Not sure if the requirements are referred to as an artefact or as a process. Although it is possible to skip requirements as artefact especially for smaller teams and still deliver a product, skipping requirements as process is out of question. Requirements as artefact let you model the system at cost lower than building the entire thing, do feasibility, estimates, and for a larger and more disperse team to cut communication overheads and have a common ground under the feet. Neglect the requirements and you get louse estimates (regardless if you plan a lot up front or just do a short sprint), poor idea of feasibility and possibly quite a lot of very inefficient communication and even some a lot of miscommunication.
Requirements as a process on the other hand is going to exist regardless if it is formally acknowledged or not. You cannot really exclude it, you can pretend requirements process does not exist or integrate into the design, coding, testing or into stages as late as pilot and maintenance. Obviously treating the process in this way mean it will not get fair amount of attention and resource. Consequences normally range from delivering something that is ultimately useless to having to fix the now obvious shortcoming shortcomings of the product later in the development cycle or even discovering the real requirement requirements once the product fails in the field, increasing the cost of development, defaulting on the deadlines, ruining team’s good name, destroying user confidence etc.
Testing usually boils down to validation and verification, more recently testing technology improvements let automated testing to be used as a solid tool for achieving greater efficiency in debugging and reducing time necessary for regression testing. Validation is making sure that the team has built the right product, i.e. scoped requirements are correct, not contradictory and there are not no gaps. Verification on the other hand is making sure that the product is built right: no technical defects, accidental errors etc.
As we can see testing provides a safety net in the scenario where requirements were neglected. Normally as the team starts testing they need to refine their understanding of requirements and as a result modify the software. Since both requirement artefacts and software itself just represent different levels of fidelity of in modelling a solution for a real life problem, and software as a model is order of magnitude more precise the testing of application evaluates requirements as well (regardless if they are implicit or explicit, formally analysed or informally communicated).
Normally the alternative to testing is to let users report a substantially larger amount of defects and shortcomings and try and fix them as part of maintenance (meaning later in product lifecycle), increasing the cost of every fix.
So requirements versus testing? Fire the manager. Ok, skip requirements if you want the project schedule slip during the testing phase and get yourself into the mess of building not what users need, skip the testing if you just need to show utter disrespect to your users.
