We
have come quite close to end of the year 2013. And, I must admit we
have really come a very long way from our formative years. Look at the
way we have progressed and grown in our country as well as in the world.
We are the second largest accounting body of the world. All
stakeholders of the accountancy profession are responsible for this
success and development, and I am really grateful to them for lending
their complete support along with keeping their warmth and faith intact.
All our members have been with
their alma mater at every stage
of its development. While I am happy with the development in the
profession, I would never like this contentment to come in the way of
our ongoing efforts and endeavours. For about six and a half decades in
the past, the accountancy profession has taken up many measures
constantly to maintain and regulate the robust Indian economy.
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I do not believe in a big step or a giant leap
towards success-for me, it is always a collection of smaller steps and
that may be successes and failures, which are part of everybody’s life.
Failures make us wise provided we understand the story of failures and
the message behind them, provided we take failures also in our stride.
If we know the true meaning of failures, we will ultimately be able to
move ahead and write our own success stories. We should stop living in
the past, and defending our failures. Influential artist and philosopher
Elbert Hubbard says: There is no failure except in no longer trying. Celebrated motivator Dale Carnegie confirms that and says: Most
of the important things in the world have been accomplished by people
who have kept on trying when there seemed to be no hope at all.
Besides
helping our own government constantly in updating their accounting and
auditing skills, we have also reached out to our stakeholders abroad
extending our technical expertise and infrastructure support. Rising
constantly since its inception in 1949, we have now 22 foreign chapters
to help accountancy grow and prosper in the respective regions, and to
educate and train concerned professionals. Our international
associations including MRAs and MoUs have been growing. Every Council
year, we organise an international conference not just to showcase the
global and national professional growth and competence, but also to
register a strong professional presence before the national and
international accountancy fraternity.
Some of the remarkable
developments in the matters pertaining to accountancy, economy and
finance that took place over the past one month are:
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International Conference in Kolkata
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A three-day International Conference was successfully
concluded in Kolkata on 23rd November, 2013, and a record number of
delegates registered and actively participated and deliberated during
the Conference on the issues including global opportunities for
Chartered Accountants; banking sector-navigating through maze; emerging
paradigms in education, technical standards and company law; competency
mapping for capacity development of profession-country perspectives;
sustainability and value creation- emerging paradigms; IT-rewriting
rules of business; role of public enterprises in nationbuilding;
expanding trade through innovation and digital economy; global
competitiveness—evolving dimensions of trade; sustainable growth through
financial inclusion; and developing nation through wealth creation.
The
Conference was inaugurated by the Chief Guest Hon’ble President of
India Shri Pranab Mukherjee on 21st November, 2013. Union Minority
Affairs Minister CA. K. Rahman Khan, West Bengal Governor Shri M.K.
Narayanan and West Bengal Commerce & Industry Minister Shri Partha
Chatterjee were the Guests of Honour on the occasion. Hon’ble President
of India Shri Pranab Mukherjee praised the sincerity with which the
Chartered Accountants today are playing their role and coming all out in
support of the Government’s initiatives and measures. While addressing
the participants, Union Minority Affairs Minister CA. K. Rahman Khan
challenged his, i.e. Chartered Accountants’, fraternity to take up more
responsibility and measures to regulate and uplift the financial sector
of the country. West Bengal Governor Shri M. K. Narayanan and the
Commerce & Industry Minister also praised the contribution of
Chartered Accountants in the Indian economy.
Dignitaries across
the world from the professional fraternity came to Kolkata to
participate. Union Bank of India CMD, ONGC CMD and Member of Parliament
CA. Piyush Goyal, among others, also addressed the participants on the
first day. The second day started with a panel discussion on global
professional opportunities and ICAI’s foreign Chapter Chairs and
past-Chairs joined the panel to illuminate the participants. CAPA
President and Deputy-President addressed the professional concerns and
contributions from the Asian continent. ICAI past- Presidents, ICRA
Chair, NSDC CEO and Canara Bank CMD, among others, were some of the
speakers on the second day. An MoU between ICAI and AASB of Bhutan was
also signed, and AASB Chair of Bhutan spoke at length on happiness index
on the occasion. This MoU is yet another example of our commitment to
help and support the cause of professional development in all parts of
the world. West Bengal Finance and Excise Minister, ICSI President, and
President of Institute of Cost Accountants of India, among others, were
other prominent speakers on the last day. (A detailed report on the
International Conference has been published elsewhere in this Journal.)
