Ernst & Young faces many difficulties when embarking on its plan to merge all its European partnerships at the same time, according to the co-head of KPMG Europe, the only accountancy firm to have integrated firms.
KPMG merged its UK, German and Swiss practices last year but was outdone last month when E&Y unveiled plans to unite all its 45 European firms in one big move and incorporate another 42 partnerships in Africa, the Middle East and India under the same 87-firm single management umbrella.
John Griffith-Jones, KPMG Europe co-head, admitted in an interview with the Financial Times that KPMG’s own three-way efforts had been more difficult than expected because each firm had its own culture and practices.
‘But the advantages of having only three is you can have a discussion about which way to do things and you can work your way through it,' he said. ‘If you had had 15 or 25,or 45 or 87, you would have the danger that you would never get anything agreed and you would either go for the compromise of saying everyone continue to do exactly what they were, or else you would just be swamped by somebody being unhappy about every single thing you do.’
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