Corporate Affairs Ministry Sets up 7-Member
Amarjit Chopra Panel to Control Big 4
The Corporate Affairs Ministry (MCA) has constituted a
seven-member committee to examine the comments received on the consultation
paper floated by it for enhancing audit independence and accountability in the
country.
The committee will examine the comments and make
recommendations requiring any amendments in law, rules and standards to achieve
the objective of enhancement of audit independence and accountability, official
sources said.
The panel has been asked to submit its report by June 30.
The committee members are: Amarjit Chopra, Past
President of CA Institute; KVR Murty, Joint
Secretary, MCA; PR Ramesh, former Deloitte India Chairman; Ajay Bahl, Co-Founder & Managing Partner, AZB Partners;
Sridhar Pamarthi, Joint Director, MCA; NK Dua, Joint Director, MCA, and Atma
Sah, Deputy Director, MCA.
It may be recalled that the MCA had earlier this year
come up with a 20-page consultation paper seeking comments from government
departments and regulatory agencies, besides others, by February 28 on wide
ranging issues affecting audit independence including a proposal to prohibit
audit firms from providing non-audit services to their clients, how to address
the oligopoly of ‘Big4’ audit firms (economic concentration of audit) and
making the National Financial Reporting Authority (NFRA) prepare a separate
panel of auditors for appointment as auditors of listed entities.
Addressing ‘threats’
The consultation paper had sought to address five
“threats” for auditor independence — self interest,
self-review, advocacy, familiarity and intimidation. Comments were also sought
over making joint audit mandatory for bigger companies, whether number of
audits under one audit firm/auditor be reduced and whether the number of
partners under one audit firm be reduced or fixed.
It also sought views on whether the holding company’s
auditor must also review the working papers of auditors of subsidiary and make
mandatory comment on the account of subsidiary companies.