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Auditors and Changing Economic Conditions
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As the year-end approaches, changing economic
conditions might require the auditor to reassess the appropriateness of
the planned audit strategy, materiality levels, risk assessments
(including identified fraud risks and other significant risks), and
planned audit responses. Such a reassessment is especially important if
the auditor planned the audit and performed the initial risk assessment
procedures early in the year or performed initial testing as of or
through an interim date. Audit planning is not a discrete phase of an
audit but, rather, a continual and iterative process. The nature and
extent of planning activities necessary depend on, among other things,
changes in circumstances that occur during the audit. Accordingly, the
auditor should modify the overall audit strategy and the audit plan as
per the changing economic conditions and amendments in relevant laws.
Our auditors must be aware of the risks of material misstatements in the
financial statements they audit in today’s volatile economic
environment. You must be aware that with the responsibility of
navigating more complex reporting standards and new technologies,
coupled with momentum building among regulators across the world for
mandatory rotation of auditors, we find ourselves more than ever under
public scrutiny. As such, today's auditor needs a heightened skill set
from those of a generation ago, as not only have standards become more
complex with more companies engaging in global commerce but at the same
time the techniques for perpetrating fraud have also become all the more
complex. A 21st century auditor must brandish a toolkit that includes
an IT systems pedigree and a good knowledge of forensics, valuations and
regulations, while maintaining the traditional degree of scepticism and
professional judgment that are the foundations of audit and attest
work. Despite quantum changes in auditing technology and reams of
evolving standards, critical thinking and communication remain among the
top prerequisites for auditing. Auditing was and always will be a
thinking person's profession. A piece of software will never replace
that. Let’s arm ourselves with the best of practices, best of
professional ethics and best of proactive critical thinking as auditors
in the days and years to come.
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Importance of Ind AS converged with IFRS
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High-quality financial reporting standards in the
form of Indian accounting standards converged with IFRS are essential
for transparency and comparability and for the efficient functioning of
companies and capital markets. Implementation of Ind ASs converged with
IFRS are in our country’s domestic interests and the best way to protect
investors. In a global economy, investors need a global accounting
language and IFRSs is the only answer today. As such, we should become
experts of Ind ASs and practically demonstrate deep commitment of this
country to reliable financial reporting. All of us-whether we prepare
financial statements, verify the integrity of financial statements or
study the numbers to understand the performance of a commercial
enterprise-are part of a global effort to reverse the economic slowdown.
Our efforts in this regard have already started producing results.
Being converged and not changed, our standards will have a national
flavour fostering quality financial information, promoting confidence in
the industry, accelerating and facilitating economic integration.
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RBI Measures on Bad Loans Soon
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Reserve Bank of India will very soon announce
measures to tackle the issue of banks sweeping bad loans under the
carpet. According to the RBI, the measures will encourage banks to
report troubled borrowers early and incentivise resolutions of bad loans
and their fair recovery. At present, all decisions in this context are
greeted with suspicion and scrutinised for an evidence of malfeasance.
The Finance Ministry has assured that bankers will not be penalised for
their honest and poor decisions, provided they consider all existing
facts and take the decision in the right forum. Fear of vigilance action
is another factor that inhibits the public-sector banks from resolving
their bad loans and in selling distressed assets at written-down rates.
According to the RBI Governor, the system is required to recognise the
financial distress early and take steps to resolve it, and it should
recover fairly in the interests of investors and lenders.
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Inflation and Economic Inclusive Growth
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Inflation appears because of high demand and less
supply, and therefore there has to be some balance in order to have some
order in the economy in the country. The economy is getting back on
track. The momentum is being captured. While it is true that inflation
is there in food and service sectors, sustained real wage growth over
the last few years has generated a bigger mass of purchasing power in
rural India. Trade deficit has come down by almost 50% from that a year
ago. Falling external deficit strongly indicates that our rupee will
soon be strengthened. Acknowledging this change, multinational companies
and conglomerates are investing in our country.
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Companies Act, 2013 not Applicable for May 2014 Examinations
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I would like to inform our students that the
Companies Act, 2013 notified in the Official Gazette on 30th August,
2013, (with partial enforcement of only 98 sections of the Companies
Act, 2013 from 12th September, 2013) shall not be applicable to the May
2014 examinations of both Intermediate (IPC) and Final Courses.
