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Press Room

Sujeewa Rajapakse inducted as 21st President of CA Sri Lanka

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17th January 2012: The Institute of Chartered Accountants of Sri Lanka (CA Sri Lanka) inducted Sujeewa Rajapakse as the 21st President of the Institute on 17th January 2012 at a ceremony attended by corporate leaders and elite professionals in Sri Lanka at the Oak Room of the Cinnamon Grand Hotel Colombo.

Mr. Rajapakse was ceremonially inducted in the presence of the Chief Guest Mr. Ajith Nivard Cabraal, the Governor of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka.

A leading corporate figure in the world of finance, Mr. Rajapakse is a fellow of the Institute with over 25 years of experience in practice and has wide exposure in diversified businesses and activities both nationally and internationally.

He is the Managing Partner of BDO Partners, a firm of Chartered Accountants in Sri Lanka which is a member firm of BDO International, the world’s fifth largest accountancy and advisory services network and currently serves on the Board of Directors of the National Development Bank and Asian Alliance Insurance PLC.

Mr. Rajapakse who holds a MBA from the Postgraduate Institute of Management, University of Sri Jayewardenepura was enrolled as an Associate Member of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Sri Lanka in 1994 and as a Fellow of the Institute in 1999. He was elected as a Member of Council of the Institute in 2003 and as the Vice President of the Institute in 2009.

He has also been extensively involved in Institute activities and has served as Chairman in several important committees of the Institute.  

In addition, Mr. Rajapakse also represents the Institute in the Sri Lanka Accounting and Auditing Standards Monitoring Board, South Asian Federation of Accountants (Board Member), Confederation of Asia Pacific Accountants as a Technical Advisor, the International Federation of Accountants and in the Monitory Policy Consultative Committee of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka.

Meanwhile, Mr. Arjuna Herath, Partner at Ernst and Young with over 20 years of experience was elected as the Vice President of the Institute. Mr. Herath was initially appointed as a Member of Council during the periods of 2002/03 and 2005/06 and was subsequently elected to the Council in 2010/11.

He presently serves as a Member of the Board of Directors of the Sri Lanka Accounting and Auditing Standards Monitoring Board and has served as a member of the Board of Directors of United Motors Lanka Ltd., Nepal Sri Lanka Merchant Bank Ltd. in Nepal, GTE Directories Lanka Pvt. Ltd., Orient Financial Services Corporation Ltd., Astron Ltd., and GTB Colombo Corporations Ltd.

The Institute of Chartered Accountants of Sri Lanka has been in existence for over 52- years and is a globally recognised accountancy body, and one of the country’s largest professional organisations. The institute has 4200 members and over 36,000 registered students, making it among the largest tertiary education providers outside the university system.

The institute is the first professional accountancy organisation to be incorporated under an Act of Parliament in 1959 and has been conferred the sole authority of formulating Accounting and Auditing Standards in Sri Lanka. The Institute provides a wide variety of services, setting a benchmark for the highest ethical and professional standards as well as governance procedures.

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Renowned Professor explores tenability of Beyond Budgeting for Sri Lankan corporates at CA Sri Lanka Seminar

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As pressure mounts for better corporate performances, with shareholders demanding firms to be among the top of their industry peer group, renowned Professor of Management Accounting, Prof. Danture Wickramasinghe of the University of Hull, UK recently explored the tenability on how Sri Lankan corporates can move out of conventional budgeting and focus on a more productive mechanism which will bring long term success for companies.

Addressing a CPD seminar titled ‘Beyond Budgeting: Can this be Tenable in Sri Lanka?,’ organized by the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Sri Lanka (CA Sri Lanka), Prof. Wickramasinghe emphasized that the old command-and-control management style is out of tune with the new need for agile and adaptive leadership and the need to transfer more power and authority to people closer to the customer.

He stressed that today budgeting is out of kilter with the competitive environment and no longer meets the needs of either executives or operating managers.

“Budgets are rarely strategically focused and often contradictory, Budgets concentrate on cost reduction and not on value and Budgets constrain responsiveness and flexibility and are often a barrier to change; among much other negativity,” Prof. Wickramasinghe said.

The principles of Beyond Budgeting offer a new coherent management model. It assumes that front-line managers are able to regulate their own performance. Senior executives provide a supportive role. They challenge and coach, but decisions are taken locally within a clear governance framework based on principles, values and boundaries. In the new coherence, relative improvement contracts, strategic models, rolling forecasts and service-level agreements make sense.

