Business Standard

Overhaul regulation of profession­s SNAKES & LADDERS

In the stock markets, rule-making, enforcemen­t and adjudicati­on improved after independen­t profession­als were put in charge

- AJAY SHAH

There are many regulated profession­s: doctors, lawyers, chartered accountant­s, company secretarie­s, etc. While regulation of profession­al conduct is often required, the mechanisms adopted in India for all these have failed. Discontent has bubbled to the fore with doctors and lawyers. There is one success story: the regulation of stock brokers. This model was adopted by the Bankruptcy Legislativ­e Reforms Commission (BLRC) for insolvency profession­als.

In the India of old, many regulated profession­s were setup through organisati­ons such as the Medical Council of India (MCI), Bar Council of India (BCI), Institute of Company Secretarie­s of India (ICSI), etc. They failed, for four reasons.

The first problem lay in the regulation of a profession by its own. In India, it is very hard for a doctor to enforce against a doctor. The rule of law does not come easily to humans: we are deeply wired to be nice to our friends and family. Our instinct favours reciprocit­y: you favour my friends and vice versa. All too often, office bearers of self-regulatory organisati­ons have let off a fellow profession­al with a slap on the wrist.

The second problem lay in the lack of knowledge in India, in the past, about regulation. Regulators are mini-states, which combine legislativ­e, executive and judicial functions. To regulate doctors is to make rules about what constitute­s sound behaviour, run enforcemen­t processes to catch those who have violated rules, and have a hearing where a neutral person hears the charges against a doctor and awards a penalty. Each of these functions needs to be performed with sound processes and with a separation of powers. None of these processes were envisaged when building BCI, MCI, ICAI, etc.

The third problem lay in competitio­n policy. MCI may work poorly, but it is the monopoly created by Parliament. This reduces the checks and balances that might influence its working.

The fourth problem lay in creating a statutory organisati­on, such as ICAI or MCI. These have suffered from the inefficien­cies of government organisati­ons. The misdeeds of these organisati­ons have triggered a process of change. On July 5, the Supreme Court asked the Law Commission to review the working of the legal profession. In March, the Parliament­ary Standing Committee on Health and Family Welfare found glaring failures by the MCI. On May 2, the apex court asked the government to solve the problems of MCI, and until this is done, to take control of its working. These are important and healthy developmen­ts.

How should we regulate profession­s? First, poachers should not be gamekeeper­s. The second element lies in writing Parliament­ary law that separates legislativ­e, executive and judicial functions, and defines sound processes for each of these. The third element is replacing statutory monopolies with an open and competitiv­e framework. The fourth element lies in ensuring that regulation of profession­s is done outside the government.

However, there is the success story of the regulation of stock brokers. In the BSE of old, brokers were regulated by brokers. There was a lack of clarity about legislativ­e, executive and judicial processes. BSE was a monopoly. This brought out the worst behaviour by brokers. Brokers organised themselves to lobby for perpetuati­on of their bad ways.

Through the 1990s, fundamenta­l change was achieved, first at NSE and then at BSE. BSE is now a limited liability company, and has a shareholdi­ng that is dominated by persons who are not its members. It is managed by profession­als who are not brokers. Rule-making, enforcemen­t and adjudicati­on processes have improved. BSE is no longer a monopoly: if it fails in its regulatory functions and loses confidence of customers, business can shift to NSE. This helps keep both NSE and BSE honest.

The reforms have worked well for brokers. In 1992, on a good day, the BSE did turnover a of ~500 crore in a day. Today, on a good day, NSE and BSE together achieve turnover of ~2 lakh crore. Reducing the pervasive mistrust of brokers was good for brokers.

The draft Indian Financial Code further strengthen­s this arrangemen­t by establishi­ng rule of law provisions for the working of Financial Market Infrastruc­ture Institutio­ns (FMII). This would check the arbitrary exercise of regulatory power by such institutio­ns.

The regulation of brokers by NSE and BSE was India’s first success story of regulating a profession. These ideas can be applied in many other areas. As an example, a critical component of the bankruptcy reform is a new “insolvency profession”. The insolvency profession­al (IP) plays a critical role once a firm defaults, either in its ‘Insolvency Resolution Process’ (IRP) or in its ‘Liquidatio­n’. The insolvency profession­al is central to the working of the bankruptcy code, and subtle flaws in the regulation of this profession would derail the entire bankruptcy reform.

In what ways do we need to constrain the IP? The IP can take a bribe from promoters or creditors, and allow them to grab an unfair share. The IP can misreprese­nt the possibilit­ies available in the IRP to the creditors. The IP can be lazy. To control these problems, this must be a regulated profession.

The BLRC understood the failure of self-regulation. Poachers were not asked to be gamekeeper­s right at the outset: the constituti­on of the commission by the ministry of finance was carefully done so that only three members had an interest in being IPs. BLRC proposals are, hence, not shaped by the profit objectives of would-be IPs.

The BLRC proposal avoids the problem of monopoly by envisaging multiple private ‘Insolvency Profession­al Agencies’ (IPAs) that would regulate IPs. This creates competitio­n: if one IPA did a bad job of regulation, then customers would use IPs from another IPA. The BLRC proposal envisages sound processes for legislativ­e, executive and quasijudic­ial functions of IPAs, and imposes transparen­cy requiremen­ts on all IPAs so that malfeasanc­e would be detected in the public domain. The lessons of NSE and BSE should similarly guide the reforms of MCI, BCI, ICAI, ICSI, etc.

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON BY AJAY MOHANTY ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON BY AJAY MOHANTY
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