Corporate Governance & CSR: CRF - 2012: Control To Self Regulation
Corporate Governance & CSR: CRF - 2012: Control To Self Regulation
Corporate Governance & CSR: CRF - 2012: Control To Self Regulation
Y.R.K. Reddy
yrk@academyofcg.org www.academyofcg.org February 15th 2012
A: Review of the key developments leading to revived interest in corporate governance; the current framework of assumptions; the OECD standards; the assumed benefits and business case; the broad shortcomings in Emerging Market Economies; the potential role of company registrars in promoting corporate governance. B: Developments leading to the current logic for CSR; the international standard relating to stakeholders; leading approaches and bench marks; the dynamics; the potential for strategic CSR - key examples, whether Registrars have a role in promoting.
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PART A
Corporate Governance Historical Foundations The Directors of such companies, however, being the managers
rather of other peoples` money than of their own, it cannot well be expected, that they should watch over it with the same anxious vigilance with which the partners in a private copartnery frequently watch over their own . Negligence and profusion, therefore, must always prevail, more or less in the management of the affairs of such a company, 1776.
The focus on control in corporations: Berle & Means Studied the modern corporation & debated the dynamics of ownership and control in 1932 in the context of the USA. There are severe apprehensions about control and what it can mean to Institutional investors and minority shareholders, in case of block holders participating in management and the SOEs. Hope that risks would be abated if internal structure and processes and external institutions get developed reducing information asymmetry and promoting attendant rationality.
Revolving around Crony Capitalism due to financial sector weaknesses (combination of inadequate capitalization & supervision of banks combined with excessive leverage & guarantee + directed lending). Competitive capitalist / market assumptions with weak structures the Asian way with cross holdings, large number of subsidiaries, lack of transparency, collusion between corporations, financial institutions and governments etc. Weaknesses in equity market development, IFRS / FASB standards, information disclosure, oversight by independent directors, bankruptcy laws.
Corporate Governance is one of the 12 key standards promoted by Financial Stability Forum (now Financial Stability Board). IMF - World Bank, The Report on Observance of Standards and Codes (ROSC), OECD, BIS, regional and national agendas..
Mainly argue for appropriate regulation / intense supervision; greater transparency and disclosure norms; early action from the State; public policy / plans for impaired assets; balance sheet repairs consistency of treatment etc. at policy level ( along with some multi-lateral moves) At the enterprise level, the emphasis has been on advanced / robust / comprehensive risk management and qualified board oversight and activism; compensation / incentive structure that do not encourage false / fleeting profits and risks.
Accountability
Fairness
Transparency
Responsibility
Ensure mgmt.s Protect accountability to Shareholders the board & rights; treat all boards equitably; accountability to provide shareholders redress.
Ensure timely Recognize the and accurate legal rights of disclosure on all stakeholders & material matters promote sustainable development
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Internal
Shareholders
External
Private
Stakeholders
Regulatory
Standards (for example, accounting and auditing) Laws and regulations Financial Sector Debt Equity Markets Competitive factor and product markets Foreign direct investment Corporate control
Board of Directors
Appoints and monitors
Reputational agents1 Accounts Lawyers Credit Rating Investment Bankers Financial media Investment advisors Research Corporate Governance Analysis
Reports to
Management
Operates
Core functions
agents refer to private sector agents, self-regulating bodies, the media, and civic society that reduce information asymmetry, improve the monitoring of firms, and shed light on opportunistic behaviour
1Reputational
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Many studies have shown positive benefits. Eg: those of Mc Kinsey, ABI and IMF working paper on CGQ & CLSA studies and the subsequent ones Recap: Other compilations had shown following benefits in earlier years:
Improves Valuation of Assets - Share premium 22% to 30% as per Mc Kinsey survey; 700 fold increase in firm value in Russia (21 firms) Improves Access to Capital - CG a major factor for competitive provision of finance; access to IFIs. Lowers the Cost of Capital - CG helps in finer rates. Eg: Romanias BCR Improves Efficiency - ABN Amro study in Brazil shows 20% higher P / E ratios; 45% higher ROEs and 76% higher net margins. Deutsche Bank study of S & P 500 shows out performance by 19% over two years; Harvard / Wharton study shows abnormal returns of 8.5%; CLSA study of 100 companies shows 8% points higher EVA; Other benefits - reduced risks improves the reputation and trust ; increases competitiveness.
