Post on 09-Feb-2022
Mierta CapaulProgram Manager, Corporate Governance Policy PracticeCorporate Governance DepartmentThe World Bank Group
Key Issues and Policy Recommendations
India
Corporate Governance ROSC Assessment
Varsha MaratheFinancial SpecialistFinance and Private Sector Unit- South Asia RegionThe World Bank
October 18, 2004
New Delhi
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Overview
Who we areWhy corporate governance?The role of the World BankCorporate governance ROSC assessmentsSummary of the corporate governance ROSC assessment in IndiaKey issues and policy recommendationsContact information
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Corporate Governance DepartmentA joint WB/IFC Department
Who we are…
IFC Investor and Corporate
Practice
• Multi-donor trust fund• Awareness raising• Sponsor research• Promotes government
reform and private sector self-help
• Develops toolkit
• Evaluates client companies
• Uses methodology & set of tools and
practices• Helps clients implement
best practice• Technical assistance
• ROSC assessments• IFA / OECD liaison• Cross-support• Operational work• Best Practice papers • Implementation design
WB Corporate Governance
Policy Practice
Global Corporate
Governance Forum
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Why corporate governance?
Protection of shareholder rightsPublic policy rationale Access to finance Crisis prevention and financial stability Protection of pension savings for retirement
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Corporate Governance and World Bank Strategy
Investment Climate One of the World Bank’s strategic pillars Macro-stabilization and micro policy reforms Laws, regulations, public institutions & civic habits Importance of diagnostics – ICA, FIAS, DB, CG
A conducive investment climate is crucial for economic growth and poverty reduction
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Overview of Corporate Governance ROSC Assessments
Corporate governance is one of 12 standards and codes assessed by IMF and World Bank
• Data Dissemination • Fiscal Transparency • Monetary and Financial Policy Transparency • Banking Supervision • Securities Regulation (IOSCO)• Insurance Supervision • Payments Systems Corporate Governance Accounting Auditing Insolvency and Creditor Rights• Anti-Money Laundering
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Overview of Corporate Governance ROSC Assessments
Country participation is voluntaryAssessments are benchmarked against the OECD Principles of Corporate Governance Standardized and systematic diagnostic, including policy recommendationsUpdates: measure progress over timePublication is voluntary at: http://www.worldbank.org/ifa/rosc_cg.html
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Overview of World Bank Corporate Governance Assessments
Published 30Completed (not yet published) 8Ongoing 4Planned ’05 6
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8
10
10
10
0 10 20 30 40 50
FY01
FY02
FY03
FY04
FY05
Assessments by Year
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Overview of Corporate Governance ROSC Assessments
Assessments through FY04 by Region
AFR (3)
EAP (5)
ECA (17)
LCR (7)
MNA (4)
SAR (2)
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Overview of World Bank Corporate Governance Assessments
2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 Brazil Georgia Mauritius Egypt 2 Poland2 Croatia Czech Rep. 2 Brazil 2 Slovenia Thailand Czech Rep. Lithuania Hungary Russia Armenia Egypt Bulgaria Ukraine India 2 Brazil3 India Latvia Korea Peru Vietnam Malaysia Morocco Hong Kong Romania 2 Macedonia Philippines Romania Chile Indonesia Ghana Poland South Africa Mexico Jordan Bangladesh Turkey Slovakia Moldova Lebanon? Zimbabwe Colombia Panama CFA Zone? Pakistan? Notes: Assessments in bold are in process. Assessments in italics have not been published.
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Corporate Governance Assessment in India
Summary of assessment
Key issues and policy recommendations
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India ROSC – Key country features
Over 9,500 listed companies in 200369 GDRs, 11 ADRs, 5 companies bothSOEs account for 32 % of market capIncreasing importance of equity finance Promoters own at least 26 % of firmBusiness groups are common
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Corporate Governance Assessment in India: Summary of Assessment
Strong assessment: 10 Principles “Observed” 6 Principles “Largely Observed” 6 Principles “Partially Observed” 1 Principle “Materially Not Observed” No principle was “Not Observed”
Improvement from previous assessment in 2000 with only 5 observed, 9 partially observed and the rest materially not, not observed or information not sought Update reflects progress over time including Company Act amendments, SEBI regulations and “Clause 49”, the “comply and explain” clause in the listing agreement. Awareness due to reporting in the press.
