The Institute of Chartered Accountants, Ghana (ICAG) has won a high court case, affirming its exclusive statutory mandate to regulate, train, certify, and admit professionals into the accountancy profession in Ghana.
The court, in a case involving the Chartered Institute of Certified Tax Accountants, Ghana, the National Accreditation Board, ICAG, and the Attorney-General, established that all disciplines of accountancy, including tax accounting, fall within the regulatory jurisdiction of ICAG.
The High Court held that the training, certification, admission, and regulation of persons practising any branch of accountancy are matters exclusively reserved for ICAG under Ghanaian law. The court further declared unlawful the activities of the applicant, which sought to regulate and certify individuals as Chartered Certified Tax Accountants. As a result, the court restrained the organisation from advertising, training, certifying, and admitting persons into such membership programmes.
The ruling is expected to have far-reaching implications for professional accounting education and certification in the country, particularly in specialised areas such as taxation and financial reporting.
ICAG explained that its regulatory authority derives from the Institute of Chartered Accountants, Ghana Act, 2020 (Act 1058), which grants the institute sole responsibility for regulating the accountancy profession in Ghana.
The institute also said the ruling aligns with the provisions of the law that empower it to train, examine, certify, and admit persons into the profession while maintaining professional standards and ethical conduct.
ICAG urged students, employers, educational institutions, and the general public to exercise caution when enrolling in professional accounting programmes or relying on qualifications offered by organisations claiming authority to regulate or certify accountants.
The institute warned that any institution, body, or organisation presenting itself as authorised to train, certify, license, or regulate accounting professionals in Ghana without legal backing may be acting unlawfully. It stressed that qualifications issued by such entities may not enjoy legal recognition under Ghana's regulatory framework.
ICAG said it remained committed to protecting the integrity and credibility of the accountancy profession and would continue taking appropriate steps to prevent unauthorised institutions from misrepresenting themselves as professional accounting bodies.
The institute also emphasised the importance of maintaining uniform professional standards in accounting practice to safeguard public confidence in financial reporting, taxation, and auditing.
The Institute of Chartered Accountants, Ghana, was established under the Chartered Accountants Act, 1963 (Act 170) and later reconstituted under the Institute of Chartered Accountants, Ghana Act, 2020 (Act 1058). The institute serves as the country's principal professional accountancy body and is responsible for promoting the study and practice of accountancy, regulating members of the profession, and ensuring compliance with professional and ethical standards.
Under the Companies Act, 2019 (Act 992), members of ICAG are recognised as the professionals authorised to undertake statutory audits of company accounts in Ghana.
Industry observers say the ruling provides long-awaited legal clarity on the regulation of accounting and tax-related professional qualifications, while strengthening efforts to protect students, employers, and the public from potentially misleading certifications.