Financial power list 2008

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1 George Osborne, shadow chancellor
Since Alistair Darling's pre-Budget report, which stole shamelessly from Tory tax proposals, Osborne has become the de facto chancellor. As Labour's support in business circles dips, the Tories' rises and Osborne is playing up to it with a full charm offensive. Can he maintain the momentum?

2 Kieran Poynter, chairman, Pricewaterhousecoopers
The straight-talking chairman and senior partner of the UK's largest accountancy firm PricewaterhouseCoopers is never far from the limelight. And having been chosen by chancellor Alistair Darling to investigate the circumstances of the data loss from HM Revenue & Customs, Poynter is now a political figure. Will he stick the boot in?

3 Paul Boyle, chief executive, Financial Reporting Council
Boyle would be a key figure in any accounting power list, but 2007 has seen his stock rise considerably. With his ideas on audit ownership gaining popularity worldwide, Boyle looks set to eclipse his enemies at the Big Four who disliked his interest in the audit choice area.

4 Dave Hartnett, acting chairman, HM Revenue & Customs
As busy as 2007 was for Hartnett, the acting chairman will have to step up a gear in the next 12 months. Expected to end up either as chief executive or chairman at HMRC, Hartnett will have to restructure the department's faltering management team, batten down its IT hatches and meet tough service level targets.

5 Alistair Darling, chancellor of the Exchequer
Darling comes fifth in our list, way behind Osborne. He may have his fingers on the buttons, but he doesn't have his finger on the pulse. The Northern Rock crisis and a botched attempt to reform capital gains tax made 2007 a year of hell for Darling.

6 John Griffith-Jones, chairman, KPMG
Other Big Four bosses may make more money, but it is KPMG that is making the running. The merger with the German firm is still fresh, and the rest of the profession is watching expectantly. If it fails, the others will crow. If it succeeds, the others will follow.

7 Arthur Levitt, chairman, US Treasury advisory committee on the auditing profession
No stranger to putting the boot into the global firms, former SEC chairman Levitt's impending views on the concentrated US audit market are likely to be more hard-hitting than the FRC's equivalent. But if he barks, can his bite match up? He lost out on plans to block auditors offering clients extra services in 2000 after all.

8 Pervenche Beres, chairman, EU economic and monetary affairs committee
Beres ruffled feathers in 2007 at the International Accounting Standards Board by challenging IFRS 8, the standard on the reporting of company segments. She questioned the accountability of the IASB, and will likely be a thorn in its side in 2008 as well.

9 Ashley Almanza, chairman, the Hundred Group of Finance Directors
BG Group's reclusive FD is known for letting the numbers do the talking, but his appointment as chairman of the Hundred Group will demand a more prominent media profile. He will need to come out of the shadows in 2008, and convey his views on important matters like audit choice and corporate tax reform.

10 Christopher Cox, chairman, Securities and Exchange Commission
Cox recently redeemed himself on this side of the Atlantic, when he fulfilled a promise on convergence of accounting standards by removing the requirement for convergence to US GAAP for companies that use IFRS. Cox will remain significant in 2008, but only by listening to what business has to say.

11 Fair Value accounting
The summer credit crunch has provided the opponents of fair value with plenty of ammunition as banks marked illiquid assets to market only to take heavy writedowns later on. Talk of 'bubble-blowing' continues to abound as bank FDs scramble desperately to clean up the mess and try and keep their jobs.

12 Sir David Tweedie, chairman, International Accounting Standards Board
Love him or hate him, Sir David is doing exactly what his mandate set out - conquering the world with a single set of accounting rules. There have been obstacles at every turn but single-minded Sir David has not let these stand in his way. Not to be underestimated.

13 David Viniar, CFO, Goldman Sachs
Long before the credit crunch, a Goldman Sachs team led by Viniar pulled off the financial coup of the year. While other investment banks fell over each other to get in on the sub-prime action, Viniar hedged against sub-prime - a move that would earn his bank a £2bn windfall. Watch his star shine in 2008.

14 Sir Christopher Hogg, chairman, Financial Reporting Council
Using one of the best contact books in the City, Sir Christopher is able to pull people together from across the FTSE 100 in a single gathering. But in 2008, we'll see how tough the UK's accounting watchdog will be as the credit crunch derails business plans and challenges the work of FDs and auditors alike.

15 Peter Wyman, head of professional affairs, PricewaterhouseCoopers
Over the past few years, Wyman has stepped out of the limelight but his influence has not waned. Opinionated and clever, Wyman continues to ensure the importance of accountancy in all spheres of life remains at the forefront. Today he fights quietly but no less fiercely. He remains an accountant to be reckoned with.

16 Michael Cleary, chief executive, Grant Thornton
BDO Stoy Hayward’s Jeremy Newman tends to get the headlines, but Grant Thornton’s ‘quiet man’ Cleary has made an impact with the Robson Rhodes merger. Most industry watchers are fairly skeptical about the firm’s ability to challenge the Big Four, but for the time being Cleary’s actions are speaking louder than BDO’s words.

