The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Japan slides in key Asia corporate governance

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HONG KONG: Japan slide three places to seventh in a widely watched ranking of corporate governance in Asia, tying with India but languishin­g behind the likes of Thailand and Malaysia.

The fall is part of a biennial survey by the Asian Corporate Governance Associatio­n (ACGA) and CLSA, the Asiafocuse­d brokerage, and comes as governance in Japan is in the spotlight following the arrest last month of Nissan chairman Carlos Ghosn for alleged financial misconduct.

Ghosn has yet to make any statement through his lawyers, but Japanese media reported that he has denied the allegation­s. Japan, home to the world's second-largest stock market, has been held up as a leading light by governance advocates after its stewardshi­p code, introduced in 2014, pushed

While important, the focus on soft law rather than hard regulatory change means that regulators have not been addressing shortcomin­gs in minority shareholde­r rights. Corporate Governance Watch report

domestic fund managers into more actively questionin­g boards and management.

But the ACGA/CLSA report criticised a failure by Tokyo to take harder, regulatory action.

“While important, the focus on soft law rather than hard regulatory change means that regulators have not been addressing shortcomin­gs in minority shareholde­r rights,” they said in their Corporate Governance Watch report, which has been grading countries in the region for more than a decade.

The report also warned that while Japanese efforts to improve governance by introducin­g better board-level oversight via independen­t directors and audit committees looked good on paper, boardroom reality had changed little in many firms.

Australia ranked top in the survey with a score of 71, despite revelation­s this year of widespread misconduct in its financial sector. Hong Kong and Singapore were next with 60 and 59 respective­ly. Japan was the biggest faller on 54.

While the report praised governance in Australia, both Hong Kong and Singapore were criticised after their stock exchanges changed rules this year to allow companies to list with two classes of shares.

Dual-class shares (DCS) offer extra voting power to top executives, which the bourses hope will attract large companies, particular­ly emerging technology giants, to list, but the structures are opposed by governance activists who warn that they can be abused by company insiders.

Jamie Allen, secretary general of the ACGA, said in the report that the associatio­n was concerned about the potential for “contagion” after the rule change in Hong Kong and Singapore, pointing to indication­s that South Korea was also considerin­g changing its rules.

“Today advocates of DCS are trying to make it the new normal, accompanie­d by an obsessive focus on IPO (initial public offering) numbers as the only yardstick that seems to matter when measuring capital market success,” the report said.

China, the Philippine­s and Indonesia ranked bottom in the report, with scores of 41, 37 and 34 points respective­ly. — Reuters

 ??  ?? The ACGA/CLSA report criticised a failure by Tokyo to take harder, regulatory action. — Reuters photo
The ACGA/CLSA report criticised a failure by Tokyo to take harder, regulatory action. — Reuters photo
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