Famous quotes

"Happiness can be defined, in part at least, as the fruit of the desire and ability to sacrifice what we want now for what we want eventually" - Stephen Covey

Monday, April 06, 2026

Newspaper Summary 060426

 

Inside Kerala’s meme-fuelled poll battle

By Vinson Kurian (with inputs from Chitra Narayanan)

Kerala’s election season now comes with two certainties: monsoon-like political thundershowers and a full-blown digital downpour on social media. What we are witnessing is less a campaign and more a daily “war of wits,” where the three political fronts trade punches in real time, armed not with microphones but memes.

SWIFT MESSAGING

Each day’s political headlines are swiftly converted into tit-for-tat messaging. When allegations surfaced about the Left Front’s supposed understanding with the NDA, the CPI(M) fired back with a neat one-liner: “We have a deal only with the people”. Cue a crisply packaged explainer reel on the LDF government’s decade-long report card. Not to be outdone, BJP handles pushed viral content suggesting the CPI(M) and the Congress were “two sides of the same coin”.

CM IN DIGITAL SOUP

And then there was Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan snapping at someone who tried to raise a question midway through his campaign speech: “Go home and ask your folks”. The Congress cyber team didn’t let that pass; within hours, it shot back: “Better sit at home and pontificate”. In Kerala’s digital battlefield, wit travels faster than wi-fi.

Behind such rapid-fire exchanges are highly organised digital war-rooms as the new nerve centres of political strategy. Leading the charge in sheer scale is the BJP-led NDA, with an army of nearly 10,000 digital foot soldiers operating across roughly 50,000 WhatsApp groups. A dedicated team functions out of the State election committee office for Rajeev Chandrasekhar (BJP State President and candidate from Nemom) and an additional war room in Thrikkakara. At the core is a 100-member state-level team led by Anoop Antony, General Secretary, which dissects, debates, and despatches content sourced from multiple agencies, often involving social media influencers. One creative digital video from the right-wing party shows a man washing a red cloth that slowly fades to become saffron-hued.

LEFT NOT LEFT BEHIND

The CPI(M)-led LDF is no laggard either. Its social media machinery has been in motion well ahead of the election buzz, using a steady stream of polished ads and curated interviews highlighting government achievements. The effort is steered by a seasoned media professional with a clear left-of-centre orientation, hosting panel-style discussions with senior party leaders.

The Left is also promoting “Brand Pinarayi” in a big way, with outsized billboards featuring the CM’s smiling visage appearing on busy streets. These personality-driven campaigns even prompted Leader of the Opposition V. Satheesan to quip that voters will be so tired of seeing Vijayan’s face that they will not vote for him. The Left has also roped in external professionals to amplify its PR content. Meanwhile, its portal, irundakalam.org, serves as a repository of “dark age” stories from the previous UDF regime, proving that even archives can be weaponised.

CONGRESS PLAYBOOK

The Congress-led UDF operates with a different playbook consisting of two parallel streams: a quick-response team for instant rebuttals and an AI-driven unit focusing on video content and fact-checking. These outputs are funnelled through the pages of party leaders and affiliated organisations. Headed by Ernakulam MP Hibi Eden, the team also works to simplify and broadcast policy promises, including the guarantees articulated by Rahul Gandhi, for voters who prefer content in "reel" format.

MERCHANDISE MESSAGING

A popular new medium for messaging in Kerala is apparel. Across the state, parties are distributing mundu and shirts emblazoned with symbols like the hand, the hammer-and-sickle with a star, and the lotus.

COUNT ON KERALA

Even as political parties slug it out, the State Election Commission, Kerala, has joined the social media blitz. Through agencies like Bridging Dots and Stark Communications, it has flooded the internet with campaigns such as Vote Chat (a chatbot), Vote Knock (door-to-door campaigns), and Vote Vandi (mobile campaigns), urging citizens to be sure to ink their preferences.


Sensex at 40: What really drives long-term wealth?

By P Saravanan and Manas Mayur

Markets are often narrated through headlines. In one phase, liquidity becomes the defining explanation. In another, it is reform momentum, geopolitical uncertainty, interest rates, or foreign flows. Bull runs are celebrated as a triumph of confidence; weak phases are blamed on anxiety and indecision.

Yet, when one steps back and looks at the Sensex over the last 40 years, a quieter and more durable truth becomes evident. Markets, over the long run, are driven less by stories and more by arithmetic.

That arithmetic is uncomplicated. Equity returns over time broadly reflect earnings growth (Sensex basket of companies), with changes in valuation adding or subtracting from returns only temporarily. Put simply, investors ultimately earn what corporate India delivers in profits. Excitement, pessimism, and market mood may influence prices in the short term, but over a decade or more, earnings do the heavy lifting.

This is an unfashionable conclusion in an era increasingly drawn to index milestones, target levels, and dramatic market calls. But it is the most useful lesson that the Sensex offers as it completes four decades of existence.

EARNINGS DO THE HEAVY LIFTING

A long view of market history shows that over most rolling 10-year periods, Sensex returns have broadly tracked earnings growth. On average, both have stayed in the vicinity of 10-11 per cent. There have been periods when returns have moved well above this band, but those episodes were typically driven by a combination of strong earnings growth and a sharp expansion in valuation multiples. They were exceptions, not the rule.

The years from the late 1990s to 2008 remain the most striking example. That period combined rapid profit growth with a powerful re-rating of the market. Earnings growth moved into the mid-teens, while price-to-earnings multiples expanded significantly. The result was a phase of unusually strong equity returns that still shapes investor memory today. But that memory can also be misleading. Exceptional periods tend to become the standard against which normal market behaviour is judged, and that often distorts expectations.

MYTH OF EXTRAORDINARY RETURNS

The post-global financial crisis period offers a useful counterpoint. Market returns in many of those years were far more restrained and largely mirrored earnings growth, with little help from re-rating. This underlines a critical point: valuation expansion can amplify returns for a while, but it rarely sustains wealth creation on its own. Unless earnings keep growing, markets eventually run out of momentum. This is why investors often misread long phases of subdued market performance. Range-bound or moderate-return periods are frequently seen as signs of stagnation or disappointment.

In reality, they are often phases of adjustment, when earnings continue to rise but valuations remain stable or contract. Such stretches are not signs of market failure. They are part of the natural process through which markets reconnect prices with fundamentals.

REALISTIC READING

This has direct relevance for the present market environment. India’s equity market today appears to be in an earnings-led phase rather than a valuation-led one. Earnings growth remains reasonably healthy, but valuations are already demanding, and the interest-rate backdrop does not offer the kind of broad support that typically fuels a dramatic re-rating.

Under such conditions, expecting returns to remain broadly aligned with earnings growth may be more realistic than hoping for another prolonged phase of outsized gains. That is not a pessimistic view. It is a disciplined one.

The problem with equity investing is rarely that long-term returns are inadequate. The problem is that investors often expect them to be spectacular all the time.

THE ENDURING LESSON

The larger lesson from 40 years of the Sensex is therefore both simple and humbling. Corporate earnings grow over time. Market returns, over long periods, broadly follow that growth. Valuation cycles can create temporary bursts of exuberance or phases of disappointment, but they do not rewrite the long-term equation.

The arithmetic of markets may not be dramatic. But it has proved more reliable than the stories told around them.


Saravanan is Professor of Finance, IIM Tiruchirappalli; and Manas is Associate Professor of Finance, Goa Institute of Management, Goa.


War crisis: Global cloud majors look to India as data centre hub

By Vallari Sanzgiri, Mumbai

India is set to benefit from the war in West Asia and may emerge as a regional hub for cloud infrastructure, as the crisis has triggered a surge in demand for data centre capacity in the country from global hyperscalers and Gulf-based clients.

Global cloud majors, including Google Cloud, Amazon Web Services (AWS) and Microsoft Azure, are seeking larger co-location deals with Indian data centres, industry sources said. As per one source, AWS is talking to five co-location providers like CtrlS, Sify, NTT, CapitaLand and even Airtel’s Nxtra to build data centres to host public cloud regions.

SPIKE IN DEMAND

Demand for data centre capacity has spiked in the last three-four weeks, ranging between 200 and 500 MW, Sunil Gupta, Co-Founder, Managing Director and CEO of cloud infrastructure provider Yotta Data Services, told businessline.

Those from West Asia are in a particular rush to close the contracts. These are huge inquiries even at a charge of $60 per kilowatt, he said. “Since data centres cannot be opened and closed on an ad-hoc basis like offices, these contracts have long-term implications. In the midst of the global chaos, there is a golden opportunity for India to become a regional hub for data centres,” said Gupta.

Overall, India stands to benefit from a structural reallocation of global cloud and data infrastructure demand, particularly as a secondary hub for the West Asia and Asia corridor, said Neha Singh, Co-Founder, Tracxn. “In the near term, hyperscalers are likely evaluating India as a contingency location for regional workloads, particularly as disruptions in Gulf-based infrastructure raise operational risks”.

STRATEGIC LEVERAGE

Companies also have an option of migrating workloads to data centres in Europe or the US. Ultimately, where these workloads shift is a factor of cost and India has a clear advantage in pricing, as per RackBank.

“Building a 100 MW AI facility in India is roughly $5-6 million compared to a place like Singapore and APAC, where it is around $12-14 million," said Narendra Sen, Founder & CEO, RackBank. "India gives double capacity at the same cost. For a hyperscaler, it’s enough money to build an entirely second facility for free".

GPU DEMAND

Apart from data centres, Indian cloud infrastructure providers have received huge requests for GPUs. Gupta said US-based GPU providers had contracted all of Yotta’s GPU capacity, with contracts ranging from $16 million for a year to $1.3 billion for four years.

These orders from international players are for global requirements, and not India. While Gupta said that Yotta is commissioning an additional 30,000 B300/B200 GPUs over the next four months for India requirements, there has been no noticeable concern regarding GPU shortage.


Major ports register 7 per cent cargo growth in FY26

By Our Bureau, Mumbai

Major government-administered ports in India handled 915 million tonnes of cargo in FY26, registering a 7.06 per cent growth over the previous year. The tonnage growth was the result of capacity expansion and efficiency gains, the Ministry of Ports, Shipping and Waterways said on Sunday.

Deendayal Port Authority in Kandla overtook Paradip port to become the top performer, handling 160.11 million tonnes in the last fiscal. Increased volumes of fertilizers, liquid cargo, and containers contributed to the growth at Kandla.

The Paradip Port Authority handled 156.45 million tonnes in the last fiscal, taking the second position. Paradip port stated that despite challenging market conditions, such as declining exports of iron ore, it saw a 4.1 per cent growth in volume and continued to lead among all ports on the Eastern Coast.

The Jawaharlal Nehru Port Authority, India’s largest container port, stood third as it handled 102.1 million tonnes.

KEY PORTS

Other key ports, including Visakhapatnam, Mumbai, Chennai, and New Mangalore, also registered a strong performance, contributing to the cargo throughput.

“The record cargo handling of over 915 million tonnes by our major ports is a testament to the government’s unwavering commitment to strengthening India’s maritime sector,” Union Minister of Ports, Shipping and Waterways Sarbananda Sonowal said.

“The sustained growth in cargo handling has been driven by capacity augmentation and modernisation of port infrastructure, strengthened multimodal connectivity and seamless hinterland linkages, adoption of digital and smart port initiatives, increased handling of key commodities including coal, crude oil, containers and fertilizers, as well as improved turnaround time and ease of doing business across ports,” the Ministry said.


