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Chartered Accountant of Singapore is a professional accounting qualification in Singapore. Candidates who successfully complete the Singapore Qualification Programme in Accounting are eligible to register as Chartered Accountants of Singapore under the Singapore Accountancy Commission Act 2013.
Currently, the Singapore Public Accountants Oversight Committee (PAOC) of the Accounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority, [1] established under the Accountants Act to determine, prescribe and review the requirements to be satisfied by people seeking to be registered as public accountants in Singapore, will not register any person as a public accountant unless the person is a member of ISCA.
ACCA offers a range of foundation-level certificates and diplomas – collectively referred to as Foundations in Accountancy (FIA) [13] – which provide an entry point for anyone new to accounting and finance and who doesn't meet the minimum entry requirements for the ACCA Qualification (which is three GCSEs and 2 A Levels or equivalent, in ...
The Accounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority (ACRA) is the regulator of business registration, financial reporting, public accountants and corporate service providers. ACRA's role is to monitor corporate compliance with disclosure requirements and regulation of public accountants performing statutory audit.
State licensing requirements vary, but the minimum standard requirements include passing the Uniform Certified Public Accountant Examination, 150 semester units of college education, [1] and one year of accounting-related experience. Continuing professional education (CPE) is also required to maintain licensure.
The Institute of Singapore Chartered Accountants (ISCA) is a designated entity in the SAC Act and confers the CA (Singapore) designation on behalf of SAC. The Singapore Chartered Accountant Qualification programme has three components: academic base, professional programme and 3 years of practical experience.
The CDAS was formed by the Ministry of Finance in December 2008 to undertake a review of the Singapore accountancy sector and profession. [7] The CDAS, chaired by Bobby Chin, chairman of the Singapore Totalisator Board and formerly managing partner of KPMG LLP Singapore, comprised members of the accounting profession, the business community, academia and the public sector. [7]
Accounting Standards Committee of Germany (ASCG, in German: DRSC) [4] India. National Advisory Committee on Accounting Standards with the aide and advice of Institute of Chartered Accountants of India and Institute of Cost Accountants of India; Iran. Accounting Standards Board [5] Malaysia. Malaysian Accounting Standards Board [6] Malta