Title: THE OECD PRINCIPLES OF CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
1THE OECD PRINCIPLES OF CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
2What is corporate governance?
- A set of behavioural patterns
- A normative framework
- OECD Principles address both areas
3Why corporate governance
- Mobilisation of capital by corporations
- Allocation of capital
- Monitoring of the use of capital
4WHY IS CORPORATE GOVERNANCE IMPORTANT FOR POLICY?
- The limited liability corporation
- The public corporation and the agency problem
- The growth of the private corporate sector
- The growth of equity markets and their
institutions - The new economy
- The growth of international private capital flows
5The limited liability company
- More than a century- old debate continuity and
limited liability - Still relevant Company law reform in UK, Sweden,
France, Japan, Germany
6The Agency problem
- The public corporation markets instead of
monitors market for corporate control, market
for managers - Securities regulation focus on market integrity
?the state intervenes when there are big
information asymmetries to enhance credibility - In the past, largely an Anglo problem?most
countries have adopted Anglo solutions
?regulatory convergence
7The growth of the private sector privatisation
totals more than 700 billion since 1990-- more
than one trillion since 1980
8Privatisations Impact on Stock Market
Capitalisation
- Market Cap Of Privatised Enterprises (PEs)Rose
From lt50 Billion To 2.44 Trillion - PEs Are 10 Of Total, 21 Of Non-US Market Cap
- About 30 of total equity issuance during the
last 5 years. More than 50 of total issuance in
Europe. - Market indices 28 in UK and Germany, 30 in
France, 48 in Spain, 46 in Italy - Five Largest--And 7 Of 8 Largest--Firms of the
200 largest firms in emerging markets are PEs
9Over The Past Two Decades Institutional
Investors Have Grown Steadily In Size and
Importance
10Trends In Financial Assets of Institutional
Investors
11The new economy
- high risk requires special financial structure
and dynamics few fixed assets little debt
equity finance and the need of venture capital to
exit they all require a vibrant equity market
12- The private, market-based investment process,
underpinned by better corporate governance is now
much more important for most economies, then it
used to be 10-15 years ago. The state has a clear
interest in developing a domestic capital market
if it wants to capture the benefits of increased
investment both on the supply and demand side
otherwise flight towards the Nasdaq
13FDI and Portfolio Investment Have Increased Their
Share of International Investment Flows.
2,021
384
Direct Investment includes equity capital,
reinvested earnings and inter-company
loans. Portfolio Investment includes equity
securities, bonds, notes and money market
instruments. Other Investment includes loans and
other financial assets and liabilities (both
short term and long term), such as trade credits
and currency deposits.
14Decision to Develop Core Principles
- Governance systems vary widely
- No single model of good corporate governance but
need for a global language - Detailed codes, best practices should be
established at national and regional levels - Task Force objective to identify common elements
or core principles underlying good corporate
governance across the different systems a
multilateral policy framework
15Intended Uses of the Principles
- Primarily aimed at governments
- Guidance also for stock exchanges, investors,
corporations, commissions - Views primarily listed companies
16I. Rights of Shareholders
- Protection of shareholders rights and the
capability of shareholders to influence behaviour
of the corporation are pillars of good corporate
governance
17I. Rights of Shareholders
- Secure ownership and registration,
- Participation in basic decisions (pre-emption
and appraisal), - general shareholder meetings accountability
procedures, in absentia voting, proxy rules the
IT impact - disclosure of capital and control structures
corporate groups and block-holders - fair and transparent transfers of control
transparency and fair treatment of all - Institutional voting pointing to the trend
18II. Equitable Treatment of Shareholders
- All shareholders - including foreign shareholders
- should be treated fairly by controlling
shareholders, boards and management
19II. Equitable Treatment of Shareholders
- Insider trading prohibition a cornerstone of
market integrity in developed economies - Self -dealing and the disclosure of potential
conflicting interests the curse of emerging
markets - Effective redress the possibility to seek
remedies in courts for all shareholder a key
implementation aspect - Ex ante transparency with respect to distribution
of voting rights and ways voting rights exercised - Beneficial ownership and the role of custodians
OECD trends and ADR issue
20III. The Role of Stakeholders
- most stakeholders rights are protected by other
laws (labour law, environmental law, etc.) - In some countries, the Board is also accountable
to some stakeholders, particularly the employees
(but not only) - The Principles are agnostic on formal stakeholder
participation, - The Principles urge transparency, including to
stakeholders - They urge incentives for stakeholder
participation as a value enhancing mechanism
driven by the corporations themselves i.e.
encourage firm specific- investment.
21IV. Disclosure and Transparency
- A strong financial and non financial disclosure
regime is the heart of corporate governance
22IV. Disclosure and Transparency
- Financial and operating results
- Company objectives
- Ownership and control structure
- Board and executive information and
recommendation - Foreseeable risk factors
- Stakeholder information
- Governance information
- Independent audit and high quality dissemination
channels
23V. The Role of the Board
- The Board is the main mechanism for monitoring
management and developing strategy
24V. The Role of the Board
- The key issueindependence from management
- Target non -executive participation (but the
boards should consider..) with specific tasks
audit , remuneration, nomination - Act fairly with respect to various groups of
shareholders, deal fairly with stakeholders,
assure compliance with laws - Review strategy and planning, manage potential
conflicts of interest, assure integrity of
accounting, reporting and communications - Board members need to spend time and have good
information
25- Often there is a tension between markets vs.. the
law. The Principles do not address this issue.
They provide a conceptual framework of issues.
These are taken up in the OECD/World Bank Round
tables and discussed in all the regions of the
world. So these regions can provide their own
agenda for reform and improvement of corporate
governance.