Regardless of their voting intentions, they overwhelmingly expect things to improve after Nov. 3.
The shutdown in March forced O&G firms to confront the inefficiencies of their financial processes.
Most companies don’t expect to reduce their office space in the coming year.
As many businesses and consumers have been forced to deal with the difficult conditions thrust upon them by the COVID-19 pandemic, so too have fraudsters needed to make adjustments just to continue their life of crime.
If the pandemic has a silver lining, it’s that the global accounting world is becoming smaller and borderless.
As the pandemic has stretched on further into 2020, with more lockdowns and economic disruption predicted heading into the fall and winter, continuing to offer fee waivers has not always proved financially viable.
There are two key areas that CPA firms should closely watch to manage audit fees in 2020.
At least 39 states did not have enough money to pay all of their bills at the end of 2019, leaving them ill-prepared to shoulder the costs of the novel coronavirus pandemic, according to a new report.
Now that U.S. companies have experienced two fiscal quarters in the midst of the novel coronavirus pandemic, quarterly reporting for Q3 doesn’t seem to be getting any simpler, according to a new report from Deloitte.
But the federal government has been able to correct some of its earlier missteps, like sending millions of stimulus checks to the deceased, according to the Government Accountability Office.