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February 2010 Anne E Molyneux Director – CS International Prime Minister, Dr. Manmohan Singh on CG “Unless Indian firms come to be recognized world wide for good corporate governance, they will not be able to compete globally in an increasingly interdependent integrated world”. “In the era of protectionism few bothered about corporate governance and transparency in accounting and in management. Such laxity, however, is no longer possible”. At ICAI Diamond Jubilee Celebrations - 1 July 2008 CPSE scorecard 242 CPSEs, 41 listed, 22 sectors 41= 20% of market cap of BSE Dominate in utilities, transportation, coal, oil, gas Significant in steel, fertilizer, aluminium, copper and electricity machinery Produce 8% of GDP on value added basis 25% of GDP in gross sales 2% of GDP in profit terms Significant control in significant sectors Employs 1.57 million CPSE scorecard Top 10 CPSEs 2006-2007 increased income by 15.2% 2007-2008 increased income by 12.2% Net profits fell slightly Most profitable predominantly in extractives Bottom 10 -least profitable in deregulated industries, making losses for a number of years Other CPSEs 140 profitable, 53 loss making, others marginal What good CG seeks to achieve? Part of broader economic reforms – apply market discipline as far as possible and show public sector leadership Performance increase value for India and Indians improve performance, competitiveness and efficiency of public sector achieve strategies and manage risk Conformance - transparent, accountable decision making in compliance with laws and regulations Strong oversight and review of decision making (financial and non-financial), reporting, internal control systems, and mechanism for investor grievance attention. Limitations No perfect structure or model How to achieve independence of boards – role of controlling shareholders (government or family) “Independence” of independent directors Capable directors : supply issue Checklist approach to compliance (vs. spirit) To what extent, can regulators regulate greed, dishonesty and unethical behavior… Evolution in private sector 1998 - Desirable CG Code for listed companies by CII 2000 – Recommendations of Kumar Mangalam Birla Committee implemented - Clause 49 introduced 2002 – Naresh Chandra Committee Report and banks ( Dr Ashok Ganguly) 2003 - Recommendations made by Narayan Murthy Committee (implemented in 2004) 2005: Irani Committee Report on Company Law constituted by MCA Various Committees factor in international practices and developments - Narayan Murthy Committee was set up in the aftermath of major corporate developments in US (Enron/WorldCom / SOX) NFCG set up by MCA – interact with national and international agencies Comprehensive self assessment in 2007-08 Evolution in public sector Phase 1 - 1991 New Industrial Policy – greater role for private sector – more competition, partial sale of shares (on BSE , then in large lost), disinvestment, deregulation, liberalisation Phase 2 - Mid 1990s – more decision making to CPSEs, esp. Navratnas (originally 9 now 18); 1997 DPE Guidelines – special status for some cos. Phase 3 – to 2004, disinvestment and privatisation, esp listing on SX, therefore requirement cos comply with listing rules and CG requirements Phase 4 – 2004 to today, National Common Minimum Program, reaffirmed commitment to state-owned sector; 2007 DPE CG for all CPSEs Framework for CPSEs Legal The Companies Act, 1956, s. 617, ‘govt companies’ – 51% o’ship Listing Agreement (Clause 49) – SEBI Act, 1992 Mandatory Voluntary provisions For listed companies - other SEBI Regs. (not just clause 49) Other DPE guidelines Guidelines on CG for SOEs Other: Right to information Labor Insolvency Other acts and regulations – competition, environmental, banking/securities, insurance/sector regs Institutional – shareholder role is complex; oversight and regulation also complex Structure Main features of Clause 49: Composition of Board Compensation / Remuneration of non-executive directors Constitution of Committees Disclosure norms CEO / CFO Certification Reporting requirements Risk management framework Whistle blower mechanism – non mandatory Main Report Recommendations CG reforms - seen as part of the broader reform program Focus efforts on the profitable companies - navratnas and miniratnas Deepening CG reforms requires: Strengthening the state’s ownership role; Professionalising CPSE boards; Enhancing transparency and disclosure. Implementation of reform requires careful management Future steps Strategy for CPSE reform Revision of the CG Guidelines Monitor compliance with CG Guidelines Company level reforms Enhance DPE capacities to do all this Transparency issues re government obligations, relations Move to more centralised ownership model– to arm’s length ownership/shareholder perspective Ensure clarity and cost of non-commercial obligations Apply, as far as possible, private sector CG norms to public sector commercial enterprises. Transparency Issues Board appointment process – an independent process, yes but....... Minimize political interference CMD Independent directors Functional directors Nomination committee role Focus on competence and commitment – search criteria Pilot in few navratnas and transfer to rest Reduce ACC/PESB role Reduce focus on appointment of civil servants Remove preference for functional directors to be internal candidates Audit committees and independent directors Clause 49 – min 3 dirs (2 independent dirs) CA requirements in unlisted cos - min 3 dirs (2 independent dirs) VIP role in getting oversight and compliance right, inc internal controls and risk management Need: More independents from private sector Board and A/C evaluation process Make it mandatory for all statutory companies to form audit committees Non-compliant composition re independent directors No audit c’tee formed, not meet number of 3, not 2/3 independents Transparency re board/director/committee evaluations Clause 49 – non-mandatory recommends evaluation of nonexecutive directors, by peer group of rest of board excluding the persons to be evaluated (rarely done) Need: Systematic board, board committee and individual director evaluations Related to performance targets, committee activities and relations with board and management, and Relate to board/director development programs for CIP Only requirement is that administrative ministries review performance of directors at end of first year , prior to confirmation of rest of tenure Clause 49 no evaluation of fulltime directors or of independent directors Transparency – enhance disclosures Regulations re disclosure are well established but... Limited monitoring Need to improve: Submit quality accounts presented according to international accounting standards in a timely manner (not late and require restatements) Improve disclosures re related party transactions, noncommercial objectives, social obligations, ministerial requests/directions, MOU targets and target areas DPE and ministry monitoring of disclosures including public reports on this Transparency – strengthen audits and control Quality statutory audits to international standards by independent firms appointed by CAG CAG audits: compliance audit, test audit of statutory audit, performance audit Weakness in audit committee oversight of and implementation of internal controls, internal audit risk management and disclosure processes Need in each CPSE: Independent directors on mandatory audit committees Stronger risk governance and systems Likely to need improved capacity and guidance in this area Transparency and disclosure - conclusions Forward plan for reform - DPE, CAG Clarity re govt obligations, disclosure requirements and requirements re related party transactions Rationalise supplementary audits and performance audits Support for CPSEs Director appointment and development programs, especially re evaluations and audit committee activities Increased understanding and implementation re risk, control and internal audit and quality disclosure and reporting practices Increased monitoring by ministries, DPE and CAG and public reporting on this. Transparency and Disclosure - Discussion Actions How do we achieve these goals? What changes will be easiest to tackle? Barriers What obstacles may we meet? What are the issues? Solutions How do we overcome the obstacles? Discussion- specific questions 1. Do CPSEs have too much reporting and audit requirements? How can these be made more cost effective without reducing disclosure? 2. How can CPSEs more effectively disclose non-commercial obligations, including those mandated by GOI? Similarly, how should CPSEs disclose transactions with each other and their administrative ministries? 3. How can DPE and the ministries help CPSEs to implement disclosure requirements? 4. How can DPE and the ministries better monitor CPSE disclosure? 5. How can CPSEs introduce and improve performance of audit committees, and internal audit and control systems?