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History of Corporate Governance by M.H.M.Faizer. ENTERPRISE GOVERNANCE. Dimensions. Dimensions. CORPORATE GOVERNANCE. BUSINESS GOVERNANCE. (Conformance). (Performance). The two dimensions need to be in balance !. Enterprise Governance.
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ENTERPRISE GOVERNANCE Dimensions Dimensions CORPORATE GOVERNANCE BUSINESS GOVERNANCE (Conformance) (Performance) The two dimensions need to be in balance !
Enterprise Governance Defined as the set of responsibilities & practices exercised by the board & executive management with the goal of providing strategic decision, ensuring that objectives are achieved, ascertaining that risks are managed appropriately and verifying that organizations resources are used responsibly.
Corporate governance & Performance governance • CG covers issues such as board structures & roles, internal controls & executive remuneration. The performance dimension focuses on helping the board to make strategic decisions; understand its appetite for risk and its key drivers of performance.
Corporate Governance is necessary but not sufficient for success. Bad governance can ruin a company but cannot on its own ensure success hence the need for enterprise governance.
Treadway & COSO (USA) • Issued a report on fraudulent financial reporting in 1987 which confirmed the role & status of Audit committees (a listing requirement) with a majority of non executive directors • Frame work for internal controls
Cadbury, Greenbury & Hampel (UK) 1980/90’S • Integrity – honest, balanced and complete financial reporting • Accountability – directives to set up by FRC, the stock exchange & accountancy profession • The code was based on three principles • Openness – subject to commercial confidentiality • Integrity – honest,balanced and complete financial reporting • Accountability- directors to provide quality information & shareholders to exercise their powers.
Cadbury (contd) • Report on financial reporting & accountability of corporate governance • Responsibility of Executive & Non Executive directors • Case for Audit committees • Principal responsibilities of Executive & Non Executive Directors • Links between shareholders, board & auditors
Greenbury (Jan 1995) • Initiative of CBI (Confederation of British industry) • Emphasis on determining directors pay • Role of Non Executive Directors
Hampel (Nov.1995) • Initiative of FRC, Stock Exchange, the CBI & CCAB • Review Cadbury & propose amendments • Review greenbury & propose amendments • Review role of directors • Address the roles of shareholders & auditors in the CG • The committee produced a “ Combined Code”
Combined Code • Directors • Directors remuneration • Accountability & Audit • Relations with shareholders
Directors • Balance of Executive & Non Executive Directors • Clear division of responsibilities between Chairman & CEO • Appointments be formal, rigorous & transparent • The Board evaluate its own performance on an annual basis • Re- election at regular intervals
Directors’ Remuneration • Remuneration necessary to recruit & retain directors • Significant portion of Executive Directors’ pay should be performance related • Policy on remuneration to be clear & transparent • No director should be involved in determining his/her remuneration
Accountability & Audit • Board is responsible for presenting a balanced and understandable assessment of the company’s financial position & prospects • Board is responsible to maintain a sound system of internal controls to safeguard company’s assets & S/H investments • Financial reporting • Relationship with externalauditors
Benefits of Corporate Governance • Reduces risk – it provides a mechanism to review risk. It helps to reduce the risk of fraud • Stimulates performance – it institutes clear accountability & effective links between performance & rewards. • Improves access to capital markets- corporate governance is seen as protecting shareholders rights. • Enhances the marketability of goods & services – it creates confidence among the shareholders, customers & suppliers, etc… • Improves leadership – appointments of NED’S - wider pool of knowledge • Demonstrating transparency & social accountability
Bangladesh • Market Capitalization USD 3.8 Billion (6.8% of GDP ) • 277 Securities listed in DSE • 198 Securities listed in CSE • 49 Banks & 28 Non Banking Institutions • 44 State owned enterprises (60 Privatized )
Bangladesh contd….. • Awareness was low (2002) but now….. • Legal framework : company’s Act 1994 • SEC Act 1993
Corporate Governance Initiatives • Bangladesh Bank directives • National Taskforce on corporate governance • Code of corporate governance • SEC guidelines • Role of World Bank & Asian Development Bank • In 2002, Bangladesh Enterprise Institute examined the current state of corporate governance & practices in South Asia (OECD Principles of Corporate governance as benchmark )
India • Securities scam involving large no of banks leading stock market crash in 1992 • Initiative from confederation of Indian industry (1998) (voluntary code – only 20% of companies followed. • Therefore intervention by the regulators Eg; securities & exchange board & Ministry of company affairs • 15,000 listed companies • 23 registered stock exchanges but only two matters Bombay stock exchange & National stock exchange • SEBI Corporate governance guidelines (1999) (Substantial aspects of SEBI Code are mandatory)
Sri Lanka • Numerous company failures specially finance companies in late 1980’s & 1990’s • Taskforce set up in 1992 by ICA followed by a committee in 1996 • Code of best practice on CG – 1997 by ICA • Setting up of the SL Accounting & Auditing Standards (ICL) Act No 15 of 1995 • SEC – to develop standards of financial reporting
Sri Lanka Contd…. • 1997 – Initiated by Institute of Chartered Accountants together with • Colombo Stock Exchange • Securities Exchange Commission • Ceylon Chamber of Commerce • Institute of Directors of Sri Lanka • ( voluntary best practice code) • Listed companies, unit trusts, fund management companies, finance companies, Banks, insurance companies were expected to adopt the code. • ( Primarily based on Cadbury Report)
Sri Lanka Contd… • Areas Covered • Effectiveness of the board • The Chairman • Non – Executive Directors • Professional Advice • Directors’ Training • Directors Responsibilities for Financial Statements • Compliance Report • Internal Controls • Committee structure for Board
Sri Lanka Contd…. • Code of best practice on Audit Committees (2002) • Initiated by ICL • A separate code covering Audit committees was introduced • Based on the combined code (UK)
Sri Lanka Contd… • Areas Covered • Effectiveness of the board • The Chairman • Non – Executive Directors • Professional Advice • Directors’ Training • Directors Responsibilities for Financial Statements • Compliance Report • Internal Controls • Committee structure for Board
Sri Lanka Contd…. • Code of best practice on Audit Committees (2002) • Initiated by ICL • A separate code covering Audit committees was introduced • Based on the combined code (UK)
SL Contd… • Revision of Corporate Governance Code 1997 • In 2003 • Applicability to all companies under companies Act • Functions of the board – revisited • Disclosure of major transactions • Introduced performance evaluation
Sri Lanka contd • Guidelines for listed companies (Audit or Audit Committees) • In 2004 • Deals mostly with external Auditor related issues (Qualification & appointment, power, Remuneration, Rotations, conflict of interest). • Audit committees, Financial reporting requirements
Further Revision (code of best practice) • In 2006 • To include latest developments of the combined code (UK) & NYSE listed co. manual, Singapore, Malaysia, India etc.. • Specific new inclusions: • Code of ethics for directors & senior managers • Specific board related Disclosures • Audit committee aspects are strengthened • Director Independence criteria is specified
Major Corporate Collapses • UK : The Maxwell publishing group BCCI Marconi • USA : Enron World Com Tyco • Germany : Berliner Bank Babcok • Australia : OneTel Ansett Airlines
Lessons of Experience Lesson i : Corporate Governance cannot be introduced in isolation from a range of other reforms. Nor can these reforms achieve all their objectives without CG initiatives Lesson ii : The need to monitor the trends in different sectors of the market so as to try & avoid a “perfect storm” Lesson iii : need for range of players to improve CG.
Lesson iv : a degree of “stick” may be needed with “carrots” of increased investment & performance Lesson v : critical importance of company & contract laws & efficacy of the legal system.