Ramalinga Raju

India expecting boom for forensic accounting

Thousands of forensic accountants needed to manage strengthened due diligence

Written by Raghavendra Verma in New Delhi

The Satyam scandal means India will need up to 6,000 new forensic accountants, one of the country's leading experts has forecast.

Mayur Joshi, founder and CEO of Indiaforensic Consultancy Services, claims that the trade body of India's IT industry Nasscom is planning to beef up due diligence accounting guidelines so that they would effectively “entrust the task of detecting and preventing the fraud to the forensic accountants”.

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Reeling under revelations of the billion dollar Satyam affair, Joshi told Accountancy Age that India is going to require 6,000 of these specialist accountants in the near future. However there are far too few trained professionals available.

The Satyam scandal broke last month when former chairman Ramalinga Raju admitted in a letter that an accounting fraud thought to be worth up to $1bn(£700m) had taken place at the IT giant.

Major demand for forensic accountants is also expected from regulatory authorities such as the Indian Serious Fraud Investigation Office and Securities and Exchange Board of India, as their scrutiny of corporate accounts becomes much stricter.

Even in the ongoing Satyam investigations, Joshi - speaking from his office in the western Indian town of Pune - argued that solid evidence could be generated by forensic accountants using their data analysis tools to interrogate raw data. 'We go beyond the figures, and try to ascertain that the given document is genuine', he said.

Indiaforensic not only provides fraud examination and forensic accounting services but also trains professionals.

For the last three years Joshi’s company has been running six-month courses on forensic accounting, specialising in corporate, banking and money laundering frauds and has trained 400 accountants. This figure is in addition to various company employees it has trained under corporate training programmes.

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India begins debate over future of audit after Satyam

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