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MCA Paper on Auditing

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March 23, 2020

What is the issue?

  • The Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA) published a consultation paper whose success is predicated on a strong framework, engagement, etc.
  • This article will examine certain key concepts that impacts audit quality, the central theme of the MCA paper.

Why it recommended audit reporting on subsidiaries’ accounts?

  • The paper tries to avoid the negative consequences of an auditor not having visibility over a corporate group.
  • So, it wants a mandatory comment from the parent's auditor on its subsidiaries' accounts, which is inefficient in achieving this visibility.
  • Solution - Replace the current national standard that allows reliance on the work of other auditors with the international standard ISA 600.
  • [ISA 600 - Does not permit division of responsibility between auditors of the holding and subsidiary companies.]

What the paper wants to restrict the audit firm composition?

  • The MCA paper considers limiting the number of audits and partners for a firm to improve quality.
  • But, the market really wants capacity building i.e. larger firms with experience and diverse skill sets to serve large companies.
  • Such firms will be better able to integrate their resources and respond to emerging complexities in the framework and technology.
  • To achieve this quickly, smaller firms with varied capabilities need to consolidate, creating a positive correlation between larger firms and improved audit quality.

Why the paper wants to implement AQI?

  • The MCA paper wants to implement the Audit Quality Index (AQI), as it rates each auditor considering qualitative and quantitative factors.
  • AQI will help companies, including the unlisted ones, to identify the firms or auditors most suited to audit them.
  • Relevant parameters need to be added in developing the AQI framework, complemented by specific needs of the companies or audit committees.
  • If implemented properly, the AQI will lead to consolidation of smaller firms and building capacity, resulting in a natural "panel" of firms, without regulator intervention.
  • It also means fewer firms for the regulator to regulate, leading to better quality regulation.

Why continuous engagement needs to be ensured?

  • A greater engagement can repair the significant trust deficit between auditors and regulators.
  • The paper recommends deterring improper audits through inspection that is indeed the right direction.
  • Auditing involves the application of skill, expertise, judgement and experience; and goes beyond a checklist.
  • Therefore, inspections should be robust and carried out by competent and experienced auditors.
  • Auditors should go beyond audit files to cover the firm's quality-related processes.
  • The auditor needs to know that the regulator is engaged, aware, and constantly monitoring the auditor.

 

Source: Business Standard

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