How medical myths go viral at deadly speed

By Ramakanta Panda (By Invitation)

A landmark 2018 study by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, published in Science, found that falsehoods on the microblogging site Twitter (now X) spread significantly faster, deeper and more broadly than the truth. Analysing data from 2006–17, researchers reported that false news was 70 per cent more likely to be retweeted and reached people up to six times faster than truthful stories. False health claims do not merely compete with science, they also outpace it.

VULNERABILITY IN INDIA

India is particularly vulnerable, given the gaps in health literacy. Patients frequently come to me clutching their chest, demanding immediate surgery because a WhatsApp forward has convinced them their symptoms are fatal. In nearly 60 per cent of such cases, the symptoms improve with appropriate medical management.

CASE OF TUBERCULOSIS AND CANCER

Consider tuberculosis: India carries the world’s largest burden of the disease, with an estimated 2.8 million incident cases annually. Studies tracking patients across multiple states have documented substantial delays in care-seeking and diagnosis as many patients initially seek care from informal providers or follow social media advice. It is estimated that tuberculosis costs India nearly $24 billion annually in lost productivity and healthcare expenses.

Cancer presents a similarly troubling picture. Misinformation thrives because social media algorithms reward engagement, and “miracle cures” generate disproportionate attention. Indian oncologists routinely report patients presenting at advanced stages after pursuing unproven remedies. A study published in JAMA Oncology found that those relying on unproven treatments had significantly worse survival outcomes. During the Covid-19 pandemic, several products labelled as “evidence-based cures” were aggressively promoted despite a lack of rigorous clinical validation.

QUICK DEBUNKING

While India’s scale presents unique challenges, countries like Finland offer instructive models. Finland’s education system integrates media literacy across all levels, teaching students how misinformation is constructed. India can replicate this using its vast network of ASHA workers, anganwadi centres, and government schools.

A second intervention is “prebunking” — exposing individuals to weakened forms of misinformation in advance to build psychological resistance, much like vaccination. We must treat health communication with the same rigour we apply to drug approvals, surgical protocols, and infection control. In the age of al-


The author is a renowned cardiac surgeon.


Dubai curbs on Indian carriers under scrutiny: Dubai curbs on Indian carriers under scrutiny as Gulf conflict hits operations

By Rohit Vaid, New Delhi

The disparity in air traffic access between India and Dubai is coming under scrutiny at a time when airlines on both sides are operating under exceptional conditions due to the ongoing Gulf conflict, sources told businessline.

Accordingly, the issue was recently flagged by the Federation of Indian Airlines (FIA) in a communication to the Ministry of Civil Aviation (MoCA), seeking a review of capacity deployment in the current environment. In the communication, FIA told MoCA that Dubai International Airport (DXB) authorities had mandated flight cancellations for the Northern Summer 2026 season between April 20 and May 31, restricting foreign carriers to only one rotation per day.

DIFFERENT RULES

However, UAE-based carriers, such as Emirates and FlyDubai, have resumed operations to India at pre-disruption levels and are not subject to similar restrictions, resulting in what industry stakeholders described as an uneven playing field.

Separately, industry sources told businessline that Emirates and FlyDubai together operate around 35 daily flights between Dubai and multiple Indian cities, while Indian carriers continue to have limited ability to scale up services on these routes, despite sustained demand on the corridor. In its communication, the FIA noted that the continuation of such restrictions is already leading to anti-competitive market conditions, operational inefficiencies, substantial revenue losses, and passenger inconvenience.

EXTENDED FLIGHTS

Speaking to businessline, industry stakeholders said with portions of airspace restricted, Indian carriers flying to Europe and the US are being forced to take longer routes, resulting in higher fuel burn and extended flight durations, in almost all cases adding hours to flight time. These operational challenges, coupled with higher fuel consumption, are further straining airline economics at a time when cost pressures remain elevated.

“The imbalance becomes more visible in situations like this. Indian carriers are dealing with longer routes and higher operating costs, while also having limited room to expand capacity where demand exists,” an airline executive said.

According to industry stakeholders, the current situation reflects how capacity and access are being managed during a period of disruption, with airlines seeking a more balanced approach under existing bilateral arrangements.

Consequently, the industry body urged the government to engage with Dubai to remove the restrictions and allow Indian carriers to restore operations to pre-disruption levels. It suggested that reciprocal measures could be considered, including restricting the operations of Dubai carriers in line with the cumulative seat capacity deployed by Indian airlines on the route.

Saturday, April 04, 2026

Reviewing The Drama: A Combustible Premise Struggles for Justification

 Below is the full text of the article “The Drama” Has a Combustible Premise That It Struggles to Justify, written by Justin Chang and published on April 2, 2026, in The New Yorker.


“The Drama” Has a Combustible Premise That It Struggles to Justify In Kristoffer Borgli’s Boston romance, Robert Pattinson and Zendaya play a couple weathering more than their fair share of premarital jitters.

Seen from the right warped angle, “The Drama,” a new film from the Norwegian director and screenwriter Kristoffer Borgli, is less a drama than it is a comedy—a romantic comedy, which kicks off with what one character will later describe as a classic “meet-cute.” Though, since it involves a white lie, a misunderstanding, and some borderline stalkerish behavior, it’s perhaps more of a meet-sketchy. In a bustling Boston café, Charlie (Robert Pattinson) is instantly smitten with Emma (Zendaya), who’s quietly reading a novel by a window. He looks up the title on his phone and, after scanning a plot summary, approaches her from behind, gushing about how much he loves the book—only to get no response. Emma, he doesn’t realize, hasn’t heard him speak; she’s deaf in her right ear and listening to music via her left one. Some confusion and awkwardness ensues until Emma, recognizing what’s going on, lets Charlie off the hook with a forgiving smile and an interested query: “Can we start over?”

That question will become something of a steady motif for Charlie and Emma. Or, rather, it has already become one, given that this origin story turns out to be a flashback, an episode that Charlie is considering mentioning in his speech for their wedding, which is fast approaching. Over the course of their relationship, you gather, Charlie and Emma have dodged many an argument by hitting the reset button, allowing themselves an easy do-over, with the possibility of some goofily improvised role-play. But “Can we start over?” also proves grimly prophetic; by the end, the two lovers might well wish that they had never started in the first place. Their perfectly imperfect romance narrative has been derailed by a more dangerous form of storytelling, the kind that can strand even the closest relationship in uncharted territory.

If you haven’t yet seen “The Drama” and plan to, best to stop reading here, before all is revealed. One night, as Charlie and Emma are finalizing food and wine selections for the wedding, with their married friends Mike (Mamoudou Athie) and Rachel (Alana Haim), an ill-advised game of “What’s the Worst Thing You’ve Ever Done?” begins. Emma’s worst thing, blurted out in a moment of drunken foolishness, is a particular doozy: when she was fifteen, she says, she planned to carry out a mass shooting at her high school. Thankfully, she didn’t go through with it and would never dream of doing such a thing now, though that’s scant consolation for her fiancé and friends, who, for a while, are in utter disbelief. Rachel furiously turns on Emma, with a mix of self-righteous hypocrisy and vindictive spite that occasions Haim’s strongest, spikiest work since her star-making turn in “Licorice Pizza” (2021). Charlie, although more sympathetic, is left reeling, and Pattinson, always at his best when his matinée-idol looks surrender to warpings of fear and anxiety, conducts a virtuosic symphony of shifting moods. As the wedding-day countdown accelerates, ushering in a litany of vender appointments and other logistical niceties, Charlie can’t stop wondering what the point of it all is—and who, exactly, this woman he claims to love so unconditionally is.

Does the movie itself know who she is? I’m not so sure. Emma is a literary editor, though the specifics are awfully vague—a late subplot involving challenges on the job feels particularly superficial—and her love for literature seems to begin and end with that novel in the café. Zendaya more than fulfills the central requirement of a romantic lead—when she’s onscreen, you can’t imagine looking at anyone else—but her striking presence alone can’t provide the psychological illumination that the film needs as a portrait of repressed, and ultimately redeemed, violence. “The Drama” has a juicy, combustible premise that it struggles to justify, not because there’s anything inherently distasteful about broaching the subject of real-world gun violence in the context of a sexy, tempestuous Hollywood melodrama but, rather, because Emma’s deep, dark secret simply doesn’t ring true.

Some might contend that this seeming implausibility is very much to the film’s point, insofar as many shooters’ identities have taken their communities by surprise. (One scene acknowledges the relative rarity of shootings committed by women, mainly so that it can then conveniently bat that statistic away.) But Borgli undermines his premise—ironically, by attempting to substantiate it. He repeatedly flashes back more than a decade to the high-school-age Emma, played by Jordyn Curet, who bears little physical or emotional resemblance to her Zendaya counterpart. Is that also the film’s point—that people can, in fact, transform themselves dramatically—or is it plain bad casting? Would it have made more sense for Zendaya, although several years older than when she first starred as a teen-age drug addict on the HBO series “Euphoria,” to embody Emma’s younger self as well? In any event, Curet’s Emma is a case study and a cipher. She’s lonely, isolated, and bullied; she wears nerd-coded glasses one minute and disreputable eye makeup the next. She has ready access to her father’s military rifle, which she drags around her family’s pointedly empty house as if it were her closest companion. Emma is turned on by the aesthetics of sociopathic rage and enjoys making online videos in which she spews hatred and poses with the rifle. But she is most heavily influenced, the film suggests, by the sheer ubiquity of school shootings and gun culture, which has contaminated America at large with a free-floating psychic residue of mass violence.

Borgli, a co-editor on the film, cuts jaggedly between past and present, and sometimes between reality and hallucination. Watching the young Emma, we can never be entirely sure if we are seeing an accurate representation of a distant time, a distorted memory of Emma’s, or a paranoid imagining of Charlie’s. In a way, the filmmaker is accessing the slippery terrain of his previous work, “Dream Scenario” (2023), an ominous black comedy that starred Nicolas Cage as a kind of flop-sweaty Freddy Krueger figure—a nebbishy professor who invaded the dreams of everyone around him. It was, like “The Drama,” a story about the dangerous power of suggestion, the repeated blows to our collective psyche, and the ease of villainizing someone for things that they didn’t actually do.

“Dream Scenario” was darkly amusing for a while, before it ultimately crapped out, unable to sustain either its funny-scary genre mechanics or its moribund cancel-culture subtext. “The Drama,” for all its miscalculations, is better at holding your interest. It was richly shot, on film, by Arseni Khachaturan, who brings out a lustrous golden-afternoon warmth in the film’s Boston locations, and it has an intensely jangly horror-film score, by Daniel Pemberton, that keeps your nerves suitably off-balance. Mostly, though, it holds you for a structurally built-in reason, the kind that keeps wedding movies in business. It isn’t just Emma but Charlie and Emma’s very beautiful and expensive nuptials that are in danger of being cancelled.

What’s the worst thing you’ve ever done? Forced to play the game himself, Borgli might not supply what many would deem the obvious answer: a relationship that he had in his twenties with a teen-age girl from Oslo. She was ten years his junior and not yet of voting age (eighteen) but over the age of consent (sixteen). Borgli wrote defensively about his “May-December romance” in an essay that was published by a Norwegian magazine in 2012; an English translation recently resurfaced in The Hollywood Reporter during the publicity campaign for “The Drama,” which is being released in theatres this week by A24. In short, the toxic cloud of judgment that Borgli seeks to interrogate has settled around and polluted the reception to the movie itself, forming a kind of life-versus-art ouroboros that, in the eyes of the most cynical marketeers, might seem less a blow than an opportunity.

