What responsibility does the independent accountant have for evaluating the business judgment and business planning of the registrant?
Interpretive Response: Business judgment and business planning are within the province of the registrant. Thus, the independent accountant may accept the registrant’s business judgment and business planning and express reliance thereon in his letter. However, if either the plans or judgment appear to be unreasonable to the independent accountant, he should not accept them as justification. For example, an independent accountant should not accept a registrant’s plans for a major expansion if he believes the registrant does not have the means of obtaining the funds necessary for the expansion program. Question 4: If a registrant, who has changed to an accounting method which was preferable under the circumstances, later finds that it must abandon its business plans or change its business judgment because of economic or other factors, is the registrant’s justification nullified? Interpretive Response: No. A registrant must in good faith justify a change in its method of accounting under t