21/04/2025
🛠️ An Audit That Went Beyond Numbers
During one of our audit assignments for a large Indian manufacturing company, we discovered something that looked perfectly fine on paper - but wasn’t in reality.
The company operated multiple manufacturing units across India and engaged contract workers through third-party labour contractors. As per Indian labour laws, eligible contract workers must be provided with earned leave - paid annual leave with wages. These are in addition to weekly rest days and are typically earned at the rate of one day for every 20 days of work.
📋 On the surface, the process looked structured:
✔️ Labour contractors filed statutory data with authorities
✔️ The company tracked labour compliance through a centralised internal portal
✔️ Manufacturing units regularly uploaded confirmations of full compliance
Everything appeared in order.
Until we verified the details.
As part of our audit, we compared:
🔹 Actual labour deployment records at the plant
🔹 Government filings submitted by the contractor
🔹 Compliance declarations uploaded internally
And that’s when we found a serious discrepancy.
⚠️ Earned leave benefits were not being provided to eligible contract workers at that unit - and this had gone unnoticed for years.
📌 Under Indian labour laws:
🔹 Unused earned leave can be carried forward, subject to a limit (typically 30 days)
🔹If a worker leaves or is terminated, payment must be made for unused earned leave
🔹The principal employer remains legally responsible even if the contractor fails to comply
🔹Filings and Declarations alone do not absolve accountability
📉 The internal portal showed “compliant”,
📉 The central team accepted it at face value, and
😔 The workers were quietly denied a basic legal right
This wasn’t just a documentation issue.
It was a long-standing social and legal gap - hidden in plain sight.
🔍 We highlighted the issue and sensitised leadership on the potential financial penalties, legal risks, and reputational damage if the issue wasn’t addressed.
✅ The company took prompt corrective action
✅ A compliance review was initiated across other units
✅ And most importantly, the affected workers were finally granted their rightful benefits
🎯 Key Takeaway:
Compliance isn’t about ticking boxes - it’s about being accountable to people.
Auditors don’t just find numbers - we uncover what numbers can sometimes hide.
When done right, an audit doesn’t just protect the organisation -
It also upholds the dignity of the people who help it run every day.
💬 Have you ever come across similar gaps during an audit or review? Would love to hear your thoughts in the comments.