I mention this not because Borgli’s life choices are under review but because his artistic ones are. And although “The Drama” has mercifully little to add to the self-serving tedium of so much age-gap discourse, it does boast at least one prominent visual-design element—a spiral staircase, in Charlie and Emma’s apartment—that reminded me, each time I saw it, of a similar fixture in Woody Allen’s “Manhattan” (1979). I don’t think I’m casting about idly for associations here; I saw “The Drama” and sensed the connection even before reading Borgli’s essay, in which he holds up “Manhattan,” with its “open and romantic” presentation of a fictional May-December romance, as justification for his real-life one. The characters in “The Drama” have quintessentially Allen-esque jobs in the literary and artistic establishments; Charlie works as a curator at a Cambridge art museum, and his job is only slightly less decorative, in the context of the narrative, than his fiancée’s is. At one point, driven nearly mad by Emma’s revelations, he finds a provocative book of art photographs on his desk, filled with images of women holding guns—and proceeds to torment himself with visions of Emma in the same sexy-violent poses.

“The Drama” never manages to imbue Emma with more depth than one of those images. The movie’s attempts to dramatize her history of near-violence feel perfunctory to the point of incuriosity. It treats her mental-health history not as a complicated reality but as a premise, a narrative impetus, and, worst of all, a problem that seems to weigh more heavily on those around her than it does on her. (No illumination is forthcoming from Emma’s parents, who, despite being significant variables in this scenario, are kept out of the spotlight until the big wedding-day climax.) I fear that this is at least partly, and through no fault of her own, a Zendaya issue. I was reminded, unhappily, of “Malcolm & Marie” (2021), in which the director and writer, Sam Levinson (of “Euphoria” fame), cast her as a recovering drug addict, turning her scantily attired body and her howls of resentment into a voyeuristic spectacle. “The Drama” treats her better than that, but to no more substantial effect: rather than messily exploiting her, it reduces her to a tidy blank. Either way, you have to wonder: What is it about Zendaya that compels certain filmmakers—and, there’s no way around it, certain white male filmmakers—to pelt her with gobs of unexplored trauma? Do they think suffering looks good on her? Does her air of youthful innocence provide just the touch of sugar they need to make the hard-core medicine go down?

A more honest appraisal of Emma’s character, and of her and Charlie’s chances of staying together, might have been conducted without the artificial pressurization of a wedding-countdown framework. And yet it’s in the accumulation of tension and the exacerbation of squirm that Borgli’s real strengths as a filmmaker lie. The road to Charlie and Emma’s big day is paved with tense appointments and ill-fated encounters, the most memorable of which involves Charlie’s colleague Misha, played, with a brilliant swirl of matter-of-fact cynicism and empathetic concern, by Hailey Benton Gates. The wedding itself unfolds as a series of escalating set pieces, dryly observed and thoroughly excruciating, that reminded me of the great Scandinavian tradition of gathering-from-hell movies, including Thomas Vinterberg’s “The Celebration” (1998) and Lars von Trier’s “Melancholia” (2011). As in those films, Borgli sends up the emptiness and tedium of codified social rituals—what the couple’s dance instructor describes, witheringly, as their “inherently performative” nature. “The Drama” ends on a note of grace that suggests Charlie and Emma may well survive the horror of their wedding; it also suggests that they will look back on it, in the future, as the actual worst thing they’ve ever done.

The Cold Pitch: Kevin Chalker’s Clandestine War against Iran

He Helped Stop Iran from Getting the Bomb A former C.I.A. officer says that he recruited scientists as part of the United States’ effort to disrupt Iran’s nuclear program. By David D. Kirkpatrick March 30, 2026

Not long after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, Kevin Chalker set out to become a spy. He was a thirty-year-old graduate student at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, in Washington, D.C., and he and his wife, Young, had a newborn son. She thought that this idea was terrible; having grown up in a left-leaning Jewish family in Chicago, she pictured killings and coups. She also worried that Chalker would turn out like his father—a gruff and taciturn man who had once worked for the Central Intelligence Agency and ended up as a construction worker in Fort Worth, Texas, where he kept trying to interest his daughter-in-law in Jesus, guns, and even knife-fighting.

Chalker reminded her that his father had been an enlisted marine who joined a C.I.A. paramilitary force in Southeast Asia during the early Vietnam War, a time when “the agency was doing wacky stuff all over the world”. Chalker promised her that he would do only “traditional espionage—no big deal”. A few days later, he queued up at the C.I.A. table at his school’s job fair. Chalker had a more martial bearing than most students; he had been a nationally ranked judo fighter and a Golden Gloves boxer, and had spent two years at the United States Air Force Academy before dropping out due to an eye injury. He also had an aptitude for languages, speaking fluent Japanese, basic Mandarin, and a little Farsi. After a proficiency test and several interviews, he entered the first class of C.I.A. trainees who had applied after 9/11. His training culminated at the Farm, the legendary base at Camp Peary, where he was assigned the internal alias Fred E. Snappleton.

I first heard of Chalker in 2018. After a six-year career at the agency, he had set up a security-consulting company, Global Risk Advisors, and one of its few publicly known clients was the emirate of Qatar. That spring, the investor Elliott Broidy—a mega-donor to President Donald Trump—filed a lawsuit claiming Qatar had paid Chalker to orchestrate cyberattacks against him. Leaked emails revealed Broidy had tried to turn the Trump White House against Qatar to win business with the United Arab Emirates, and I covered his legal claim against Chalker for the Times. I had no reason to doubt Chalker had played a role in the hack.

So I was surprised when, in early 2024, Chalker emailed me wanting to talk. We met at his cavernous office in the World Trade Center. Now fifty-four, Chalker is nearly six feet tall and barrel-chested, with short brown hair and a thick, graying red beard. Aside from a receptionist, he appeared to be alone. Chalker told me that before Broidy’s lawsuit, Global Risk Advisors had employed nearly two hundred people and earned about a hundred million dollars a year. He had also founded a second company, Qrypt, which develops cutting-edge quantum encryption. But the lawsuit’s publicity drove away all clients, and Chalker was forced to lay off his entire staff. Since then, he said, he had “not earned a single penny,” lost a lectureship at Yale, and was even denied insurance policies because he was deemed too great a risk.

News reports alleged Chalker had hacked various eminent figures and deployed spy tricks like covert surveillance and honey traps to help Qatar secure the 2022 World Cup. Chalker denied all allegations but said the stress of the lawsuit eventually required him to have esophagus surgery. Recently, however, he and Broidy settled the suit. Chalker told me the terms were confidential but that he wanted to repair his reputation. He insisted he was an American patriot and was willing to talk publicly, for the first time, about his years of clandestine work for the C.I.A.—which, he said, had “prevented Iran from getting a nuke”.

Chalker told me that, as promised to his wife, he had never personally engaged in combat or killing. Yet he acknowledged he had risked his life and indirectly carried responsibility for some killings. He insisted he helped obtain pivotal information that laid the groundwork for over a decade of American efforts to disrupt the Iranian nuclear program, from the Stuxnet cyberattacks around 2010 to the U.S. air strikes on Iranian atomic-energy facilities in the summer of 2025. Chalker spoke in detail, sensing a certain resentment that the C.I.A. had offered him no help as the lawsuit ruined his life.

Chalker began as a clandestine-services trainee on the East Africa desk at Langley. Part of the work involved paying Somali warlords to capture or kill suspected Al Qaeda terrorists—"Fifty thousand dollars alive or twenty-five thousand dead,” he recalled. One assignment involved shipping dry ice to Mogadishu to transport human-tissue samples for DNA testing to confirm identities before paying bounties. When transportation in and out of Mogadishu became a problem due to gunfire, Chalker suggested using inbound charter flights delivering khat—a legal narcotic leaf—which always landed without trouble. The desk chief loved the idea, and the C.I.A.’s inspector general ultimately consented to the reliance on khat-shipment flights.

After completing his assignment, Chalker spent months learning tradecraft at the Farm, including defensive driving, weapons use, and surveillance detection. At graduation, he expected to work in East Asia based on his language skills. Instead, his assignment said “cp/irannuc”—counterproliferation against Iran’s nuclear program. Chalker was shocked; he had a D in physics and had never been to the Middle East. When he complained, the officer handling his assignment—whom he identified as Valerie Plame—told him to “go sit in that fucking cubicle and don’t speak until spoken to”.

Before 9/11, Iran’s nuclear ambitions were a relatively low priority. The C.I.A. knew Iran had bought atomic bomb instructions from Pakistani scientist A. Q. Khan, but believed outdated blueprints had handicapped them. Following the invasion of Iraq, President Bush directed the National Security Council to prevent Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon. While the Pentagon suggested commando operations to kill scientists, the C.I.A. proposed recruiting them to defect. Bush authorized the C.I.A. project, which became known publicly in 2007 as Brain Drain.

When Chalker joined the Iran desk, he found it staffed mostly by analysts, with only a few trained field operators available, some of whom were struggling with alcoholism. Chalker quickly became the most senior case officer available. He learned the agency had few assets inside Iran, though a decade earlier a scientist code-named Bernadine had provided insights. However, Bernadine had become erratic and was viewed as a potential double agent. Soon after, Bernadine called headquarters using a secret code, and Chalker was ordered to meet him outside Iran, treating the situation as potentially hostile.

Chalker met Bernadine on a European street corner. To avoid being kidnapped, Chalker escorted him through a hotel lobby so they would be seen together. Chalker hammered Bernadine with hostile questions, but Bernadine insisted he was working with the agency to protect his children from a nuclear-arms race, not for money. Bernadine provided new details and diagrams that checked out with physicists at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Chalker concluded that Bernadine’s previous handler had fabricated intelligence and embezzled nearly two million dollars from the C.I.A..

Chalker later arranged to sneak Bernadine’s family out of Iran. He then planned to extract Bernadine from a Middle Eastern city. During a "brush-pass" in a souk, the local case officer botched the recognition signals—carrying the wrong newspaper and tying her scarf to the wrong part of her purse. Panicked, Chalker aborted the handoff and hurried to the airport. It was later revealed that the country's intelligence agency had been monitoring the local officer and shared the safe house location with the I.R.G.C.. Working with a different undercover officer in Europe, Chalker eventually successfully extracted Bernadine to America.

To find more defectors, Chalker used Bernadine’s leads. In 2006, based in New York, he followed a tip about an Iranian-born scientist, Masud Naraghi, allegedly soliciting prostitutes. Chalker sat in on an F.B.I. interrogation of Naraghi, who ran an engineering firm called Torr International. Naraghi appeared "too smart to be playing so dumb," and when Chalker mentioned Bernadine’s name, Naraghi "turned sheet white". Naraghi, code-named Shelve, turned out to be the "Oppenheimer of Iran". He eventually shared insights about how Iran had overcome weaknesses in A. Q. Khan’s blueprints. The agency even tried to line up a publisher for Naraghi’s memoir to encourage other defectors, though the project felt too "cloak and dagger" for the editor at Ecco Press.

Chalker specialized in the “cold pitch”—recruiting a stranger in minutes. He would often pose as a junior researcher at conferences to approach scientists. However, he said the ruse rarely worked; most scientists immediately guessed he was a spy and assumed he was there to kill them. Chalker typically had ten minutes to explain that he could secure them a new life in the U.S.—and that, if they rejected the offer, they would regrettably be assassinated. While the U.S. government denied killing civilian scientists, Israel’s ongoing assassination campaign made the threat highly plausible. Former officials said the C.I.A. sometimes shared intelligence with Mossad that enabled these killings, preserving deniability for the U.S..

