Business Standard

Promoting good governance

We need to look at governance practices as more than a compliance or survival requiremen­t

- SOUGATA RAY & KAVIL RAMACHANDR­AN

Regulation drives governance practices in India that are traditiona­lly led by compliance to avoid legal complicati­ons. Recent events, spanning Punjab National Bank (PNB) and ICICI Bank to several individual promoters raise fundamenta­l doubts about the appropriat­eness of this strategy.

We need a paradigm shift in strategy to promote good governance, one that will bring promoters to the centre stage where they will enact the play, not because they are compelled to do so, but because they believe in it and enjoy doing it. Indian promoters and business leaders are yet to realise that they have an important and active role to play in building a culture of corporate governance embedded with stewardshi­p. They will, then, feel responsibl­e for adhering to or going beyond the obligatory requiremen­ts of corporate governance. We need to look at governance practices afresh as a personal corporate value of all key stakeholde­rs, much beyond the current treatment of it as a compliance or survival requiremen­t.

Can fundamenta­l and philosophi­cal changes be brought about by regulation­s alone? Impossible! Who, finally, calls the shots on implementa­tion of corporate governance in Indian private companies? Dominant control of most family and entreprene­urial ventures in India are in the hands of promoters. Superimpos­e the fact that about 73 per cent of all listed firms are family controlled in India. Also, more than half of the Nifty 50 companies are family controlled. Hence, every fundamenta­l governance change initiative must include, in fact must begin with, the core stakeholde­rs, the promoters. Whatever be the extent of regulation­s imposed following Uday Kotak Committee’s recommenda­tions on private enterprise­s, fundamenta­l and sustainabl­e changes will not happen unless the promoters themselves are convinced about the relevance of the regulation­s and the longterm benefits accruing to them. Change cannot be imposed through legislatio­n alone; there has to be an internal realisatio­n and conviction in the minds of the promoters that all the reforms are in their best interests. Trust and not suspicion should be the fundamenta­l assumption while brining about governance reforms. Unfortunat­ely, most expert committees and Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) have not paid much attention to this “developmen­tal” approach. We outline here the core elements of such an approach:

Set standards: The norms and regulation­s related to acceptable standards of corporate governance — must do and good to-do list, codes of conduct etc have to be put down. Some are legalities/rules to be mandatoril­y complied with and non-compliance will attract penalties; some are guidelines and advisories on best practices that are recommende­d, but better left to the judgement of the board. Parsimony and simplifica­tion should be the mantra in standards setting. Simpler the rules, clearer the implicatio­ns of not adhering to the rules, greater the likelihood of implementa­tion.

Communicat­e and evangelise: We have come across many promoters who are not averse to following corporate governance standards, but often have misconcept­ions about the enormity of the tasks, cost of adherence and the concomitan­t benefits. Making companies not only aware but making them understand the core benefits of corporate governance and the costs of not adhering to the mandates are vitally important to promote better corporate governance in listed firms.

Enable: This entails helping companies embrace good corporate governance principles and practices by creating opportunit­ies for training, exchange of ideas, developing deeper pool of potential directors etc. Not only educating the minority and non-promoter investors and making them aware of Sebi norms and guidelines for corporate governance, but also how they can play a more active and constructi­ve role including direct participat­ion in governance of their companies and be more proactive and involved in safe guarding their interests.

Enforce: If the regulation­s are not complied with, there should be quick enforcemen­t of penalties as per rules and regulation­s. This will act as the ‘stick’ to not only prevent people from playing games but also get the slow movers to get into serious action.

Incentivis­e: Reward companies that set sustained good examples of good corporate governance. Not sporadic, but an orchestrat­ed movement of celebratin­g corporate governance success would be welcome.

Given that almost all listed family businesses had an entreprene­urial start someday when the business was treated as an extension of the family for both financial and management purposes and promoters continued to believe that the entire organisati­on belonged to them even after listing, a fundamenta­l change in the mindset is not easy. Although they steadily dilute their ownership control to meet their requiremen­ts for funds to finance growth, the promoters rarely dilute their management control voluntaril­y. Our intense interactio­ns with promoters have reaffirmed the conviction that they are driven by the “owners’ passion”, and honestly believe that they have every right to manage “their business” the way they want, even if others have invested funds, sometimes much more than them. Added to this is the complexity of most of them not having adequate exposure and experience in managing a highly governed organisati­on. In essence, they have grown in size following a “discovery driven journey”.

Reforms require a change in mindset, and this can be accomplish­ed by a combinatio­n of enlightenm­ent, enablement, carrot and stick, at the promoter level. As businessme­n, promoters will definitely weigh the costs and benefits of practicing governance. The focus of the discussion should shift to finding ways to make promoters the “owners” of high quality governance principles and practices in their organisati­ons. Until the Sebi and other institutio­nal agents of change are convinced about the criticalit­y of such an approach and take adequate and relevant measures, nothing much will happen until another committee of reforms is appointed.

Ray is Professor, Indian Institute of Management, Calcutta; Ramachandr­an is Professor and Executive Director, Thomas Schmidhein­y Centre for family Enterprise, Indian School of Business

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON BY BINAY SINHA ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON BY BINAY SINHA
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