Govt amends FDI policy to promote local Audit firms
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This marks a major shift in India's FDI regime, which was earlier silent on the issue and resulted in a situation where the shareholders' agreement between a foreign investor and its Indian partner contained a clause specifying audit by Big Four firms such as KPMG, Ernst & Young, Deloitte or PricewaterhouseCoopers or Indian firms that are part of their network.
The clause has been inserted to prevent this kind of an arrangement and the belief is that one global firm will not agree to a joint audit with an international rival and this will open the doors for standalone Indian firms which have been complaining of being left out. The foreign firms control a majority of the audit work in listed entities as well as large Indian companies, causing a lot of heartburn.
In fact, a group of Indian chartered accountants had lobbied hard with the government to insist on joint audit for all companies and had pitched for an amendment to the Companies Act. An expert committee headed by former finance secretary Ashok Chawla, however, rejected the proposal as it was seen to be adding to costs but recommended ways to strengthen Indian firms and work towards the development of some large Indian entities.
"It is a very good move from a corporate governance point of view. Instead of promoting Indian firms, the existing system prevented them from becoming global brands. This government move will help Indian firms. #casansaar (Source - Times of India)
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