Chalker didn't know the exact fates of those who refused him, but he was confident they were killed. Israel’s campaign sometimes complicated his work; he once had to send an urgent cable to Mossad to prevent them from killing an asset code-named Hustle. Hustle eventually defected and provided schematics of Iran's missile development node. Other scientists refused his offers to protect their families. One scientist, code-named Ejection, was convinced Chalker was a Mossad operative. Chalker "peeled the onion," showing photos and notes from former colleagues to build trust. Ejection finally agreed after running into a colleague's relative who confirmed the man was alive in the U.S. under the protection of a "burly C.I.A. officer" with a red beard.

Ejection provided intelligence on the Natanz facility, but headquarters then ordered Chalker to persuade him to return to Iran as a mole. Chalker pitched it as a chance for Ejection to prove he was "smarter and better" than those who hadn't promoted him. Ejection agreed after Chalker haggled him down from a three-million-dollar request to ten thousand dollars to avoid being conspicuous at the airport. Chalker called a case officer’s job "to convince someone that something is a really good idea—even though it is actually the worst idea ever".

Chalker’s defectors contributed to a dramatic leap in the U.S. government's understanding of Iran's nuclear program. This intelligence helped carry out the Stuxnet attack and informed the 2015 nuclear deal negotiations. Drawing on this information, the Pentagon even constructed life-size facsimiles of Iranian facilities to plan bombing raids.

Chalker resigned from the C.I.A. in 2010 after his wife gave him an ultimatum. He then built Global Risk Advisors into a lucrative, albeit shadowy, business. While Broidy’s allegations of hacking were plausible given the firm's specialties, evidence surfaced that much of Chalker's revenue actually came from covert work for the U.S. government, and shell companies in Gibraltar were used to move C.I.A. money. Chalker’s lawyers asked the C.I.A. to quash Broidy’s lawsuit on national-security grounds, but the agency refused, leading Chalker to feel abandoned.

The lawsuit ended in a settlement on April 8, 2024, with no money changing hands and no criminal charges against Chalker. Ultimately, while expert Marko Milanovic noted that the killing of scientists in peacetime was "just murder," Chalker viewed the campaign against him as its own kind of success. Referring to the "nation-state denial-and-disruption campaign" that cost him his business and health, he admitted, “they did a bang-up job”. 

ICAI Journal April 2026

 

Editorial: India’s Digital Financial Ecosystem - From Inclusion to Empowerment

The headline proclaims, ‘India’s UPI is leading the world in real-time payments.’ Behind this triumph lies the deeper story of trust, innovation, and implementation, the pillars that have fortified the financial ecosystem for billions of Indians. The nation has transformed from a cash-driven economy to a mobile-first financial system within a decade. By embracing technology through which money seamlessly flows, India has not only redefined digital finance but also carved a proud milestone that signals a transformative leap into the future of global financial systems.

Building on this momentum, the nation is embracing diversity in its truest sense by embedding Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) seamlessly from the grassroots to the highest levels of commerce and governance. Anchored in its core pillars—digital identity, fast payment systems, and secure data exchange layers—India is effectively modifying itself into a connected ecosystem where technology binds every stakeholder. Whether it is identity verification, financial transactions, or the direct delivery of government benefits, technology now serves as the common thread. Furthermore, the effective rollout of faceless income tax assessments, seamless e-filing of returns, and the rationalisation of GST compliance through digital platforms have markedly enhanced transparency, operational efficiency, and the overall ease of doing business.

The numbers further underscore this potential, with India’s fintech sector projected to reach $250 billion by 2030, driven by digital lending, embedded finance, and data-driven innovation. As the nation progresses from enabling digital payments to architecting a comprehensive digital financial ecosystem, initiatives such as the digital rupee (e₹), including offline capabilities introduced by the RBI, signal a future defined by resilience, inclusivity, and forward-looking execution.

Hurdles serve as stepping stones to growth, and the way they are addressed reflects true strength and spirit. As India advances on its journey of building a digital ecosystem, it continues to navigate challenges with resilience while keeping future imperatives in clear focus. The rapid surge in digital adoption has amplified exposure to cybersecurity threats, including fraud, data breaches, and data privacy concerns, thereby necessitating safeguards and heightened regulatory vigilance. India recognises the imperative of expanding digital adoption and is, therefore, undertaking concerted efforts to extend its reach to the remotest corners, ensuring that it becomes truly pervasive and inclusive.

A digitally empowered ecosystem is not the outcome of isolated efforts, but the result of a cohesive convergence of multiple professions, seamlessly integrating technology, finance, and regulatory frameworks. Technology undoubtedly acts as the catalyst, yet its true potential is realised only through responsible adoption and effective implementation. This transition necessitates professionals who can balance innovation with ethics, ensuring that progress remains both sustainable and trustworthy.

In this evolving landscape, Chartered Accountants emerge as key enablers, bridging the gap between technological advancement and financial governance. With their expertise in assurance, risk management, and compliance, they play a vital role in strengthening cybersecurity frameworks, enhancing transparency, and reinforcing stakeholder trust. Guiding enterprises, particularly MSMEs, in adopting digital systems and navigating emerging regulatory frameworks, the profession significantly contributes to building a resilient, inclusive, and future-ready digital economy.

The Institute stands proactively with the nation and its members. It embraces this digital momentum by introducing forward-looking initiatives, including the development of Information System Audit Standards, specialised courses on data protection and data privacy, fraud detection, data analytics, AI, and emerging technologies. The launch of CA GPT as an innovative learning platform reflects its commitment to equipping professionals with future-ready skills. Further, the dynamic evolution and adoption of the Unique Document Identification Number (UDIN) system stands as a landmark reform, reinforcing authenticity and credibility in financial reporting. Together, these initiatives exemplify a cohesive progression towards a transparent, technology-driven, and resilient financial ecosystem.

India is standing united today; it is the power of collective effort, aligned in a common direction, that yields transformative outcomes. India’s rising stature in the global digital financial landscape is a testament to this shared vision, positioning the nation as a trailblazer whose innovations are increasingly being emulated worldwide. As countries look toward India’s models of DPI and inclusive finance, the journey toward becoming a “Vishwaguru” gains tangible momentum. In the words of Mahatma Gandhi, “The future depends on what we do in the present.” With sustained collaboration, governance, and a forward-looking approach, India stands not only to lead but to redefine the contours of the global financial ecosystem.


Ease of Doing Business: Doing Away with Sections 138-148 of the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881

By Hareesh Kumar Kolichala, Legal Expert

The Payment and Settlement System across the world during the 19th and 20th centuries was mainly by way of Cheques, Bills of Exchange, and Promissory Notes. Therefore, in India, the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881, was enacted to regulate them; however, frequent cheque ‘Dishonour’ persisted, and in the absence of any convenient alternative for transferring large sums for goods or services, cheques remained the preferred mode of payment. In view of the prohibition under the Income Tax Act, 1961, from paying in cash above a specified amount, the payment through cheques has also been a legal necessity in our country. However, unscrupulous people or traders, with mala fide intentions, used to dishonour cheques issued by them by not keeping sufficient funds in their accounts, stopping payment, or closing accounts altogether. Originally, there was no specific remedy under the 1881 Act for victims except filing time-consuming and expensive police complaints or civil suits.

To bring certainty to mercantile transactions and instill confidence in cheque payments, the Parliament of India amended the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881, via the Amendment Act of 1988, inserting Sections 138-142. Under these sections, the dishonour of a cheque was made a criminal offence punishable with up to one year of imprisonment or a fine up to twice the cheque's amount. This amendment came into force on April 1, 1989. Because cheques were common, a high incidence of dishonour led to a large number of criminal complaints, which completely overwhelmed the criminal justice system. Complaints remained pending for years due to elaborate trial procedures, choking the disposal of other criminal cases. Consequently, the Act was amended again in 2002 to introduce radical changes, such as making the offence triable summarily, fixing trial completion time limits, and enhancing punishment to two years of imprisonment.

In the landmark case of ***Gimpex Private Limited vs. Manoj Goel (2021)***, the Hon’ble Supreme Court observed that while the object of Section 138 was to inculcate faith in banking operations, the provision has encouraged a disproportionately large number of cases that are choking the judicial system. According to the Law Commission of India’s 213th Report, more than 38 lakh cheque bouncing cases were pending as of October 2008. By December 18, 2024, the Government informed Parliament that this number had risen to 43.05 lakhs.

Acknowledging this severe logjam, the Supreme Court took Suo Moto action in WP (Crl) No. 2/2020, constituting a 10-member Committee that suggested creating Special Negotiable Instruments Courts. A pilot study involving retired judicial officers was conducted in five states with the highest pendency (Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Gujarat, Delhi, and Uttar Pradesh) between September 2022 and August 2023. Since this period expired, hearings in these special courts have stalled, and the Supreme Court’s decision on their continuation is awaited.

Meanwhile, the advent of technology has introduced rapid and efficient alternative payment systems. Users can now utilize the Electronic Clearing Service (ECS), Internet Banking (NEFT/RTGS), and UPI systems like Google Pay and PhonePe. Between January and November 2024 alone, UPI completed 15,547 crore transactions amounting to Rs. 23.49 lakh crore. Unlike the past, when physical cash was the only alternative, these systems are now well-entrenched and regulated by the RBI.

In the case of ***P. Mohan Raj Vs. Shah Brothers Ispat Pvt. Ltd.***, the Supreme Court described Section 138 proceedings as “Civil Sheep in a Criminal Wolf’s clothing,” noting that the offence is quasi-criminal as it arises from a civil wrong. With 3.45 crore criminal cases pending nationally, the criminal courts should focus their limited resources on serious crimes rather than cheque dishonour complaints. On June 8, 2020, the Ministry of Finance proposed the ‘Decriminalization of Minor Offences’ to improve business sentiment and attract foreign investment, noting that the risk of imprisonment for non-fraudulent omissions hurts the Ease of Doing Business.

Globally, the usage of cheques is declining. Singapore has announced corporate cheques will be done away with by the end of 2025, and Australia plans to phase them out by 2030. Developed nations such as the UK, USA, France, Australia, and Singapore have not criminalised cheque dishonour, treating it solely as a civil wrong. Given that India’s UPI systems are more advanced than those in many of these countries, the article argues that the provisions related to cheque dishonour in the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881, should be repealed. At a minimum, the Government should fix a threshold—such as Rs. One crore and above—to apply Section 138, which would drastically reduce the burden on criminal courts.


Audit Documentation: A Cornerstone of Audit Quality

By CA. Jyoti Aggarwal

Audit documentation, commonly referred to as working papers, is integral to maintaining the quality and reliability of the auditing process. As emphasized by Standard on Auditing (SA) 230 “Audit Documentation”, it not only ensures compliance with professional standards but also demonstrates the thoroughness and rationale behind audit conclusions. Effective documentation supports audit quality, facilitates future audits, and aids supervision and regulatory reviews. It is not merely a requirement for compliance but a critical component that ensures quality, consistency, and transparency by reflecting the work performed, decisions made, and evidence collected.

Understanding Audit Documentation

Audit documentation is the written record that provides evidence of the auditor’s work, including planning, execution, evidence gathered, and conclusions reached, whether in physical or electronic form. According to SA 230, its objectives are:

  1. Evidence of Audit Quality: Substantiates that the audit was performed in accordance with standards.
  2. Support for Audit Conclusions: Provides the rationale for well-founded opinions.
  3. Facilitating Future Audits: Serves as a resource for planning recurring engagements.
  4. Basis for Supervision and Review: Facilitates supervision and provides a framework for peer and regulatory reviews.