As an alternative he proposed that companies should, instead of setting a fixed sales/profit target, should trusts everyone to maximize profit potential by continuously improving against an agreed upon benchmark and remaining in the top of the industry peer group.

“Instead of a fixed reward, managers are rewarded by a peer review panel based on performance and with ―hindsight at the end of each year and instead of an agreed action plan, the organization trusts everyone to take whatever action is needed to meet medium-term goals,” he said.

According to the Prof., there must also be a wider coherence among the organization’s success factors, its strategy, its management processes, and its leadership styles and culture. The process is about lifting the burden of bureaucracy from the shoulders of front-line people, eradicating the dependency culture and enabling people to accept even more responsibility for their own performance.

“As you move beyond budgeting, your structure should become more networked, using independent units with distributed capabilities and expertise. You will be able to locate and combine expertise across the network and seamlessly bring collective expertise together to provide customer solutions. That way, teams can share knowledge across the business as they respond to customer demands,” Prof. Wickramasinghe adviced.

Do not link rewards to fixed targets agreed upon in advance, he adviced and instead suggested for set bonuses based on a relative improvement contract that involves a whole team setting and meeting a range of performance benchmarks over a period of time. Use a peer review group to evaluate their performance with the benefit of hindsight. The peer panel must ask, ―Did they do as well as they could have done given what we know about the profit-making opportunities during the period and what the competition has achieved?

“The calendar or fiscal year may be an appropriate time period for reporting results to investors but it is unlikely to be for managing the business. Focus instead on continuous value creation. Managers need fast access to resources. Although you may provide parameters within which resources can be committed, within these limits managers should have wide discretion over how they utilize resources. Provide fast-track approval for major projects outside the budgeting process. Major projects should be approved as needed, not because it is the right time of the year. Managers should have the power to implement small projects,” Prof. Wickramasinghe noted.

He said, Let the pace of market demand set commitments, while emphasizing that Whenever possible companies must respond to unanticipated customer requests. “Give those who are making the front-line decisions access to customer profitability information or they risk creating losses as the costs of customizing affect customer profitability,” he said.

Giving an example on a company which abandoned conventional budgeting, Prof. Wickramasinghe disclosed that Swedish Bank Svenska Handelsbanken was struggling and losing customers, especially to a smaller rival run by Dr. Jan Wallander. So the bank invited him to join it as its new CEO. He accepted with the proviso that the bank would have to radically decentralize operations and abandon its budgeting process.

Since abandoning the budgeting model in the 1970s, the bank has produced outstanding return for shareholders, consistently beating all its European rivals on the key ratios of cost-to-income and costs-to-total assets. The CEO credits its decentralized management model as a major source of competitive advantage.

Danture Wickramasinghe is Professor of Management Accounting and the Director of the Centre for Accounting and Accountability Research at Hull University Business School, University of Hull, UK. As the first Sri Lankan to be a Professor in Accounting in a British university, he has joined Hull after 19 years of research and teaching at the University of Manchester where he earned his PhD in Management Accounting, again as the first Sri Lankan to earn this degree.

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CA Sri Lanka takes lead in educating SMEs on IFRS

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With the convergence of Sri Lanka Accounting Standards in line with  International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) from 1st January 2012, the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Sri Lanka (CA Sri Lanka) will take the lead in educating the country’s Small and Medium Entities (SMEs) on the adoption of the standards at a special presentation on 9th January 2012.

This presentation will be a platform to educate SMEs on the Sri Lanka Accounting Standard for SME’s( SLFRS for SMEs) and will be conducted by Mr. Sanath Fernando, Partner of Ernst & Young and member of the IFRS Implementation Group for SMEs appointed by the IFRS Foundation.

The presentation scheduled to be held at the CA Sri Lanka Auditorium, Colombo 7 will include a wide ranging outline of topics including the benefits of adopting SLFRS for SMEs, which entities are eligible to use SLFRS,detail requirements in SLFRS for SMEs, the difference between SLFRS for SME and full SLFRS/LKAS and the transition to SLFRS for SMEs from the previous SLAS.

The Institute of Chartered Accountants of Sri Lanka (CA Sri Lanka) is the sole authority in promulgating accounting standards in the country and by statute these standards will have to be adopted by Specified Business Entities  (SBEs) in the country.