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Corporate Governance Assessment in India: Summary of Assessment (cont.)
But …Enforcement remains a challenge and sanctions still not credible deterrent Fragmented regulatory structure between DCA, SEBI and SE may lead to regulatory arbitrageBoard practices must be strengthenedAbsence of corporate governance policy for institutional investors acting in fiduciary capacity weakens shareholder influence of all shareholders.
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Key Issues and Policy Recommendations
• Institutional Framework• Board Structure• Fiduciary Duties• Create a Director Training Organization• Institutional Investors• Improve Disclosure- Issuers• Improve Audit Quality and Oversight• Strengthen Sanctions and Enforcement• Next Steps
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1. Institutional Framework
The institutional framework guides the implementation and enforcement of rules and practices. The three-tiered regulatory system creates potential for regulatory arbitrage and weakens enforcement.
An in-depth revision of regulatory system regarding respective roles and responsibilities of the involved institutions and their supervisory functions necessary.• Keeping in mind the size of the equity market
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2. Board Structure
1/3 of the board of directors: permanent directors Promoters, Executive Directors, Nominee Directors
2/3 of the board rotational – i.e. elected at AGM1/3 of the board independent directors If CEO is chairman, then 50% of board independent
Audit committee: majority independent
Should shareholders elect entire board? Do nominee directors have necessary specialized knowledge? Should terms for independent directors be capped?
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3. Fiduciary Duties
Company dominated by promoter rather than BODBOD may delegate special powers to “executive directors”or “full time directors”Audit committee’s recommendations are binding on the board
The Company Act should clearly define duties and liabilities for all directors of the board• No different standard of care & diligence for full time and
independent directors, for audit committee and board Clearly defined board procedures and
responsibilities allow board to exercise its function
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4. Create a Director Training Organization
Director training is considered essential to upgrading a country’s corporate governance.Director training provides directors with an understanding of their role and duties, and educates them in financial, business, and industry practices.Director training will expand the pool of competent independent director candidates, especially for audit committees.
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5. Institutional Investors
SOE insurance companies and UTI are the most important institutional investors Traditionally characterized by voting apathyNominee board positions on portfolio companies’ boards
Institutional investors acting as fiduciaries should be encouraged to formulate and disclose a comprehensive CG and voting policy: Institutional investors should disclose how they manage
conflicts of interest Institutional investors should consider nominating
independent directors to boards of portfolio companies instead of automatically awarding positions to current/retired employees
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6. Improve disclosure compliance- Issuers
Currently: Compliance emphasis on form rather than content Wide range of penalties for non-compliance: from
monetary penalty to imprisonment. However these are not credible deterrents.
Reforms: Sanctions (fines and civil liability) for non-disclosure
should be reviewed SEBI’s role as disclosure regulator- Selective review of
content versus form Stock Exchange Surveillance: Monitoring of financial
media needs to be supplemented with market surveillance on unusual price movements or trading volumes
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7. Improve Audit Quality and Oversight
Currently: Ineffective sanction when auditor’s opinion and reports do
not conform with the law Disciplinary proceedings through ICAI have been lengthy
Reforms Establish a monitoring and enforcement arrangement in
line with recent international developments and the recommendations of Naresh Chandra Committee
World Bank ROSC on Accounting and Auditing to be published shortly provides an assessment of the strengths/weaknesses of the institutional framework for supporting high quality accounting and auditing practices
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8. Strengthen Sanctions and Enforcement
The Companies Act provides sanctions for oppression by majority or mismanagementCourt delays are the norm We would recommend that: Enforcement powers of regulators can offset backlog
and delay of court procedures More effective cooperation between SEBI, SE and
DCA/CLB. Monetary sanctions should be strengthened to act as a
deterrent For fines to be appealed they should have to be paid An efficient delisting mechanism should be introduced
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9. Next Steps
Follow up assessment in 2006Technical assistance and capacity buildingCoordinated action plan for reform, once country assessments on accounting and auditing and insolvency and creditor rights regime are completedCorporate Governance Guidelines in State owned Enterprises