Millennium Post (Kolkata)

Business integrity important for growth, ensuring investors’ confidence: NCLAT chief

- DELHI:

NEW

Emphasisin­g that business integrity is extremely important for economic growth, appellate tribunal NCLAT’s Chairperso­n Justice Ashok Bhushan on Tuesday said companies have the first responsibi­lity of preparing a set of accounts that can be trusted. He asserted that constant vigil needs to be exercised so that each element of the transparen­cy and governance chain works properly and to its best capacity.

The chairman of the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal was speaking at the internatio­nal conference on ‘Transparen­t Financial Reporting and Audit Quality - Pillars of Corporate Governance’, organised by the National Financial Reporting Authority (NFRA) in the national capital.

“Companies have the first responsibi­lity of preparing a set of accounts that can be trusted. In several cases, weak accounting practices have led to financial scandals. If record keeping is not proper, financial results are not accurate, the entire business environmen­t suffers,” Bhushan said.

If the financial position is not presented fairly, he said that raising money from institutio­ns and investors becomes difficult.

“Even though large investors do have better bargaining positions than small investors, we have seen instances where they have been misled into investing in companies where financials have been window-dressed and oversight mechanisms have not worked as effectivel­y as expected,” he noted.

As the nation aspires to be amongst the top three economies of the world, Bhushan said that business integrity is extremely important to support growth and ensure investors’ confidence and protection.

In his speech, he also mentioned about corporate frauds that had happened in the country and that in several cases, audits have not done enough and in extreme cases audit has acted in or even colluded with management interest at the cost of shareholde­r interest.

“If the auditor fails to point out infirmitie­s and this goes on year after year, it amounts to misleading the investors and the lenders. In certain cases, it may amount to cheating. We have seen numerous cases in India where money was diverted and auditors did not perform required procedures to detect the anomalies...,” he said.

At the conference, NFRA Chairperso­n Ajay Bhushan Prasad Pandey said that when the regulator began its operations, the focus was on enforcemen­t approach rather than supervisor­y approach as the prevailing scenario demanded that kind of medicine.

He asserted that constant vigil needs to be exercised so that each element of the transparen­cy and governance chain works properly and to its best capacity

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