurisdictions you plan to move into?
- Do you have a compliance partner with the appropriate governance structures, KPIs, shared systems, and communications frameworks in place to ensure all your global compliances risks are adequately mitigated.
"During a crisis there are usually two types of people: those who cry and those who sell the tissues; our Firm developed a third role: we are the ones who care about listening and guiding our people, clients, and stakeholders to get ahead together"
Andrea Vega
BPS Practice Coordinator Nationwide.