Geopolitical & Tech Risks Challenge Governance

1 Minute Read Listen to Article
Share:    

Mar 14, 2026 22:07

x
Geopolitical risks, tech advancements, and cyber threats challenge corporate governance. Internal auditors must adapt to evolving risks.
Kolkata, Mar 14 (PTI) Geopolitical developments, economic volatility, rapid digitalisation, cyber threats and emerging technologies like artificial intelligence are reshaping the global risk landscape for organisations, posing new challenges for traditional governance and control systems, an industry body said on Saturday.

The Institute of Internal Auditors (IIA) India's Calcutta Chapter made the observation at its Annual Conference 2026, which brought together internal audit professionals, risk practitioners and industry leaders to deliberate on the expanding role of internal audit in strengthening corporate governance.

The conference, held under the theme "Internal Audit: Control-Risk-Governance and Beyond," was formally inaugurated by Krishnan Venugopal, President, IIA India. Neeraj Bansal, Head, India Global, KPMG, attended as the Chief Guest and shared perspectives on evolving global risks, board expectations and the importance of resilient control frameworks.

"India is no longer an isolated economy. Businesses today operate across multiple geographies and are influenced by global geopolitical developments, cyber risks and rapidly evolving technologies. In such an environment, internal auditors are expected to continuously monitor these risks and help organisations strengthen their governance and control frameworks," said Abin Mukhopadhyay, President, IIA India's Calcutta Chapter.


He noted that while internal auditors were traditionally focused on verifying transactions and ensuring compliance, they are now expected to assess emerging risks, strengthen governance systems and play a broader role in organisational growth by adopting a risk-based approach.

Mukhopadhyay also flagged technology as a major risk area, warning that fraudsters are increasingly using sophisticated tools to generate fake documentation or launch phishing attacks, making stronger controls and continuous monitoring mechanisms essential.

"The pace of change has accelerated dramatically. Earlier technology cycles evolved over a decade; today, they can shift within months. This makes continuous learning and professional training essential for internal auditors to remain effective," he said.

The technical sessions explored how internal audit must evolve beyond traditional assurance roles to become forward-looking, insight-driven partners to management and boards.
Share:    

TODAY'S MOST TRADED COMPANIES

  • Company Name
  • Price
  • Volume

See More >

Moneywiz Live!

Home

Market News

Latest News

International Markets

Economy

Industries

Mutual Fund News

IPO News

Search News

My Portfolio

My Watchlist

Gainers

Losers

Sectors

Indices

Forex

Mutual Funds

Feedback