Trust beyond numbers
If you have ever seen a group photograph of professional accountants, you might notice something curious. Everyone looks serious, composed, almost expressionless. It is not that accountants dislike joy. They simply know that smiling in public can lead to someone asking for "just a quick look at my accounts", which is never quick, never simple and rarely free of emotional pain.When you spend your life trying to reconcile numbers that refuse to match, smiling can become a high-risk activity. Espec...
If you have ever seen a group photograph of professional accountants, you might notice something curious. Everyone looks serious, composed, almost expressionless. It is not that accountants dislike joy. They simply know that smiling in public can lead to someone asking for "just a quick look at my accounts", which is never quick, never simple and rarely free of emotional pain.
When you spend your life trying to reconcile numbers that refuse to match, smiling can become a high-risk activity. Especially when a CMO or CTO takes away more budget approval simply by flashing a smile.
Ahead of International Accounting Day on November 10, we are not just celebrating a profession; we are recognising a foundation of how economies uphold trust. In Bangladesh, where the economy has grown impressively, the importance of reliable financial reporting, strong governance and ethical corporate conduct has never been greater. Numbers are not abstract here. They shape investor confidence, creditworthiness, public spending and the credibility of national development.
Yet we must admit we are behind. Our professional accounting ecosystem has not grown at the pace of our economic ambition.
Bangladesh's GDP is among the fastest growing in Asia, but the capacity and enforcement of our financial governance are still developing. Countries such as Malaysia, Sri Lanka, Vietnam and even Kenya have made significant progress by empowering both statutory and management accountants, expanding their pool of qualified professionals and ensuring trusted regulatory oversight. They understood that accountants are not just compliance officers. They are architects of financial discipline and strategic decision making.
In Bangladesh, tradition partly slowed progress. For decades, statutory auditing dominated under a single umbrella, while management accounting, the discipline that drives efficiency, productivity and internal governance, remained undervalued. As a result, many institutions operate with passion but lack data discipline. Meanwhile, only a fraction of the professional accountants needed for a trillion-dollar future economy are currently available. The shortage is real, and the demand will only grow.
Bangladesh does not need fewer accountants. It needs more across oversight, industry, advisory, public finance and corporate leadership. Statutory auditors ensure compliance, but management accountants strengthen systems, controls and value creation within institutions. One without the other is like a cricket team with only bowlers or only batsmen. Technically a team, but unlikely to win.
Let us accept reality. Our professional ecosystem has not matured to match the scale of our economy. Countries including Malaysia, Vietnam and Kenya have built strong financial reporting systems backed by empowered accounting bodies and rigorous regulatory oversight.
Regulators must keep evolving. The Financial Reporting Council (FRC) has already taken bold steps to enforce discipline and curb misleading reporting. The BSEC has tightened its scrutiny of listed companies. These actions should not be feared. They should be welcomed. Strong enforcement is not a threat to business. It is the foundation of sustainable business.
So today, let us celebrate the accountants who protect the integrity of our financial story. They may not smile often, but they stand between order and chaos. If Bangladesh is to reach its full economic potential, we must support them, increase their numbers and elevate their role.
And perhaps next International Accounting Day, we will see a few accountants smiling in the group photo. Not because the numbers magically balanced themselves, but because the nation finally understood the value of those who make sure they do.
The writer is president of the Institute of Cost and Management Accountants of Bangladesh and founder of BuildCon Consultancies Ltd