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Suggestions for Pre-Budget Memorandum 2014 Invited
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We are in the process of identifying issues for
inclusion in the Pre-Budget Memoranda-2014 that we will submit to the
Ministry of Finance as part of our responsibility. We have invited
suggestions from all our stakeholders on laws relating to Direct Taxes
(including International Taxation) and Indirect Taxes. Suggestions
relating to Direct Taxes have been invited under: suggestions for
widening the tax base and increasing the tax revenue; suggestions to
check tax avoidance; suggestions to reduce/minimise litigations;
suggestions for rationalisation of the provisions of Direct Tax Laws and
suggestions for removing administrative and procedural difficulties
relating to Direct Taxes. Suggestions relating to Indirect Taxes have
been invited to cover the Central Excise Law, the Customs Law, the
Service Tax Law and the Central State Tax Act, 1956.
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DVD of 61 Years of The Chartered Accountant Journal Released
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In our efforts to inform and update our members and other stakeholders, we have recently launched a DVD containing 61 years of The Chartered Accountant
journal, during the recently-held ICAI International Conference in
Kolkata. Union Minister of Minority Affairs CA. K. Rahman Khan and
Member of Parliament CA. Piyush Goyal launched this coveted and
longawaited DVD on the first day of the Conference. This HTML-version
DVD has journal issues from July 1952 to June 2013 in a searchable mode.
Readers can global search the contents through key words relating to
accounting, auditing, taxation, etc., besides searching by month, year,
volume, category (like Circulars & Notifications, ICAI News, Legal
Decisions, etc.), author, etc. This will be a New Year gift to all our
stakeholders including our members, as the DVD will be available for
sale by the Institute on 1st January, 2014, onwards.
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*****
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Being passionate about my profession, I have been quite certain in my heart about what my alma mater,
my profession should achieve and where it should move towards. Growth
that the accountancy profession has achieved in the recent past since
February this year has been a product of sincere and coordinated efforts
of our stakeholders. I have just tried to give it a direction and
momentum. Let me acknowledge that the employees of my alma mater
have stood in the thick and thin of the profession in these months with
all their heart and blood. I am quite proud to acknowledge their sense
of responsibility. All we have done to each other is to support and
motivate. Let me admit that it will not be easy maintaining the momentum
we have acquired at present.
The key will be only to act in all
instances. Our condition improves and gets better by change that we
bring to that with our endeavours. Nothing improves by chance. Whatever
efforts we make in our day-to-day life, bring us eventually closer to
betterment. Very beautifully and wisely, Norman Vincent Peale comments
on our actions: The secret of life isn’t what happens to you, but what you do with what happens to you.
All of us have the power to defeat and win. We will have to discover
our own methods. Let us not be bothered about our worries and anxieties.
Once active, they will start vanishing-and this is what psychiatrists
and counsellors also say. I believe in what the musician Nora Roberts
has to say about our efforts: If you don’t go after what you want,
you’ll never have it. If you don’t ask, the answer is always no. If you
don’t step forward, you’re always in the same place. Therefore, let us act and move our steps to success.
Like
liberty, power too comes with a sense of responsibility. When we get
power, our responsibility is to use that power to empower others around
us. Then we have to respect others who do not have that. A happy and
inclusive environment needs to be put in place. We will not be happy, if
people around us are not. That is what we do in order to celebrate our
happiness, i.e., to make others happy for the moment so that we can
celebrate our moments. Now, all we are required to do is to put this
understanding in practice in larger perspectives too. That is what good
leaders do. They try to serve their people using their knowledge and
skills, and they understand that life is more about the people who love
them. When we are at the helm of affairs, we have bigger
responsibilities, and the dedication and perseverance present in us are
of great help. All of us have power to do something extraordinary. We
only have to believe in ourselves.
My accountancy profession has
helped me in developing real-time personal management skills, and has
ultimately helped me in understanding the significance of ethics and
social responsibility in our life. Pursuing our profession with both our
heart and brain helps in achieving that objective.
I would like to extend my Merry Christmas wishes to all of you in advance. Let us celebrate together.
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Best wishes
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CA. Subodh Kumar Agrawal President, ICAI
New Delhi, November 25, 2013 |
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