This is because, our feature explains, graduates are concerned with ethics and social responsibility and are bringing these attitudes to bear when deciding who to work for. It’s not the first time this view has bubbled to the surface. Audit and assurance have often been faced with questions of ethics when talking to graduate recruits.
One of the reasons the big firms have introduced service lines that advise on the environment and corporate responsibility is that it sends a clear message that the firms are thinking about the same things that graduates think about. Apart from it being potentially lucrative, that kind of service line says ‘we care’.
It’s difficult to see where tax advisers find a ‘feel good’ service line that demonstrates their integrity. What do they reach for to make it clear that, not only is the profession intellectually rewarding, but also does good in the world?
It’s difficult to imagine given the bad press corporate tax affairs have attracted in recent months. Tax is currently high on the agenda because of a concern that some corporates don’t always pay their dues. But it’s worth clinging on to the OECD conclusion: the profession enables taxpayers to comply with tax law and pay the right tax.
The question is how to get that across. The Taxables, the typical tax family invented by the CIoT, is one way, but the profession could do more by finding ways of helping people who cannot afford advice. The public perception is that the rich can afford people to help pay less than they should. The profession should be working to undermine this or its reputation will always be open to question.
Tim Smart, chief executive of BT Global Services UK, argues that far from being a "superficial PR exercise", CSR is now delivering genuine commercial benefits 20 Nov 2007
MEPs vote in favour of tougher carbon emission rules, but opposition to wide-reaching programme in some member states is strengthening 07 Oct 2008
Five year scheme will fund university research into green car technologies with good prospects of commercialisation 07 Oct 2008
Renewable Fuels Agency report shows progress is being made to improve biofuel's green credentials, but many high profile firms are still uncertain whether their fuel meets sustainability standards 07 Oct 2008
Philip Mossop, director of Intelligent Waste Management Solutions, explains why the waste industry needs to embrace a whole new business model if it is to help deliver the increase in recycling levels that customers are demanding 07 Oct 2008
On a visit to GE's flagship turbine manufacturing facility in Germany, Andrew Donoghue hears how the engineering giant is betting big on wind energy 06 Oct 2008
In her excoriating account of the US financial crisis, Hazel Henderson argues that only the development of new, more sustainable business and accounting models can prevent a repeat of the current turmoil 02 Oct 2008




