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PwC chairman receives pounds 3.7m slice of firm's 5% profits rise
[September 14, 2014]

PwC chairman receives pounds 3.7m slice of firm's 5% profits rise


(Guardian (UK) Via Acquire Media NewsEdge) The chairman of PricewaterhouseCoopers in the UK, Ian Powell, is to receive a pounds 3.7m share of the accountancy partnership's rising profits after a year in which the business grew by 5%.

Underlining a confidence in sustained demand for professional services, PwC also created 700 new jobs and took on 1,300 graduates and school-leavers during the year, taking total headcount to 18,100 by the end of June.

Powell said the strong performance of PwC's UK partnership reflected an improving British economy, where the appetite for investment was returning.

He said this was not just confined to London: "Encouragingly, the UK economy is showing positive signs of rebalancing. We are seeing significant growth potential in the UK regions." Operations in the Midlands and in Yorkshire and Humberside were highlights, up by 7% and 9% respectively.



Powell's share of profits rises from pounds 3.6m to pounds 3.7m for the year while fellow board executives are to receive an average of pounds 1.83m. The average profit-share payout for the partnership's 814 members in the UK was pounds 722,000, up 2% on the previous year.

Underlying profit windfalls for Powell and his fellow PwC partners have risen by considerably more because changes to certain tax treatments no longer require them to contribute individually to the tax bills of PwC subsidiaries.


Overall pretax profits for the UK partnership rose by 5% to pounds 793m on the back of revenues of pounds 2.81bn, also up by 5%. Among the highlights was a strong performance from PwC sales to government, which rose by 27% to pounds 240m. But revenues from FTSE 100 clients fell by 3% to pounds 441m.

PwC is noted for its market-leading role in auditing the accounts for these clients - it carries out 40% of audits for members of the index - but this work accounts for only about 5% of its overall revenues.

One of the main sources of revenue growth continues to be its tax advisory practice, which is the largest in the UK among the big four accountancy firms. This division's revenues rose 5% to pounds 714m, a quarter of the partnership's turnover.

In its annual report, published today, PwC acknowledges the "continued spotlight on corporate taxes". The report says: "The world is changing, and our focus over the last year has been to continue to adapt, transform and diversify our business." It added that a global code of conduct has been "refreshed".

"The code helps us best serve our clients by ensuring we balance their technical needs with reputational concerns." PwC said it had provided more than 6,000 hours of free technical support worth pounds 400,000 to political parties during the year, up by more than 20%, with almost 4,500 hours going to Labour and the balance mainly to the Lib Dems.

PwC's party donation history at the Electoral Commission shows its offer of support for the main political parties is typically taken up by those on the opposition benches.

Ian Powell, the UK chairman of PwC, said the accountancy firm's strong yearly performance reflected Britain's improving economy (c) 2014 Guardian Newspapers Limited.

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