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Regulatory Approaches
Two Most Popular Typologies: Principle based Comply / Apply or Explain ( and justify). Rule based, regulated / legislated and well enforced. Newer / emerging hybrid versions:
Comply or Explain but in legal and regulatory guidance. Mostly principle-based but one or two strongly rule based, regulated but fully enforced. Rule based, regulated / legislated but weakly enforced by intention.
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Regulation entry, as going concerns, exit facilitations. The tradeoff between hard nosed regulation / enforcement vs. market discipline. Is there a role for campaigns / reputation intermediation? Any other experiences?
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Corporate Social responsibility, corporate citizenship, responsible business, stakeholder engagement etc. are cluster concept: Often fuzzy and overlapping; policy as well as action oriented. The political economy of CSR can be traced to:
Beginnings mainly in the 50s. Much controversy during the 70s (strength of collectives; Milton Freidmans perspective). Strong shift to customers as key stakeholders during the 80s (issue of competition & competitive strategy for survival); Tilt to providers of finance and policy regimes in the 90s (importance of finance; liberalization) The upsurge of sustainability issues in current times
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OECD Principles of Corporate Governance What does the Global Standard Say?
The Role of Stakeholders in Corporate Governance
The Corporate Governance framework should recognize the rights of stakeholders established by law or through mutual agreements and encourage active co-operation between corporations and stakeholders in creating wealth, jobs, and the sustainability of financial sound enterprises.
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The rights of stakeholders that are established by law or through mutual agreements are to be respected. Where stakeholders interests are protected by law, stakeholders should have the opportunity to obtain effective redress for violation of their rights. Performance-enhancing mechanisms for employee participation should be permitted to develop. Where stakeholders participate in the corporate governance process, they should have access to rely an, sufficient and reliable information on a timely and regular basis. Stakeholders, including individual employees and their representative bodies, should be able to freely communicate their concerns about illegal or unethical practices to the board and their rights should not be compromised for doing this. The corporate governance framework should be complemented by an effective, efficient insolvency framework and by effective enforcement of creditor rights.
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Popular definition:
A stakeholder is any group or individual who can affect, or is affected by, the achievement of an organization's objective
Freeman, 1984
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A stakeholder is any institution, group or individual who can get benefited or affected by, and/or can benefit or adversely affect, a corporation`s actions in pursuit of its primary objectives
Y.R.K. Reddy, Presentation at OECD meet, Cebu, 2007.
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Several guidelines, case studies, international standards for assessment / reporting especially as part of CSR (Stakeholder engagement may be larger than CSR). Noteworthy: IFCs Stakeholder Engagement good practice manual; IFCs EHS guidelines; OECD`s guidelines for MNEs; Dow Jones Sustainability Index, FTSE4Good Index, SA 8000 / 14000, AA1000, GRI et al + principles such as Caux. ISO 26000 adopted in September 2010 A World by itself!
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Shareholders-Government, Institutions, Ministry of HI&PE Channels General Public Other Central Govt Direct Employees Subsidiaries Bodies/Laws Retirees Direct Customers & Families Direct Suppliers
Domestic/International
Joint Ventures
CAG
Unions
Ministry of Finance
Neighborhoodenvironment/Infrastructure
Families of Employees Townships Hospitals -Community CentresSchools, Colleges, Technical Institutes Implications for CSR??
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Dynamics of stickiness, capture, direction and the need for close analysis
High
Involve
Partner
Low
INTEREST
High
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Key steps: close analysis, explicit policy, detailed planning, partnerships, execution, reporting.
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Firm Infrastructure
(e.g. financing, planning, investor relations)
Technology Department
(e.g. product design, testing, process design, material research, market research)
Procurement
(e.g. components, machinery, advertising & services)
Inbound Logistics (e.g. incoming material storage, data collection, service customer access)
Marketing & Sales (e.g. sales force, promotion, advertising proposal writing, web site)
After Sales Service (e.g. installation customer support complaint resolution report)
Adapted from Porter & Kramer Strategy and Society, HBR December 2006
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Some Current Policy Steps in India Do they need International Best Practices?
The guidelines for Corporate Social Responsibilities for Central Public Sector Enterprises. Key concerns in reviving old debates on objectives, level playing field and control shift. The proposed Companies Law Bill and the approach to mandating CSR the policy implications of governance, tax levies and their adverse impact on market forces / discipline. The National Voluntary Guidelines on Social, Environmental and Economic Responsibilities of Business. What role can Registrars of Companies play?
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Some Challenges
The lack of unitary standards and multiplicity of reputation agents. Lack of standards in accounting, reporting and disclosure. The difficulty in recognizing the risks associated with CSR and their second-order trades-off with strategy. Others drawing from international experiences?
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