The Institute decided to adopt the IFRS for SMEs as the SLFRSs for SMEs with effect from 1 January 2012, thereby making SMEs to comply with the statutory requirement of presenting financial statements using these standards, while at the same time not be over-burdened with complex requirements of the full SLFRS.

With IFRS gaining rapid acceptance across the globe with over a 100 countries adopting it, Sri Lanka too is now in line with the global trend in enabling a common language for financial reporting processes following the adoption of IFRS. The Adoption of IFRS is a major breakthrough for companies in Sri Lanka as they will have a common, high quality and internationally accepted set of accounting and financial reporting standards and is also seen as a way forward to bring in ‘more credibility’ to financial reporting in the country.

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CA Sri Lanka holds inaugural CFO Forum committee meeting

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Aspiring for a greater partnership with the country’s top Chief Financial Officers (CFOs), one of Sri Lanka’s largest professional organisations, the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Sri Lanka (CA Sri Lanka) recently held its inaugural CFO Forum Committee Meeting in the presence of international financial expert, Mr. John O’Grady, Partner and the Asia Pacific Area IFRS Leader for Ernst & Young Australia with almost 30 year experience in the fields of audit and accounting.

The primary aim of the CA Sri Lanka CFO Forum Committee chaired by Ms. NilanthiSivapragasam, Chief Financial Officer of Aitken Spence PLC, is to provide a platform for Sri Lankan based CFOs to discuss issues facing them and their companies particularly in respect of achieving high quality standards in financial reporting and corporate governance, which is critical in the present context with Sri Lanka adopting to the International Financial Reporting Standards to ensure convergence in line with global trends thereby enabling a common language for financial reporting process.

The CA Sri Lanka CFO forum comprises of 50 senior financial professionals who represent the country’s foremost top companies. The primary aim of this forum will be to initiate a closer dialogue among these professionals and discuss various matters concerning CFOs in today’s context.

The CFO Forum Committee also comprises of Mr. Mano Rajakarier – Group Financial Controller of John Keells Holdings PLC, Mr. MalingaArsakularatne – CFO of Hemas Holdings PLC, Ms. CoraliePetersz – CFO of Finlays Colombo PLC, Ms. Lucy Tang - Group Financial Officer of Dialog Axiata PLC, Mr. NandikaBuddipala – CFO of Commercial Bank of Ceylon PLC, Mr. PrabhuMathavan – Finance Director of Cargills (Ceylon) PLC, Mr. ShironGooneratne – CFO of Sri Lanka Telecom PLC, Mr. Ajantha De Vas Gunasekara – CFO of Hatton National Bank PLC.

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CA Sri Lanka to explore mechanisms for beyond budgeting

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With companies abandoning conventional budgeting methods, the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Sri Lanka (CA Sri Lanka) will explore an informative topic at an interactive seminar titled ‘Beyond Budgeting: Can this be Tenable in Sri Lanka?,” early next month, which will be conducted by renowned Professor of Management Accounting, Prof. Danture Wickramasinghe of the University of Hull, UK.

Scheduled to be held on 3rd January 2012 at Galadari Hotel, this will be among the institute’s very first events for the New Year. The one-day seminar will be an interactive platform for Prof.  Wickramasinghe to highlight how tenable is it for companies in Sri Lanka to go beyond budgeting, while he will also describe how conventional budgeting has become problematic for companies.

The primary objectives of the programme is also to explain how companies have been abandoning conventional budgets, discuss what alternatives can be implemented in place of budgets and promote a dialogue whether and how this agenda is tenable in Sri Lanka.

Prof. Wickramasinghe will also elucidate in detail giving examples as to how some companies have abandoned conventional budgeting and the mechanisms adopted in place of it.

Danture Wickramasinghe is Professor of Management Accounting and the Director of the Centre for Accounting and Accountability Research at Hull University Business School, University of Hull, UK. As the first Sri Lankan to be a Professor in Accounting in a British university, he has joined Hull after 19 years of research and teaching at the University of Manchester where he earned his PhD in Management Accounting, again as the first Sri Lankan to earn this degree.

Formerly, he was the Dean of the Faculty of Management and Finance and the Head of the Department of Commerce at the University of Colombo, and the Head of the Department of Business Administration at the University of Ruhuna. He conducts workshops for MBA students worldwide and has lectured in Dubai, Florida, Shanghai, Hong Kong, Singapore and Manchester and supervises a number of PhD students both at Hull and Manchester.

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