Less than a month ago, KPMG’s local office was boasting on LinkedIn about how it had “integrity at its heart” as the firm celebrated “Global Values Week”.Within days, CEO Andrew Yates had resigned over misconduct in its audit division. A powerful parliamentary committee called an inquiry into the scandal, and clients and staff started racing each other to the exit.Subscribe to gift this articleGift 5 articles to anyone you choose each month when you subscribe.Subscribe nowAlready a subscriber? Fetching latest articles
KPMG witnesses show the firm still doesn’t get it
A disastrous parliamentary appearance suggests the accounting giant cares more about legal shields than re-earning the trust of fleeing clients.






