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Corporate Governance: An Antidote to Corruption John D. Sullivan July 11, 2006 Washington, D.C. An Affiliate of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce The Third Pan-African Consultative Forum on Corporate Governance successfully brought together 160 participants from 30 African countries dedicated to improving good corporate governance on the continent CIPE © 2006 Corruption: Magnitude Magnitude • Corruption costs African countries an estimated 25% of its combined national income - some $148bn a year. Olusegun Obasanjo, President of Nigeria (BBC 2/17/06) Impact • • • • • Less investment Larger informal sector Higher transaction costs Higher costs of doing business Higher poverty and inequality CIPE © 2006 • Market uncertainty • Poor public services • Misallocated resources Private Sector and Corruption: Different Views Private sector as a _________ corruption • Victim of • Direct – extortion, costs of doing business • Indirect – loss of competitiveness, weak market institutions • Source of • Public procurement • Private-private corruption • Gaining unfair competitive advantage • Solution to • Mobilizing private sector for reform • Say “No” to corruption • Reform company (internal) and country (external) institutions CIPE © 2006 The Corruption Dilemma Dilemma • Although corruption is bad for business, individual companies that engage in corruption receive a short-term advantage Approach • It is important to set up a system that makes it hard for companies to engage in corruption, even if though corruption seems desirable In other words… • Corporate governance as one antidote to corruption CIPE © 2006 Two Sides of Corruption Corruption Demand-Side • • • • • • • Checks and balances Procurement codes Independent audits Legal reform Simplify tax codes E-government systems Enforcement Supply-side • Anti-Bribery Convention • Conflict of interest • Transparency in private-public transactions • Freedom of information • Accounting standards • Corporate governance CIPE © 2006 Corporate Governance The core values of corporate governance: • Transparency • Accountability • Fairness • Responsibility - OECD Principles CIPE © 2006 Corporate Governance Effective corporate governance means that: • • • • • • Board members exercise good judgment Transparency values are present Investors receive timely and relevant information Decision-making is not done behind closed doors Decision-makers are held accountable for their actions Managers act in the interest of a company The bottom line: effective corporate governance makes it hard for companies to provide bribes or other company resources to government officials in exchange for services. CIPE © 2006 Internal Controls and Ethics TI’s Business Principles for Countering Bribery • Political and philanthropic contributions, gifts, hospitality, etc. • Facilitation payments! Implementing the principles requires that: • Boards of directors take formal responsibility • Effective whistle-blowing channels exist • Embedded internal control measures • Formal accounting procedures set up that check for bribery • Internal communication and training CIPE © 2006 Business Principles for Countering Bribery • Business Principles for Countering Bribery • Six-step implementation process (a how-to guide) • Self-evaluation to assess performance (in development) • Voluntary external evaluation tool (in development) CIPE © 2006 Case Studies • Center for Corporate Governance | Building national capacity to implement corporate governance in Kenya • Confecámaras | Transparency pacts in public procurement and corporate governance in state-companies in Colombia • ADFIAP | Corporate governance in development finance institutions • Egyptian Institute of Directors | Multistakeholder effort to develop a corporate governance code in Egypt • Lebanese Transparency Association | Corporate governance code for SMEs in Lebanon Available on CIPE’s Africa regional webpage www.cipe.org/regional/africa CIPE © 2006 “Corporate governance is one of the most effective tools to improve the functioning of domestic economies and increase the investment appeal of African countries.” -Philip Armstrong, Global Corporate Governance Forum, speaking at the Third Pan-African Consultative Forum on Corporate Governance held in November 2005 in Dakar, Senegal CIPE © 2006