17 New NAO chief
The individual selected to take control of the NAO in 2008 will be under the most intense media scrutiny after the travails of Sir John Bourn. Pressure aside, the new entrant will spearhead the operations of one of the UK's most influential watchdogs. His or her political and auditing clout cannot be underestimated.

18 Gerrit Zalm, chairman, IASB trustees
The former Dutch finance minister - and the longest-serving finance minister in five cabinets from 1994 to 2007 - takes up the post of new head and overseer of the IASB's trustee committee in January 2008. His new role is no less political.

19 Helen Weir, FD, Lloyds TSB
Brisk and to the point, Weir is one of the few banking FDs to remain blissfully unaffected by the credit crunch. Lloyds hasn't been involved in those sorts of bets, so Weir isn't spending her time totting up the losses. She wants to be a chief executive, so 2008 may be her year.

20 Non-domiciles
Will they stay or will they go? The prospects for the UK's 115,000 non-doms are unclear. Faced with a crackdown on their remittance of income into the UK, as well as a £30,000 charge if they are here for seven years or more, many are saying that they'll leave. The Treasury thinks it has the matter finely-balanced and that they'll stay. Watch this space.

21 Bob Mellors, FD, Sports Direct
Sports Direct's 2007 rollercoaster ride may come off the rails in 2008,and the same could be true for 'no-show FD'. Last year, Bob Mellors stuck to the shadows as infuriated investors and analysts clamoured for his financial opinion. In 2008, Mellors will be forced to step up to the plate if Sports Direct's troubles continue - provided he hangs on to his FD role.

22 Baroness Noakes, Tory Treasury spokeswoman
Committed to transparency, the Treasury spokeswoman for the Conservative Party last year successfully paved the way for public access to audit inspection reports, of audit firms. The brains behind the more sensible Tory tax and regulation moves, Noakes is the person to know at Tory HQ.

23 Mark Freebairn, head of the FD practice, Odgers Ray & Berndtson
If you want a job as a top FD in the UK this may just be the man to deal with. Widely regarded as perhaps the most influential man in his sector, Freebairn knows everyone and their business. When it comes to contacts, there are few who can rival, though Suzanne Wood at Heidrick & Struggles might dispute the claim.

24 Charlie McCreevy, Internal Markets commissioner, EU
McCreevy has shown his mettle since taking up his post at the EU. The Irish-born politician is well respected in business circles. He is level-headed and fair but ballsy. He's also building bridges with the US by reciprocating the SEC chairman's decision to drop convergence to US GAAP.

25 Margaret Ewing, vice-chairman, Deloitte
Fresh from being the saviour of BAA shareholders, Ewing has carved out a niche at Deloitte as the agony aunt to top FDs. Close to chief executive John Connolly, she is a very senior figure within Deloitte. Don't be surprised to see her star rise in 2008.

26 Richard Bacon, MP
Incisive and informed, Bacon is one of the most formidable members of the Commons public accounts committee. With HMRC facing a leadership crisis and the NAO recovering from the Sir John Bourn fallout, Bacon will be asking tough questions and holding civil servants accountable.

27 John Connolly, chief executive, Deloitte
It's make or break for Connolly as the two years he gave Deloitte to hit £2bn in revenues ends soon. He made some high-profile signings with Margaret Ewing and Dame Sue Street. This year will show whether it was worth it.

28 Tony Orhnial, head of personal taxes, The Treasury
Orhnial is the man in charge of personal tax and welfare reform at the Treasury. He'll take the flak if the non-dom decisions go horribly wrong, as well they might. Come the year end, Orhnial might be called upon to sort out the mess.

29 Michael Izza, chief executive, ICAEW
There were calmer waters for the ICAEW in 2007, but boss Izza has several issues to contend with, not least growing the institute on the international arena, increasing static member numbers and making sure its new advisory board structure works.

30 Jeremy Newman, managing partner, BDO Stoy Hayward
Newman will cast a long shadow over Baker Street when he steps down as BDO Stoy Hayward managing partner to lead BDO International. Newman has transformed BDO into a Big Four challenger and has dominated the choice in the UK audit market debate.

31 Jann Brown, FD, Cairn Energy
The FD of Cairn Energy dismisses any notion of a glass ceiling in accountancy, despite being one of a handful of women leading FTSE 100 company finance fu nctions. But Brown's achievements aren't gender-related, she is at the forefront of the oil company's key operations in India, Bangladesh and Nepal.

32 Deepak Singh, CIO, HMRC
Disaster management may be part of Singh's remit as a CIO, but even he wouldn't have thought it would be the main part of his new job with the taxman. The newly-appointed IT boss has enough to deal with in bringing the department's systems into the 21st century, without working alongside PwC chairman Kieran Poynter to make sure staff don't remove any more sensitive info.

