1 · The co-operative audit landscape
Co-operative societies in India are state-regulated under each state’s Co-operative Societies Act; societies operating across multiple states are governed by the Multi-State Co-operative Societies Act 2002. Urban Co-operative Banks (UCBs) have a dual regulator — the Registrar of Co-operatives + RBI under the Banking Regulation Act.
Maharashtra accounts for ~30% of all Indian co-operatives by count and is the bellwether state — most audit practice norms emerge from MSCS Act and the Maharashtra Co-operative Societies Act 1960. The audit is conducted by an auditor empanelled by the state Co-op Department or, for multi-state and UCBs, on the RBI / Central Registrar panel.
2 · Audit classification — the A/B/C/D scheme
The Maharashtra Co-op Audit Manual (and similar across states) classifies the audit grade A through D based on the auditor’s assessment of the society’s overall health:
- Class A — Excellent (above 60% on the prescribed scoring matrix)
- Class B — Good (45-60%)
- Class C — Satisfactory (30-45%)
- Class D — Unsatisfactory (below 30%)
- Scoring covers financial position, management quality, business performance, member service, compliance with bye-laws and the Act
3 · Specific audit focus areas
The audit covers many of the standard areas of a corporate audit but with co-op-specific overlay:
- Bye-laws compliance — every action of the management committee must trace to a bye-law provision
- Member loans — sanction limit per bye-laws, recovery, security verification
- Reserve fund — at least 25% of net profit transferred mandatorily
- Dividend distribution — limit per state Act (typically 15-20% on share capital), AGM approval
- Statutory reserves — Investment Fluctuation Reserve for UCBs, Building Fund etc.
- Investment patterns — restricted to specified securities under Sec 70 (Maharashtra Act) / Sec 64 (Multi-State Act)
- NPA classification — for credit co-operatives, RBI IRAC norms via Co-op-specific direction
- Election of management committee — held in prescribed manner, no overstayed members
4 · UCB-specific procedures
Urban Cooperative Banks face the most rigorous audit because they accept deposits from the public. Beyond the standard co-op procedures:
- CRAR computation — minimum 9% Tier 1 / 12% Tier 1+2 (varies by RBI-issued direction)
- Statutory Liquidity Ratio (SLR) — investments per RBI direction
- Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR) — balance with RBI
- IRACP norms applied as for commercial banks
- KYC / AML compliance — Master Direction
- Annual return to RBI on prescribed forms
5 · Audit deliverables
The co-op audit produces several deliverables, distinct from a typical company audit:
- Auditor’s report on financial statements
- Audit Class (A / B / C / D)
- Schedule of objections (Vandh Yadi) — non-compliance items
- Schedule of defects (Dosh Yadi) — financial irregularities
- Schedule of revenue receipts to be recovered
- Special Audit Report (if commissioned by Registrar separately)
6 · Common pitfalls
Frequent observations from Registrar / Joint Registrar inspections:
- Audit class assigned without backing scoring matrix
- Election of management committee overdue — auditor failed to flag
- Reserve fund transfer not at prescribed 25%
- Member loans sanctioned beyond bye-law limits
- Investment in unspecified securities (Sec 70 violation)
- Dividend declared in excess of limit
- Vandh / Dosh Yadi not properly issued — defeats the entire purpose of audit follow-up