Key Components of Audit Documentation

Comprehensive documentation includes:

  • Audit Plan: Outlining nature, timing, and extent of procedures.
  • Audit Programs: Detailed steps designed to address specific risks.
  • Evidence Collected: Confirmation letters, inspection records, and analytical procedures.
  • Significant Judgments: Documentation of key professional judgments and decision-making.
  • Findings and Conclusions: Summaries of observations and final conclusions.

SA 230 and Its Requirements

SA 230 prescribes that documentation should be:

  1. Sufficient and Appropriate: Detailed enough for an experienced auditor with no prior knowledge to understand the work, judgments, and conclusions.
  2. Timely and Organized: Prepared promptly with proper organization for easy retrieval.
  3. Complete and Transparent: Providing a clear trail of adherence to Standards on Auditing.
  4. Secure and Retained: Stored securely and retained for a minimum of seven years from the date of the auditor's report.

Challenges in Audit Documentation

  • Balancing Detail and Brevity: Striking the right balance between over-documentation and insufficient records.
  • Adapting to Technological Changes: Incorporating digital evidence like logs, screenshots, and electronic communications.
  • Evolving Regulatory Landscape: Continuously adapting to frequent updates to Standards on Auditing.
  • Resource Constraints: Dedicating sufficient resources in smaller firms due to time and cost constraints.
  • Ensuring Consistency: Maintaining uniform standards across large teams.

Practical Guidance for Effective Audit Documentation

Auditors should adopt best practices such as:

  1. Use of Standardized Templates: Leveraging ICAI resources like Audit Working Paper Templates to ensure consistency.
  2. Emphasize Materiality: Focusing on significant risks, key judgments, and findings while avoiding unnecessary details.
  3. Leverage Technology: Using audit software and cloud platforms for real-time updates and secure retrieval.
  4. Regular Training: Staying updated through continuous professional education and ICAI guidance notes.
  5. Robust Review Mechanisms: Instituting rigorous internal peer reviews and quality control checks.

Role of Documentation in Quality Assurance

The Quality Review Board (QRB) of ICAI highlights robust documentation as primary evidence of compliance. Common areas of non-compliance include incomplete procedures, failure to document significant rationale, and lack of supervision records. ICAI’s Implementation Guide to SA 230 (Revised 2022 Edition) provides practical insights to address these gaps.

Emerging Trends and Specialized Contexts

  • Emerging Trends: These include the increased use of digital evidence (transaction logs, emails), the integration of data analytics (documenting rationale for specific data sets), and a focus on cybersecurity risks for technology-driven businesses.
  • Audit Sampling: Documentation must clearly record the sampling method (e.g., random, systematic), size, and results to support conclusions.
  • Fraud Detection: Documentation ensures audits are performed with professional skepticism. Auditors must record fraud risk considerations during planning, specific procedures used, and findings from investigations.
  • Artificial Intelligence (AI): AI tools help identify anomalies and streamline evidence gathering, leading to increased accuracy, reduced manual work, and better risk detection.

The Role of ICAI and Regulatory Bodies

ICAI promotes best practices through training programs, guidance notes, and templates. Regulatory bodies like the Quality Review Board (QRB) conduct reviews to identify improvements and ensure adherence to standards, which is vital for quality assurance.

Conclusion

Audit documentation is a strategic tool underpinning the quality and credibility of the audit process. By embracing technology and best practices, auditors ensure transparency, accountability, and trust in financial reporting.

Reference

Standard on Auditing SA-230, Implementation Guide to SA 230 (Revised 2022 Edition), Audit Documentation, Audit Working Paper Templates by ICAI


The Power of Automation – Smart Applications, Smarter Firms

By CA. Karishma Soni

Introduction Chartered Accountancy (CA) firms in India have long delivered reliable and trusted services through disciplined processes and time-tested methods. Rooted in professional ethics, strong client relationships, and regulatory expertise, these traditional practices have built the foundation of the profession’s credibility and success. However, in today’s rapidly evolving regulatory and business environment, where speed, accuracy, transparency, and client responsiveness are increasingly important, CA practices must gradually embrace digital transformation. Traditional manual workflows often create inefficiencies in communication, document management, and compliance tracking.

Digital solutions such as client portal web applications and smart task and call management systems can significantly improve operational efficiency. A client portal enables secure document exchange, real-time compliance tracking, and structured communication with clients, while task and call management tools streamline internal workflows and strengthen accountability among team members. This article highlights how web portals, software automation, and smart workflow systems can boost productivity, ensure compliance accuracy, and help chartered accountants build more efficient, scalable, and future-ready professional practices.

Client Portal Web App: Strengthening Client Collaboration and Practice Efficiency In the dynamic world of professional accounting, Chartered Accountants (CAs) are expected to juggle client coordination, regulatory compliance, data accuracy, and constantly evolving tax laws, all under tight deadlines. Managing scattered communication, large volumes of data, stringent compliance timelines, and maintaining service transparency has become increasingly complex. In this demanding environment, manual systems are no longer sufficient. CA practices are facing mounting pressure to modernize their operations and meet rising client expectations. Traditional workflows heavily reliant on emails, physical files, and fragmented tools are proving inadequate in today’s fast-paced, digital-first landscape.

The solution for this is a Client Portal Web Application, which is a secure, cloud-based platform designed to centralize communication, simplify document exchange, automate repetitive tasks, and minimize human errors. It not only optimizes internal efficiency but also delivers a more seamless and professional client experience. Most importantly, such portals can be custom-developed to align with a chartered accountancy firm’s unique workflow, service offerings, management style, and scale, making them a powerful asset for transforming how CAs operate, collaborate, and deliver value to their clients.

Understanding the Client Portal Web App A Client Portal Web App is a cloud-based solution that enables secure, structured interaction between practicing chartered accountants and their clients. Rather than relying on messages, endless email threads, or physical paperwork, the portal serves as a centralized platform where:

  • Clients can upload and access documents, check compliance statuses, and communicate with the CAs.
  • Team members can manage workflows, monitor deadlines, and reduce routine administrative work.
  • Partners or senior professionals can oversee overall firm activity, document flow, and service delivery.

Customizable Secure Login, Role-Based Access & Audit Trails In a financial environment, safeguarding data and managing access are critical. A custom-developed client portal can be tailored to include:

  • Secure Login with Two-Factor Authentication (2FA): Custom security protocols can be integrated to ensure that only authorized users gain access.
  • Role-Based Access Control: Access levels can be precisely configured for clients, partners, and internal team members, based on their specific roles and responsibilities.
  • Comprehensive Activity Logs & Audit Trails: Every user interaction, such as logins, file uploads, and status changes, can be tracked in detail, enabling transparency and ensuring audit compliance.

Smart Document Structuring for Seamless Access (Custom-Tailored) Efficient document organization is essential for any chartered accountancy practice. Through custom portal development, we can design a smart, hierarchical document structure, organized first by service type (e.g., GST, Income Tax, TDS) and then by financial year, ensuring quick and logical access to relevant files. This intuitive structure can be seamlessly tailored during portal development to align with the firm’s operational model, including its practice type, scale, service portfolio, client base, internal workflow, and document management approach.

Key Benefits and Core Functionalities of a Client Portal Web App That Streamlines CA Practice

1. Real-Time Project Status Updates: Minimizing Client Follow-Ups One of the most frequent operational challenges faced by chartered accountancy practices is the constant inflow of client queries such as “Has my Income Tax Return been filed?”, “What’s the status of my GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B?”, and “Is my TDS return submitted?”. These repeated follow-ups are not only time-consuming but also disrupt internal workflows, particularly during high-pressure compliance periods. A client portal addresses this pain point by offering real-time visibility into project status. Each task or service can be assigned a color-coded status (e.g., Pending, In Review, Completed). Clients can independently track the status of their filings and services through their portal dashboard. This transparency reduces the need for manual updates and communication.

2. Seamless Document Collection and Cloud-Based Storage Document collection is traditionally messy, scattered across messages, emails, or even physical submissions, leading to confusion, duplication, or missing files. The Client Portal Web App provides a centralized, secure upload system that streamlines the entire process. Clients can upload KYC documents like PAN, Aadhaar, incorporation certificates, and bank details directly to their profiles. Year-wise and service-wise folders allow document submissions like bank statements, invoices, loan papers, TDS challans, and GST return data. The portal supports multiple formats—PDF, Excel, Word, and images.

This eliminates email trails and follow-up for document resubmissions, saves support staff time by automating document collection and verification, reduces errors from misplaced or incomplete documents, and stores files securely on cloud servers, ensuring 24/7 access, data backup, and version control. Most importantly, it eliminates the need for local system storage, freeing up device space and reducing dependency on physical infrastructure.

3. Compliance Overview & Automated Due Date Reminders Missing due dates can result in penalties and strained client relationships. A custom portal helps automate compliance tracking. It displays a comprehensive dashboard of upcoming and overdue filings, sends automated reminders for key services such as ITR, GSTR-1/3B, TDS returns, and ROC filings, and issues alerts via email, SMS, or in-app notifications to both clients and support teams. This enhances compliance accuracy and reduces the manual follow-up burden.

4. Service Overview, Billing & Payment Follow-Up Managing billing and service tracking can be inefficient. Clients often forget services taken or pending payments. The client portal simplifies this by displaying a bifurcation of all services availed during the year, providing access to invoice details and downloadable bills, and sending automated payment reminders. Importantly, firms can restrict access to key documents (e.g., ITR, GSTR, reports) if payment is pending, encouraging timely clearance and reducing revenue leakage.

5. On-Demand Document Access for Clients Clients often request repeat access to documents like ITR acknowledgments, Form 26AS, financials, and GST returns. This adds operational load. The portal streamlines this by allowing the team to upload once, enabling perpetual access for clients, reducing repetitive workload for operations staff, and empowering clients with access to records anytime, from any device.

6. Integrated Chat Panel for Structured Communication To bridge communication gaps, the integrated chat feature offers real-time messaging between clients and designated team members, smart chatbots for handling FAQs and standard queries, notifications for new messages or updates, and permanent, non-editable chat logs for audit and dispute resolution. This system fosters transparency, responsiveness, and a clear engagement history.

7. Push Notifications, Rule Updates & Document Upload Alerts The portal acts as a smart communication bridge between the firm and clients, ensuring critical updates aren’t missed. Key capabilities include sending push notifications for rule changes, compliance updates, budget highlights, and due dates; alerting clients and team members when documents are uploaded or submissions are pending; tracking document submissions via the admin panel to identify incomplete profiles or missing uploads; and maintaining an organized log of all communications and alerts for future reference.

8. Admin Dashboards for Document & Workflow Monitoring The backend of the portal can be equipped with robust admin tools that empower chartered accounting practices to track document upload status across all clients, apply filters to view which clients have submitted data vs. pending, monitor return filing status—filed vs. pending, for specific services, and generate reports for internal performance tracking and workflow planning. These dashboards offer complete visibility into client responsiveness and help prioritize work efficiently.

9. Personnel Assignment & Controlled Client Access In a growing chartered accounting practice, managing responsibilities and delegating client work efficiently across the in-house team becomes increasingly important. A well-designed client portal is not just for clients; it also serves as a robust back-office management tool. One of its most impactful backend features is the ability to assign specific clients to individual team members. Key capabilities include Client-to-Team Mapping, Unique Client Codes or File Numbers, and Granular Access Rights. This results in improved work allocation, clearly defined tasks for each document management executive, and reduced confusion or overlap. Partners and managers can track progress per team member based on assigned clients. Sensitive data is visible only to authorized professionals, supporting internal governance.