33 Jayne-Anne Gadhia, chief executive, Virgin Money
If Virgin succeeds in annexing Northern Rock, Gadhia will have the fate of 6,000 of the ailing bank's staff in her hands. Investors, mortgage holders, the accountancy profession and the general public will look to Gadhia to engineer a turnaround.

34 Chris Dickson, executive counsel, JDS
Dickson's tenure with the Joint Disciplinary Scheme is drawing to a close, but he has been a formidable investigator of the profession's misbehaviour. His last cases could be among the most controversial. Will Ernst & Young escape the rap for Equitable Life?

35 Judges, ICAEW disciplinaries
How will the judges in ICAEW's discipliniaries respond to the public gaze? Some members have warned the institute should look at its human rights compliance before making the move, and it will involve a culture change at the institute.

36 Allen Blewitt, chief executive, ACCA
Blewitt's time as ACCA boss has seen the association push into new territories with zeal, while at home he has regularly stuck the boot into rivals ICAEW. Will he go out with a bang during the next 12 months, and can his successor continue his good work?

37 Gareth Arnold, UK head, Microsoft small business software
The accounting community has waited long enough for Microsoft to break the small business software monopoly. Now Arnold will lead the IT giant's push to win over accountants through special deals for Office Accounting 2008, and the set up of its accountants' network.

38 Derek Patterson, FD, IM Litigation
Moore Stephens is defending itself against a £45m negligence suit bankrolled by a third party. The man in control of IM Litigation funding's prodigious purse-strings is FD Patterson. If the case against Moore Stephens is upheld, Patterson could be at the heart of similar suits filed against other firms.

39 Sovereign Funds
A wall of money is heading our way. Ernst & Young chairman Mark Otty hinted earlier this year that a lot of work for the profession might come from such pots of cash. Interested in buying up British business, the funds, will be queuing up to take stakes in banks when they report (expected) writedowns at their February year-ends.

40 Prince Charles
The heir to the throne's green accounting system was a decided success before Christmas. BT chairman Sir Mike Rake said it was simpler and easier to use than any others, and predicted it would be taken up by many companies, including his own. Sir Michael Peat is the well-known accounting brain behind the royal.

41 Sir David Walker
The pioneer of the new code of conduct for the private equity industry will now have to make sure the code works and is adhered to. He must also find a way to make sovereign wealth funds play by the same rules as the buy-out funds.

42 Edward Troup, business tax chief, the Treasury
The Treasury's business tax chief faces a busy 12-months sorting out the chaos of CGT reform. Reforming policy on foreign dividends, interest relief and CFCs also remain to be resolved as the government continues to grapple with the fallout from the European Court of Justice GLOs.

43 Anne Redston, small business tax guru
Still probably the sharpest of the taxman's critics on small business taxation, Redston will continue to be a candid critic of government in 2007. She rarely misses the crucial point and was the campaigning adviser behind the celebrated Arctic Systems cases.

44 Sir Mike Rake, chairman, BT
Sir Mike used to be chairman of KPMG International. Now he’s chairman at BT, on the board of Barclays and of the Financial Reporting Council. Having changed sides he stands on the brink of being one of the most influential people on audit in the UK.

45 Mark Otty, chairman, Ernst & Young
Otty is banking on success coming from the firm's connections to the emerging markets. With the established markets in meltdown that could be a good bet.

46 Linda Richardson, managing partner, Morley & Scott
Count up the number of female managing partners out there and you get to the grand total of… one. Linda Richardson runs Morley & Scott, which entered the Accountancy Age Top 50 last year. She alone will carry the banner for women reaching the top in accountancy practice.

47 Cameron Scott, executive counsel, AIDB
Scott is the new Chris Dickson, the man charged with charging the profession for its negligence and worse. His record - one case, one defeat - is not as stellar as Dickson's, but it would be a brave man who thought lightly of being inv estigated by the FRC's rottweiler. MG Rover, iSoft and Farepak should keep him busy.

48 The junior official
We don't know who he/she is, only that Alistair Darling thinks they've been a very naughty boy/girl. But ironically, the official is now in a position of some power. They will have a good story to tell about HMRC, and Darling will be desp erately hoping the unnamed bungler doesn't lift the lid on the taxman's failings.

49 Accountancy Age avatar Belinda Blessed
She is dark and gorgeous and one of the thousands of characters populating the bizarre virtual world Second Life. It may seem frivolous, but this parallel computer world already has advisers pondering ways to use it for tax planning. Blessed will be right there to cover this fast-evolving universe.

50 Jane Kennedy, financial secretary to the Treasury
It's a matter of when, not if, Kennedy hits the headlines for her role in effectively overseeing the tax system, something which hasn't gone too well recently, to say the least.


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