The term descends via Big Six from Big Eight, the ancestor firms noted above apart from KMG having been numbered among the eight. The term Big Eight was coined in the 1980s to reflect the international dominance of the eight largest accounting firms. The Big Eight source their origins to mergers of regional accounting firms in the 1970s and preceding decades. The original Big Eight as coined in the 1980s were:
Arthur Andersen
Arthur Young
Coopers & Lybrand
Ernst & Whinney
Deloitte, Haskins & Sells
Peat Marwick International
Price Waterhouse
Touche Ross
The Big Eight became the Big Six in 1989 when Ernst & Whinney merged with Arthur Young to form Ernst & Young in June, and Deloitte, Haskins & Sells merged with Touche Ross to form Deloitte & Touche in August. The Big Six became the Big Five in July 1998 when Price Waterhouse merged with Coopers & Lybrand to form PricewaterhouseCoopers. In the wake of the 2001Enron scandal, Arthur Andersen was effectively removed as one of the Big Five, reducing the Big Five to the Big Four.
External links
http://www.big4.com
http://www.big5friends.com/
http://www.bigfivetalent.com/
http://www.exbigfive.com/
http://www.financedirector.com/bigfive/
http://raw.rutgers.edu/raw/internet/big5.htm Rutgers Accounting Web chart of links to Big Five accounting firms