Smart Task & Call Management Web App: A Game-Changer for Modern Chartered Accounting Practices A practicing Chartered Accountant committed to improving operational efficiency in professional practice environments believes that a Smart Task & Call Management Web App can be custom-developed to address the evolving workflow and client service needs of modern chartered accounting firms. Such a platform is designed to streamline the internal workflow of team members through structured task assignment and tracking and to enhance client satisfaction by efficiently managing calls and converting them into actionable service requests.

Why Traditional Task & Call Handling Needs a Smarter Framework In many chartered accounting practices, task allocation and client interactions are often managed through informal channels such as verbal instructions, emails, or messaging apps. While these may work in smaller setups, they become difficult to manage as work volume and client communication increase.

This is where a custom-developed Smart Task & Call Management Web App proves invaluable. Its core purpose is twofold:

  1. Streamline internal workflows by assigning and tracking tasks among team members in a structured, transparent way.
  2. Manage client calls efficiently by logging every incoming service request, ensuring no query is missed or overlooked.

When a call is received, the app allows the user to instantly convert that conversation into an actionable task. This centralized system ensures transparency, accountability, and audit-readiness.

1. Role-Based Dashboards with Controlled Access The system enables the admin to create multiple user accounts and define access levels based on roles and responsibilities. For instance, team leads may be granted broader visibility, such as the ability to view the status and history of tasks assigned across the team, while individual team members can only access tasks specifically assigned to them. Sensitive controls like task deletion can be reserved exclusively for the admin.

2. Real-Time Task Allocation & Status Updates Team leads can allocate tasks to specific team members directly through the admin dashboard by entering essential details such as the client’s mobile number, the type of service required (e.g., GST registration, ITR filing), and any specific remarks or instructions. Once assigned, the team member will find the task in their “To-Do List”. Upon initiating the work, they can update the status to “Ongoing,” and upon completion, it may be marked as “Successfully Closed” or “Unsuccessful,” along with supporting remarks. This removes the need for repeated follow-ups.

3. Detailed Task History and Timestamped Logs Every action, whether a status change or a remark, is recorded with a timestamp. This provides a complete audit trail, supports performance reviews, and reinforces team accountability.

4. Reassignment, Rescheduling, and Flexibility Tasks can be reassigned to different team members or rescheduled as needed, either by the admin or authorized users. Team members can also self-assign tasks, ensuring no responsibility is left unmanaged. This flexibility helps balance workloads and meet shifting priorities without compromising deadlines.

5. Enhancing Communication with Built-in Smart Call Management Client phone calls can be efficiently handled within the web app. A designated call handler can log the call into the platform in real-time, assigning it directly to the appropriate personnel. This ensures that all service requests are addressed promptly, and nothing is missed, even during high-volume periods. For example, a client may call to request a GST amendment. The call handler instantly logs it into the app and assigns it to the GST team. The task appears in the assignee’s dashboard and gets addressed without any verbal follow-up.

6. Customizable Filters & Analytics The admin dashboard can be custom-developed with intelligent filters to view tasks by status, such as To-Do, Ongoing, Successfully Closed, or Unsuccessful. These filters offer role-based task visibility, real-time tracking, and workflow transparency at the admin level. Integrating such features into a custom-built application allows quick identification of pending or overdue tasks, efficient monitoring of active assignments, and generation of analytics on performance trends and bottlenecks.

Business Impact of Using a Smart Task & Call Management App The impact of implementing such a system is multifold. It leads to the elimination of scattered messages and verbal updates and introduces streamlined time management and task tracking. Clear responsibilities enhance team coordination, improving client service through timely delivery. The system also ensures audit readiness via complete records and activity logs and enables secure access controls with Two-Factor Authentication (2FA).

Final Reflection: The Case for Custom-Developed Solutions The day-to-day operations of a chartered accountancy practice witness how smart technology can redefine routine workflows and elevate client service delivery. While many firms opt for off-the-shelf software, custom applications tailored to specific needs can become long-term digital assets. A well-designed custom application introduces meaningful automation across recurring tasks, reduces manual intervention, and ensures consistent, timely execution. Built-in process standardization enhances accuracy, improves workflow efficiency, and ultimately raises the overall quality of service delivery.

Beyond operational benefits, such solutions strengthen data security through access controls, encryption, and secure storage, aligned with regulatory and confidentiality standards. More importantly, they foster a transparent, responsive client experience, enhancing satisfaction and long-term retention. While developing a custom application may require initial time and resource investment, its long-term value is substantial. Over time, it becomes a critical digital asset, offering tighter control, reducing administrative overhead, and enabling scalable growth.

Conclusion Today, we stand at the edge of a progressive shift, one that calls for exploring digital solutions aligned with our practice models. This is the time for us, as professionals, to take a step forward, to conceptualize custom tools built around our unique workflows. Alongside this, a wide array of AI tools, cloud platforms, and web apps offer scalable support for smarter, more agile practice management. The future belongs to those ready to innovate, adapt, and lead their practices into the digital era.


Author may be reached at cakarishmasoni@gmail.com and eboard@icai.in.


Global Trade: Turning Costs into Strategy: How Indian Exporters Can Respond to Rising U.S. Tariffs

By CA. (Dr.) Nikhil Zaveri

The recent escalation of tariffs in the United States has unsettled global trade patterns, particularly for export-oriented economies like India. While tariff hikes were directed mainly at Chinese products, their ripple effects were felt across value chains and competing suppliers. This article discusses the nature of tariffs, their impact on Indian exporters, and how Management Accounting techniques—specifically Cost Segregation, Contribution Margin (CM), and Break-Even Point (BEP) analysis—can help firms evaluate whether to sustain their presence in the U.S. or pivot to alternative markets. Drawing on India’s preferential trade agreements, the article identifies regions such as the Middle East, Australia, and ASEAN as viable destinations where tariff relief, shorter logistics, and indirect cost savings could preserve competitiveness.

Introduction

In recent years, tariffs have re-emerged as a potent policy instrument in the global economy. The United States, long regarded as a champion of free trade, has increasingly used tariffs to protect strategic sectors. For Indian exporters, who often operate on thin margins, such measures can tilt the balance between profit and loss. What makes the present context distinctive is that tariffs are no longer merely economic tools but also political signals. While recent tariff actions have been directed primarily at Chinese imports, Indian exporters to the U.S. face a more uncertain and arguably less predictable trade environment. It is therefore timely to revisit how Management Accounting can serve as a compass for strategic navigation.

Tariffs and Their Implications

Tariffs function as import duties that increase the cost of goods entering a country, thereby altering price competitiveness. While their stated purpose is to protect domestic producers, the effect is to raise the landed cost of imports. Recent U.S. tariffs on electric vehicles (100%), solar wafers (50%), and tungsten products (25%) demonstrate the sharpness of these increases.

For Indian firms, the immediate consequence is twofold:

  1. Products that directly compete with Chinese exports may find an opening, provided they can enter the market at competitive landed prices.
  2. For categories where Indian exports themselves are subject to duties, the additional tariff burden erodes margins unless it is offset elsewhere in the value chain.

From Accounting to Strategy: An Integrated Framework

In such conditions, intuition alone is insufficient. Companies require a structured, numerical framework provided by Management Accounting:

  • Cost Segregation: Distinguishing variable costs (raw materials, freight, tariffs, commissions) from fixed costs (administration, certification, promotion).
  • Contribution Margin Analysis: Identifying what remains after variable costs are deducted from the net selling price.
  • Break-Even Analysis: Determining the sales volume needed to recover fixed costs.

These tools help exporters answer the strategic question: Whether to continue in the U.S. market or reallocate to alternative markets with lower tariffs and leaner indirect costs?.

Through the Lens of Management Accounting

Tariff changes are disruptions that ripple through cost structures and profit margins. Instinct or reliance on sales volumes is insufficient; firms need a lens that converts raw cost data into strategic insight.

1. Cost Segregation: Clarifying the Anatomy of Costs

Clarity is the starting point for strategy. Tariffs alter the variable cost structure; an item that attracted a 5% duty may now face 20% or 50%. By segregating costs, exporters can identify which increases are truly variable (linked to tariffs) and which indirect costs (like financing inventory for long shipping routes) are magnified when tariffs lengthen customs clearance times. For example, an auto components manufacturer may find that while raw material duties inflate per-unit costs, fixed expenses like plant maintenance and R&D remain unchanged, allowing a more accurate assessment of whether production should be reallocated to tariff-free destinations like ASEAN or the UAE.

2. Contribution Margin Analysis: Beyond Revenue, Towards Value

A common trap is chasing revenue at any cost. Contribution Margin (CM) analysis subtracts variable costs (inflated by tariffs and freight) from the sales price to isolate the value each unit contributes to covering fixed costs. Strategic insight lies in comparison: a U.S. consignment might yield a 25,000 CM per unit after tariffs, while an Australian order delivers35,000 CM. Though the U.S. volume might be higher, the Australian market delivers more value per unit of capacity. CM analysis shifts the decision from "How much are we selling?" to "How much are we keeping?".

3. Break-Even Analysis: Quantifying the Threshold of Viability

Even with shrinking margins, firms may argue for staying in the U.S. for reputation or long-term contracts. Break-Even Point (BEP) analysis provides realism. For an apparel exporter, if tariffs drop the CM per unit from 450 to300, the company now needs to sell 16,600 units (instead of 11,100) to recover `5 crore in fixed costs. If realistic U.S. demand is only 12,000 units, the strategy is unsustainable. BEP is a litmus test of viability that forces leadership to decide whether to pivot to alternative geographies.

4. From Analysis to Strategy: Creating Focus

Together, these tools create a decision-making triad where cost segregation defines the pain, CM highlights value, and BEP reveals viability. Synthesizing these insights might lead an exporter to discover that ASEAN markets offer both higher contribution and a realistic break-even compared to the U.S.. This focused approach prevents the dilution of financial resources and transforms Management Accounting into a compass for navigating global volatility.

Alternative Markets for Indian Exporters

India’s network of trade agreements provides exporters with options to reduce barriers:

  • Middle East and GCC (UAE and Oman): Under the India–UAE CEPA (2022), over 90% of India's exports enjoy zero customs duty. The recent India–Oman CEPA (2024) further provides preferential access and serves as a logistics gateway to East Africa. Shorter transit times (3–5 days vs. 30–40 days for the U.S.) reduce working capital lock-in and enhance contribution margins.
  • Australia: The Australia–India ECTA (2022) eliminated customs duties on more than 85% of tariff lines, benefiting sectors like textiles, leather, and auto components.
  • ASEAN Economies: The ASEAN–India Free Trade Agreement offers tariff reduction across 75% of lines, providing geographic proximity and value-chain integration in countries like Vietnam, Indonesia, and Thailand.
  • Japan, South Korea, and Europe (EFTA): CEPAs with Japan and South Korea, and the new India–EFTA agreement (2024), expand the universe of low-tariff, high-value destinations.
  • Singapore: Under the India–Singapore CECA, most goods enter at zero duty, making it a critical re-export hub for Southeast Asia with predictable customs procedures.
  • Europe (EFTA and EU): The India–EFTA TEPA (2024) provides near-complete duty-free access for non-agricultural exports to Switzerland, Norway, Iceland, and Liechtenstein. While the broader EU has stricter standards, it remains a stable destination for those who can absorb compliance costs.
  • Africa: Preferential arrangements like the India–Mauritius CECPA provide duty advantages in regions with emerging demand and shorter shipping distances than the U.S. or Europe.

