There is also an investigation by the Australian Federal Police, up to nine investigations by the Tax Practitioners Board, and multiple investigations by Chartered Accountants Australia & New Zealand – any one of which could plunge the local PwC branch back into scandal and undo rebranding efforts.
But Mr Burrowes said he was confident it was time to begin the pivot.
“If I felt we were not making enough progress around [delivering on PwC’s commitments to change], then it wouldn’t have been the time to look at a new strategy and rebuild the brand,” he told the Financial Review ahead of releasing PwC’s three-year “corporate strategy on page” on Friday.
Refocusing on core client offerings
Titled Our Commitment to Reinvent, the strategy outlines how a leaner PwC – which has gone from about 900 partners in mid-2023 to what is expected to be about 650 later this year and has made about 680 staff redundant in the past year – will refocus on capabilities in auditing, tax advice and deals. This will be supplemented by four emerging priority areas where PwC believes it has an opportunity to grow: artificial intelligence, “trust in what matters”, the transition to net-zero and business model reinvention.
“Never in my 30 years working in this firm have I seen the level of corporate disruption that is happening at the moment,” Mr Burrowes said.
“We have to look at that level of corporate disruption and make sure the firm is able and capable to serve those clients in the way they want to be served. And that’s why it’s the right time to launch a strategy.”
Mr Burrowes conceded efforts to overhaul the once dominant advisory firm would take time.
“It was never going to be something that was done in six months,” he said. “It’s probably going to take us a couple of years, if not longer, to get all of the actions embedded.”
Marketing of aggressive tax strategies
But his response to two critical issues illustrated the up hill task ahead.
Asked to what extent PwC, to stay competitive, had to market aggressive tax strategies that got it in trouble last year and how that squared with repairing the brand, he rejected the premise of the question.
“What evidence have you got we market aggressive tax schemes today? … Our tax business is predominantly a compliance tax business; we help businesses gather data from their systems, comply and submit tax returns.”
Asked if that meant he was confident no PwC tax advisers were engaging in marketing aggressive tax strategies, even if legal, Mr Burrowes declined to provide a direct answer on two occasions.
Report into overseas scandal links
Asked about PwC International’s refusal to provide the Senate with a report – conducted by law firm Linklaters – into overseas aspects of the scandal, Mr Burrowes said it was out of his hands.
“I cannot release it because I don’t have it,” he said, adding when pressed: “No, no, no, no, no, I don’t have it, so we have been very clear about that. That is not within my control.”
Refusal to waive privilege has prompted the Senate to label PwC’s approach “symptomatic of its problematic engagement”.
The decision has also been questioned by local partners – behind closed doors – who doubt the firm could move on without full disclosure.
“I don’t see it like that at all,” Mr Burrowes said.