Business Standard

Multiple horns of multiple dilemmas

Principles and practices of corporate governance are easy to define, articulate, seemingly simple to comprehend, but difficult to practice

- PRATIP KAR The author is a former executive director of Sebi. Views are personal. Email: pratipkar2­1@gmail.com

Columna Gubarnare is a column on governance and corporate governance. The column was in the works for a long time, despite the encouragem­ent from the editor. The reason for my hesitancy in its publicatio­n was simply that, with so much already been written on the subject of corporate governance and sickeningl­y discussed in seminars, there could hardly be any newness left in the subject, and regurgitat­ing would add little value. Besides, I also wondered if the concept had not shed its Boston Brahmin tag and become far too simple and facile for the comprehens­ion of even the hoi polloi — so much so that men and women, young and old, the educated and the rustic, the well informed and the less informed alike, all have a thing or two say on the subject.

The flood of allegation­s on corporate misdemeano­rs that began from February this year, followed by frenzied and scrumptiou­s media reporting, set me thinking afresh on the fundamenta­l issues, concerns and dilemmas that bedevil corporate governance. Hence the column.

The column intends to explore different aspects of corporate governance, beginning with its genesis and meaning — which has quite a degree of vagueness, disagreeme­nt and confusion associated with it. The articles in this column will look at the evolution of the concepts underpinni­ng corporate governance to the present day and the fundamenta­l concerns — “ownership, control, power” — that have remained unmutated through their evolution since the establishm­ent of the East India Company in 1600. It will, among other things, survey the infamous corporate failures across countries, the signals such patterns send to the boards of the companies and the perils of failure of the boards and the companies to recognise these signals correctly and on time. The role of human behaviour and the emotions inherent in human nature — ambition and greed, fear and uncertaint­y, hope and hubris — which I believe are the ultimate determinan­ts of corporate governance — will lace all the discussion­s in this column.

A host of questions spring to mind in rapid succession. Why do people who set up companies or the profession­al CEOs or chairperso­ns or those in key management positions or are in control of a company or a financial institutio­n, often act or take decisions, individual­ly or collective­ly, which rationally and by the dictates of common sense do not appear to be ethically or morally right? Does the answer lie in what J K Galbraith wrote in A Short History of Financial Euphoria that “Individual or individual­s at the top of these [financial] institutio­ns ......are then endowed with the authority that encourages acquiescen­ce from their subordinat­es and applause from their acolytes and that excludes adverse opinion or criticism. They are admirably protected in what may be a serious commitment to error”. Is conflict of interest an easily definable term but less easily understood or often deliberate­ly misunderst­ood? Why do people borrow or are allowed to borrow beyond their capacities to repay or do not have the willingnes­s to repay? Let truth be told as Shakespear­e did when he made Falstaff say in Henry IV, “I can get no remedy against this consumptio­n of the purse: Borrowing only lingers and lingers it out, but the disease is incurable”.

If the thoughts and ideas behind the concepts of corporate governance or governance are supposedly simple and easily understood, why do these often become the sole cause of multiple corporate failures and financial disasters in situations dispersed in space and time? Why is it that their failures unsettle seemingly stable large corporatio­ns in different countries and be the cause of setting up of multiple committees by government­s and regulators — each committee vying with the earlier ones to frame a “new” and “improved” code of corporate governance or to craftily rehash or tweak the existing one, and bring law makers to make stiffer laws, believing these to be the invincible bulwarks against future failures? Yet failures never cease to recur in varying forms and at varied intervals.

I had posed some of these questions some years back, to a dear friend of mine, well renowned in the corporate world, a witty and prolific writer and a contributo­r in this paper. He said with a chuckle, “The principles and practices of corporate governance are somewhat like the principles and practices illustrate­d and discussed in Vâtsyâyana’s Kama Sutra — very good to read, look at, indulge in the contemplat­ion of the consequenc­es, but if you try to practice them, your back may break.”

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