Direct and Indirect Cost Considerations

Tariff savings alone do not determine attractiveness; indirect costs like transit time and documentation complexity decisively alter profitability. Shorter routes to the Middle East materially reduce financing costs and inventory risk. Indirect cost reductions of even 2–3% function like "hidden revenue," lowering the break-even point. Destination choice must be evaluated on "total cost economics".

Managerial Implications

Finance managers must broaden their lens to incorporate indirect costs and tariff preferences. Accountants are evolving from custodians of compliance to advisors who shape strategy. True competitiveness lies in combining CM and BEP with contextual intelligence regarding trade agreements and port efficiency.

Conclusion

Tariffs in the U.S. remind us that international trade is about strategy as much as price. For Indian exporters, Management Accounting tools are indispensable frameworks for clarity and resilience. Market selection should be a strategic decision guided by contribution margin and total cost economics rather than legacy volumes. In a world of shifting tariff regimes, this analytical capability will be the decisive edge for Indian exporters.

References

  • ASEAN Secretariat (2021). ASEAN–India Free Trade Agreement Overview. Jakarta.
  • Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT), Australia (2022). Australia–India Economic Cooperation and Trade Agreement. Canberra.
  • Ministry of Commerce and Industry, Government of India (2022). India–UAE CEPA. New Delhi.
  • Ministry of External Affairs (MEA), Government of India (2024). India–Oman CEPA. New Delhi.
  • Office of the United States Trade Representative (USTR) (2024). Section 301 Tariff Actions. Washington DC.
  • World Trade Organization (WTO) (2023). World Trade Report: Tariffs and Trade Measures. Geneva.

Building Future-Ready CA Firms: LLP vs Partnership Under ICAI’s Strategic Practice Frameworks

By CA. Pradeep Kumar B A

Chartered Accountant (CA) firms in India are navigating a major inflection point. Traditional partnership structures are increasingly strained under the weight of expanding regulatory demands, geographical presence needs, and client expectations for multidisciplinary expertise. The emergence of Limited Liability Partnerships (LLPs), particularly those enabled through ICAI’s 2022–2024 regulatory frameworks, offers an alternative that balances professional independence, scalability, and legal resilience.

This article provides a holistic, structured, and ICAI-compliant comparison of LLPs and traditional partnerships with special emphasis on legal frameworks, audit controls, partner roles, merger protocols, governance models, succession planning, and technological integration. Through strategic use of the MDP Guidelines (2022), Networking Guidelines (2021), Aggregation Model (2024), and Merger/Demerger Frameworks (2024), the analysis lays out a clear decision matrix. Whether you’re a sole proprietor, mid-sized regional firm, or a returning professional from industry, LLPs now provide ICAI-approved, ethically governed structures aligned with modern firm aspirations. With benefits ranging from liability shielding and client trust to institutional brand building and global compatibility, the LLP model is no longer an option; it’s the roadmap to a future-ready CA practice.

Introduction

India’s professional landscape is undergoing transformation. The shift is not merely legal or operational but strategic and inevitable. As the global economy integrates, clients increasingly demand firms that can offer bundled services: audit, advisory, risk, tax, digital, legal, and ESG. Traditional partnerships, with their individualistic decision-making and informal governance, struggle to respond to these demands.

With the introduction of the Limited Liability Partnership (LLP) Act, 2008, and further bolstered by ICAI’s proactive reforms including the Multidisciplinary Partnership (MDP) Guidelines 2022, Networking Framework 2021, LLP Aggregation Model 2024, and Merger and Demerger Protocols 2024, Chartered Accountants now have a legal, scalable, and strategic blueprint to build firms that are future-proof.

The LLP structure bridges the gap between flexibility and institutionalism, offering limited liability, perpetual succession, customizable governance, legal identity, professional brand continuity, and multidisciplinary partnerships under regulation. This makes it ideal for sole proprietors seeking scalability and succession, mid-sized firms looking to standardize governance, new CAs wanting structured career pathways, and industry-returning professionals needing re-entry via MDPs.

ICAI’s MDP Framework – 2022

The Multidisciplinary Partnership (MDP) framework introduced in 2022 revolutionized how CAs can collaborate with professionals from other domains.

  • Permissible Partners under Regulation 53B: Company Secretaries (CS), Cost and Management Accountants (CMA), Advocates, Engineers, Architects, and Actuaries.
  • Core Conditions:
    • Majority CA Control: CAs must remain in majority in both headcount and profit share.
    • Audit Independence: Only CAs can sign attest functions; non-CAs are barred from accessing audit revenues.
    • Naming Rights: One MDP firm name per CA is permitted.
    • Structural Flexibility: MDPs may function as LLPs or traditional partnerships.
    • Revenue Segregation: Non-CAs may share in non-audit services only.

This framework enables multidisciplinary service delivery under one brand, supports returning professionals with diverse expertise, and provides a structural base for ESG, forensic, IT audit, and legal advisory integration.

Governance, Deadlock Management & Partner Rights

In traditional partnerships, governance is generally informal, power is distributed equally unless modified by deed, and there is a high risk of firm dissolution during retirement or death of a partner. In contrast, LLPs provide robust governance features. Retirement and expulsion clauses can be pre-coded into the LLP Agreement, allowing expulsion for misconduct or inactivity without dissolving the firm. Decision-making can be allocated based on capital, role, seniority, or strategic contributions.

Table: Traditional Partnership vs LLP: Legal & Structural Comparison

CriteriaPartnership FirmLLP (MDP or CA-only)
Legal StatusNot a separate legal entitySeparate legal entity (Section 3, LLP Act)
LiabilityUnlimited (joint & several)Limited to contribution (Section 27–28)
SuccessionMay dissolve on partner exitPerpetual succession (Section 24)
GovernanceDeed-based (varies by state)LLP Agreement (customizable, filed with MCA)
VotingDefault: one partner = one voteCapital-based or custom model
Profit SharingAs per DeedAs per Agreement; includes fixed + variable models
Admission/ExitRequires amendment deedRequires MCA filing (Form 4) + Agreement update
Legal RecognitionWeak in tenders, PSU, and MNC contractsRecognized under MCA; preferred for large contracts
TransparencyLow (not public)High (public via MCA portal)

Deadlock Management in LLPs

LLPs allow pre-agreed arrangements for conflict resolution, such as a casting vote by a designated Chairperson or Managing Partner, arbitration clauses referring disputes to third parties, or "Russian Roulette" (Shotgun) clauses where one partner offers to buy out the other at a set price. Disputes can also be escalated to a Central Board or Ombudsman for Aggregated LLPs. Traditional partnerships usually lack such pre-defined arrangements, leaving disputes open-ended or forcing dissolution.

In an LLP structure, the legal and operational distinction between Designated Partners, Limited Partners, and functional team members enables the firm to strategically assign responsibilities without conferring equal ownership, liability, or voting rights.

Table: Role-Based Comparison: Designated vs Limited Partners vs Traditional Partners

ParameterDesignated Partner (LLP)Limited Partner (LLP)Partner (Traditional Firm)
Legal ResponsibilityStatutorily responsible for filings, complianceNot legally liable beyond capitalJointly and severally liable
Management ParticipationYes (as defined in agreement)Yes – Active participation requiredDefault = Yes
Signing Authority (Audit)Yes (if CA)Yes (if CA)Yes (if CA)
DIN/DPIN RequiredYesNoNo
Entry/Exit ProtocolVia Form 4 + LLP AgreementAs per LLP AgreementBy Deed Amendment
Voting PowerCustomizableCustomizableHeadcount (default)
Liability ExposureUnlimited for non-complianceLimited to contributionUnlimited personal liability
Retirement/ ResignationGoverned by LLP Agreement + MCAAs per LLP AgreementMay require dissolution

ICAI-Compliant Profit Models

Profit-sharing models are central to maintaining equity and motivation. A key compliance principle is that only CAs can share audit revenues; non-CAs in MDPs may participate only in non-audit work (ICAI Code of Ethics, 2020 and SA 220).

Table: Profit Sharing Comparison

ModelPartnership FirmLLPICAI’s View
Equal SharingYesYesPermitted
Capital-based SharingYesYesEncouraged
Performance IncentivesYesYesAllowed (non-audit)
Revenue SplitYesYesMandatory under SA 220
Fixed + Variable PayDifficult to structureYesPermitted if defined

Regulatory Filings, Transparency & Public Credibility

Traditional firms are regulated by state-level registrars, leading to a lack of standardized forms and no online visibility. LLPs are regulated by the Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA), with filings accessible online.

Table: Regulatory Filings & Visibility

AspectPartnership FirmLLP
Public ViewNot availableYes (via MCA portal)
Required FilingsMinimalAnnual Return (Form 11), Financials (Form 8)
Tech IntegrationManual/PhysicalFully online via MCA-21
TimelineVaries; informalLegally mandated timelines
Tender ReputationWeak identityStrong legal identity (PSU/MNC preferred)

Merger and Demerger Framework for CA Firms

The ICAI Merger and Demerger Guidelines (2024) offer a statutory path for formal consolidation. For mergers, entities must file Form MDA-1 with ICAI detailing the structure and CA majority, and complete the process within 6 months, including MCA filings (Forms 3 and 14). Audit assignments must remain with CA partners, and a new Firm Registration Number (FRN) must be obtained. Demergers require Form MDA-2 and predefining brand usage, client retention, and staff migration.

ICAI Networking Guidelines – 2021

Networking allows firms to collaborate without a full merger.

  • Referral: Pure client hand-off; no fee pooling.
  • Formal Network: Joint delivery and shared SOPs; no audit fee pooling.
  • AOP Network: Common name and non-audit revenue pooling; requires ICAI registration. Each network member remains independent for audit purposes.

LLP Aggregation Model – 2024

The Aggregation Model is a hybrid where a central brand is adopted by multiple separate LLPs. Legal identities remain separate, but policies, branding, HR, and tech stacks are shared. Audit revenue must not be pooled, and each LLP must confirm CA majority control.

Entry Pathways and Global Best Practices

ICAI now supports multiple entry pathways into LLPs based on professional stage, including sole proprietors seeking scalability, industry veterans returning to practice, and newly qualified CAs. Globally, professional firms are structured as LLPs for limited liability, institutional continuity, and transparency. Indian CA firms using the LLP structure can bid for international tenders more easily and attract foreign investment via the automatic FDI route.

Strategic Roadmap for Merging CA Entities

The roadmap involves seven stages:

  1. Strategic Alignment: Agreeing on long-term objectives and governance.
  2. Networking Start: Coordinated service delivery as independent entities.
  3. Transition of Entities to LLP: Statutory conversion via Form 17.
  4. Functional Onboarding: Defining vertical heads and compensation models.
  5. ICAI LLP Aggregation: Filing aggregation declaration and unified branding.
  6. Final Merger: Culminating in a single LLP structure (Statutory Forms 6, 14, and 3).
  7. ICAI Merger Notification: Filing Form MDA-1 and obtaining a new FRN.

Technology Stack and Conclusion

A scalable technology ecosystem is essential, including Google Workspace/Microsoft 365 for communication and dedicated tools like Zoho Practice, Audit360, or CCH iFirm for practice management and documentation.

In conclusion, the modern CA firm must be professionally governed, legally compliant, multidisciplinary, and technologically integrated. The LLP model provides the transformative roadmap to achieve scale without compromising integrity. It is more than a legal structure; it is a strategy for legacy building. ICAI has provided the guidelines—future-ready firms must now act.


Accountant’s Browser

PROFESSIONAL NEWS & VIEWS PUBLISHED ELSEWHERE Index of some useful articles taken from Periodicals received during February – March 2026 for the reference of Faculty/Students & Members of the Institute.

