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Undo and redo

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  • The Satyam fraud was waiting to happen. Will the government, Sebi, and other authorities do anything at all to stop such malpractices? What B. Ramalinga Raju has done amounts to large-scale investor betrayal. Honest members of the tax-paying public have lost their hard-earned money. On the other hand, what India’s fourth-largest IT company has done will badly shake foreign investors’ confidence in Indian companies. The fabled IT sector will take a hit. It will take time to salvage our reputation, especially during a recession. It is imperative for the government to punish Raju and others involved. Action should also be taken against Satyam’s auditors. Perhaps it is a good idea to rotate auditing firms among companies every two years or so. Unfortunately, there is a genuine fear that punishment will light for those responsible for India’s biggest corporate scandal.

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    — Amjad K. Maruf Thane

    Breach of trust

    This refers to the editorial ‘Company to keep’. Satyam’s fraudulent manipulation of balance sheets, especially in this economic crisis, will shatter investor confidence. But Ramalinga Raju’s confession also underlines how professional and ethical breaches victimise the ignorant small investor. We have no safeguards to protect shareholders. Nor do we have a mechanism to swiftly, visibly and correctly punish the guilty. Economic offenders have the money, and therefore the power, to manipulate retributive action against them. But developed countries, that have innumerably more and bigger corporate scams, also have the system and the will to punish the guilty when they are caught. Enron is indeed a lesson for India.

    — Ved Guliani Hisar

    Way to do it

    The magnitude of the Satyam fraud is shocking. It is a known secret that big business houses manage the certification of their balance sheets by their auditors. This problem can be fixed by a strict and compulsory audit by Sebi. Just as the CAG ‘s commercial audit wings do a superimposed audit of PSUs , Sebi, as custodian of shareholders’ interests, should also do a superimposed audit of corporate accounts through its certified agencies. Corporate houses should be compelled to publish their detailed financial results with this added certification. There is much to learn from the Enron affair and the Congressional hearing on the collapse of Lehman Brothers.

    — V.N. Ramachandran

    Vadodara

    Pakistan’s folly

    Pakistan’s credibility has never hit so low. It may happen that India will soon not be able to say who is more credible: the Pakistani president, the PM, the foreign minister or the information minister. M.A. Durrani, perhaps, could not contain himself and blurted out the truth about Kasab’s identity. Sacking him makes the Pakistani establishment look even sillier and sorrier. It’s good that India’s dossier is sending tremors down the Pakistani establishment’s spine.

    — Prasad Malladi

    Nidadavole

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