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3549 items in total found

Popular Press | 2021

View: Do we really need to rejig the gig economy?

Errol D'Souza

The Economic Times | News

Popular Press | 2021

The growth path India must take(with Astha Agarwalla)

Errol D'Souza

Business Standard

Popular Press | 2021

Managing the medical oxygen supply chain in India(with Anand Nair)

Debjit Roy

Hindu BusinessLine

Popular Press | 2021

Rise of shadow entrepreneurship

Chirantan Chatterjee

The Hindu

Popular Press | 2021

Why state govts need to release death registration statistics. Now.

Chinmay Tumbe

Times of India

Popular Press | 2021

Same Language Subtitling For A Billion Readers

Brij Kothari

BW Education

Popular Press | 2021

Another wave spells more nutrition loss (with Karan Singhal, and Advaita Rajendra)

Ankur Sarin

The Hindu

Popular Press | 2021

How India can promote job creation (with Ejaz Ghani)

Abhiman Das

Hindu BusinessLine

Journal Articles | 2021

Auditors’ negligence and professional misconduct in India: A struggle for a consistent legal standard

M. P. Ram Mohan and Vishakha Raj

Columbia Journal of Asian Law

Gross negligence is a severe form of negligence. Its severity has been characterized using the presence of a mental element or mens rea accompanying the negligent act. Within the context of professional negligence, gross negligence is important as it constitutes professional misconduct. For auditors, a finding of professional misconduct through disciplinary proceedings can result in suspension or expulsion from the profession. In India, gross negligence is regularly used in disciplinary proceedings against auditors and also by the Securities and Exchange Board to determine whether an auditor has violated any securities regulations. Given the implications of a finding of gross negligence on the practice of an auditor, this paper seeks to discuss this Indian legal standard in detail. Using the statutory framework that governs auditors as a backdrop, this paper examines all reported High Court decisions from the 1950s till 2019 along with decisions of the Securities and Exchange Board with regards to an auditor’s duties. We find that the approach used to discern the existence of gross negligence across these decisions has been inconsistent. In the absence of any precedent from the Supreme Court of India that details what comprises gross negligence in the context of auditors, this inconsistent approach poses a problem. This paper offers a starting point for a discussion to minimize the uncertainty currently associated with auditors’ liability for professional misconduct, especially hoping to assist the newly established National Financial Reporting Authority in its decision-making process.

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Journal Articles | 2021

Borrowing from government owned banks & firm’s liquidation risk

Ankit Kariya

Journal of Corporate Finance

Government Owned Banks (GOBs) have other explicit or implicit objectives apart from profit maximization. In this paper, I study whether this affects the liquidation risk of firms borrowing from GOBs. Using the natural experiment of securitization reform in India that increased firms' liquidation risk, I find that the firms borrowing exclusively from GOBs did less reduction in secured debt usage compared to other firms. In the cross-section, the effect is more substantial in the subsample of firms that are more likely to face financial distress. These results suggest that borrowing from GOBs have less liquidation risk.

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