1. Accountancy

  • Accounting Treatment of Expenditure incurred on Development of a Pilot / Model Factory Under Ind AS 16 by Dolphy D’Souza and Geetanshu Bansal. BCAJ, February 2026, PP. 93-95
  • Depreciation Policy Changes by Large Technology Companies: Analysis Under Indian Accounting Standards by Manish Shah. BCAJ, February 2026, PP. 27-32
  • The Earnings Call: Beyond the Balance Sheets by Neeraj Vasudevan. Chartered Secretary, February 2026, PP. 75-79

2. Economics

  • Artificial Intelligence, Demand Switching and Sectoral Wage Gap by Shreya Roy and Bibek Ray Chaudhuri. Economic & Political Weekly, February 28, 2026, PP. 32-36
  • Causal Analysis of Fiscal-Trade-Policies Uncertainty and Economic Growth in Nigeria: Recalling Economic Policy Corrective Actions by Yusuf Bala Zaria, Jasman Tuyon and Hylmee Matahir. Decision Indian Institute of Management Calcutta, V. 52, No. 4, PP. 561-579
  • Dividend Governance in India by Mayur Mazumdar. Chartered Secretary, February 2026, PP. 70-74

3. Education

  • Transforming Higher Education Through Technology: Government Initiatives and the Road Ahead in India by K Praveena and K Jayaprakash. University News, February 23 - March 01, 2026, PP. 19-22

4. Management

  • Corporate Governance Standards for Municipal Corporations: A Compliance Framework by Kunal Mandwale. Chartered Secretary, February 2026, P. 65-69
  • Digital Maturity in Primary Care Facilities: Assessing its Influence on Organisational Commitment and Job Satisfaction by Lillana Hawrysz, Magdalena Kludacz-Alessandri and Malgorzata Fialkoswska-Filipek. Decision Indian Institute of Management Calcutta, V. 52, No. 4, PP. 461-478
  • Will Your Investors Support Your Strategic Pivot? Here’s How to Figure That Out by Mark DesJardine and Wei Shi. Harvard Business Review, March-April 2026, PP. 65-73

5. Taxation and Finance

  • Decoding GST: Burden of Proof by Sunil Gabhawalla, Rishabh Singhvi and Parth Shah. BCAJ, February 2026, PP. 76-82
  • Budget 2026-27: Forging Viksit Bharat’s Path through Global Headwinds by Asish Mohan. Chartered Secretary, February 2026, PP. 60-64

Full Texts of the above articles are available with the Central Council library, ICAI, which can be referred on all working days. For further inquiries please contact on 011-30110419 and 011-30110420 or by e-mail at library@icai.in.


Opinion: Timing of Capitalization of Partly Completed Gas Pipeline (Phase I) Under Ind AS Framework

This section presents the opinion of the Expert Advisory Committee (EAC) of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of India regarding the accounting treatment for a gas pipeline project under the Indian Accounting Standards (Ind AS).

A. Facts of the Case

In March 2015, the Ministry of Petroleum & Natural Gas (MoP&NG) constituted a committee to prepare the "Hydrocarbon Vision 2030 for North-East India." The project involves constructing the North East Gas Grid (NEGG), divided into multiple phases. Phase I includes sections such as the Guwahati-Numaligarh pipeline, with an estimated length of 392 Km. The Company’s accounting policy states that expenses exclusively attributable to the project during the construction period are considered Capital Work-in-Progress (CWIP). Property, plant, and equipment (PPE) are capitalized only when the asset is brought to the location and condition necessary for it to be capable of operating in the manner intended by management. Currently, 195.898 Km of the Guwahati-Numaligarh section is mechanically complete, but commercial operation depends on the completion of the entire 392 Km stretch, as the Numaligarh Refinery is the anchor customer.

B. Query

The Expert Advisory Committee was asked to determine whether the Company should capitalize the total cost incurred till date for the 195.898 Km section, even though:

  • (a) The partially completed pipeline is not yet in the location and condition necessary for it to be capable of operating as intended by management; and
  • (b) The line is not yet commercially operated as envisaged.

C. Points Considered by the Committee

  1. Ind AS 16 Requirements: Recognition of costs in the carrying amount of PPE must cease when the item is in the location and condition necessary for it to be capable of operating in the manner intended by management. This point in time is a question of fact determined by technical evaluations and test runs. Crucially, capitalization depends on the intended manner of operation, not the actual start of commercial use or intended capacity.
  2. Ind AS 23 (Borrowing Costs): Capitalization of borrowing costs should cease when an entity completes construction of a qualifying asset in parts, provided each part is capable of being used while construction continues on other parts. If a part cannot be used until the whole is complete (like a sequence in an industrial plant), capitalization continues.
  3. Application to the Case: The facts suggest that the completed 195.898 Km stretch can only be put to its ultimate use once the entire 392 Km stretch is complete, as there is only one receiving terminal (RT) for the entire section. Consequently, this section is not independently capable of being operated as intended by management.

D. Opinion

On the basis of the facts supplied, the Committee is of the following opinion:

  • The partially completed section (195.898 Km) does not appear to be in the location and condition necessary for it to be capable of operating in the intended manner as per Ind AS 16. Therefore, capitalization of further costs on this section should not be ceased, and it should remain classified as Capital Work-in-Progress (CWIP).
  • Regarding borrowing costs, since the partially completed section is not capable of being used individually and independent of other parts, the capitalization of borrowing costs (interest) should continue until the complete 392 Km pipeline is ready for use.

Note: This opinion is based on the specific facts provided by the querist and finalised by the Committee on 10th July, 2025. Detailed compendiums of EAC opinions are available for purchase from the ICAI CDS Portal.


The Fraud Triangle Reimagined: Why People Cross Ethical Lines

By CA. Lekshmi N

Introduction

Why do people indulge in unethical practices? The Fraud Triangle, comprising pressure, opportunity, and rationalization, has helped us answer that, remaining one of the most useful tools for understanding why people commit fraud at work. This article revisits the framework through a behavioural lens, exploring new pressures like the Fear of Missing Out (FOMO) and burnout, modern opportunities in a digital world, and shifts in moral lines. It provides actionable insights for Chartered Accountants and fraud examiners to strengthen prevention by understanding the human stories behind white-collar crime.

The Fraud Triangle

“Thus, conscience does make cowards of us all.” — Hamlet, Act 3, Scene 1. White-collar crime is not just about numbers; it is about people under pressure who convince themselves that no one will notice and still think of themselves as “good people”. Developed by criminologist Donald Cressey, the traditional triangle states three elements must be present for fraud to occur: Pressure, Opportunity, and Rationalization. However, in today’s digital and mixed work contexts, the shape of each corner has shifted.

Pillar I: Modern Pressures Beyond Financial Stress

While traditional pressures involved desperate financial situations, modern unethical decisions are often driven by far more subtle factors.

  • The Fear of Missing Out (FOMO): In a world of curated social media success, high-performing professionals may feel left behind. This voice can lead individuals to fudge expense reports or inflate sales to "level the playing field".
  • The Digital Economy: The narrative of instant hyper-success (e.g., crypto-investors or influencers) creates pressure to achieve results faster. This can lead professionals to cut corners to bridge the gap between expectation and reality.
  • Burnout: Remote work has blurred boundaries, leading to a silent epidemic of exhaustion. An emotionally fatigued employee may think, “I’ve given this company everything; a little extra for myself won’t hurt,” causing ethical boundaries to dissolve.
  • Job Insecurity: Chronic insecurity in a gig-oriented or restructuring workforce breeds a survival mindset, pushing individuals to exploit loopholes they might otherwise reject.
  • Toxic Corporate Cultures: Environments where underperformance is publicly punished and sales targets are unattainable act as pressure cookers, where employees justify fraud as a coping mechanism.

Pillar II: Opportunities in a Digital, Hybrid World

Modern opportunities for fraud no longer look like unguarded safes; they exist in passwords, expense apps, and cloud folders.

  • The Remote Work Effect: Without the physical presence of colleagues and managers, the "ethical nudge" of being watched fades. Supervision is weaker, making it easier for small liberties—like misreported hours—to snowball.
  • Digital Systems: Tools designed for speed can be exploited by those tempted by the illusion of invisibility that complex digital processes create.
  • The Shadow World of Digital Payments: India’s UPI system and mobile wallets offer convenience but also speed up temptation. Fraudsters may use dummy IDs or obscure origin through multiple wallets, rationalizing it with the thought, “I’ll return it before anyone notices”.
  • Blurred Boundaries: Hybrid life leads to blurred ethics, such as downloading client data to a personal folder for convenience or using a corporate card for personal expenses with plans to fix it later.

Pillar III: Rationalization in the Age of Moral Flexibility

Rationalization is often the most dangerous force, where individuals tell themselves a story to justify wrong choices.

  • “Everyone’s Doing It”: Groupthink leads employees to believe unethical behaviour is simply "how things work" if they see others cutting corners without consequence.
  • “I’m Not Paid What I’m Worth”: Resentment over feeling overlooked or underpaid can lead individuals to view fraud as a form of self-awarded compensation.
  • “Why Should I Be Loyal When They Aren’t?”: If an organization breaks promises or dodges taxes, an employee’s moral compass may shift toward self-interest.
  • “Just This Once”: This is the most seductive rationalization, where a one-time exception (e.g., "I'll pay it back next month") turns into a pattern of small acts that escalate.

Actionable Insights for Fraud Prevention

Organizations must revisit internal controls and ethical frameworks, as reinforced by Section 177(9) of the Companies Act, 2013, and the ICAI Code of Ethics.

Table 1: Focus Areas and Practical Actions

Focus AreaPractical ActionsRelevant Standards/Laws
Expanding Red FlagsPay attention to behavioural changes (withdrawal, defensiveness) and shifts in tone during meetings; incorporate non-financial indicators into audit checklists.SA 240 (Revised)
Adapting Risk AssessmentsContinuously monitor digital access rights; enforce segregation of duties in remote teams; adjust monitoring for real-time digital flows (UPI).COSO Framework; ICAI Code of Ethics
Addressing RationalizationPromote leaders who model ethical choices; facilitate open dialogue regarding burnout and ethical dilemmas.Section 177(9) Companies Act; SEBI (LODR)
Reconnecting EthicsManagement/HR should foster psychological safety; integrate simple ethical checkpoints into everyday processes.ISO 37001; ICAI Guidance Note on Section 143(12)

The Role of Chartered Accountants

Fraud arrives quietly through decisions made under pressure. The job of a CA is not just to react but to help create organizations where fraud struggles to take root. This requires human insight beyond the numbers—understanding the human stories to build systems that protect both the organization and its people.

Conclusion

Fraud is evolving, and so must we. Staying ahead of white-collar crime requires reimagining our tools and our understanding of people. Fraud risk is a living, human system shaped by pressure, opportunity, and the stories we tell ourselves. In the end, the strongest controls are human, built on values rather than just rules. “The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars, but in ourselves.” — William Shakespeare, Julius Caesar.

References

  • ACFE Fraud Resources: https://www.acfe.com/fraud-resources/fraud-101-what-is-fraud
  • Companies Act, 2013 — Sections 177(9), 134(5), 143(12)
  • SEBI (Listing Obligations and Disclosure Requirements) Regulations, 2015
  • ICAI Code of Ethics, 2020
  • SA 240 (Revised): The Auditor’s Responsibilities Relating to Fraud
  • ICAI Guidance Note on Reporting under Section 143(12)
  • COSO Internal Control - Integrated Framework
  • ISO 37001 Anti-bribery Management Systems