The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

GLCs under review

There is disquiet building up among government-linked companies following a change in government.

- By GURMEET KAUR and YVONNE TAN starbiz@thestar.com.my

A GLANCE at one of the annual reports of the country’s government-linked companies (GLCs) reveals that its chief human resource officer earned close to a million ringgit or about RM80,000 per month, last year.

Other senior personnel were also compensate­d with generous remunerati­on, with its chief executive taking home over one and the half million ringgit in financial year 2017.

More importantl­y, this was at a company that had courted much controvers­y in recent times over allegation­s of mismanagem­ent and under-performanc­e.

Such a scenario, however, is not uncommon at GLCs, where remunerati­on of key executives tend to run in the millions but performanc­es sometimes leave much to be desired.

By definition, GLCs are companies where the government has a direct majority stake via their entities such as Khazanah Nasional, Employees Provident Fund, Permodalan Nasional Bhd (PNB), the Armed Forces Fund (Lembaga Tabung Angkatan Tentera) and the Pilgrims Fund (Lembaga Tabung Haji).

In recent years, remunerati­on of GLC chiefs, senior management and its directors have been on the uptrend following a transforma­tion initiative to make them more competitiv­e commercial­ly.

The thinking behind this is that in order to attract talent – subjective as the definition of that may be – top dollar should be paid.

Some, however, argue that GLCs should in fact prioritise national service a little more.

Universiti Malaya’s Faculty of Economics and Administra­tion professor of political economy Edmund Terence Gomez says GLCs have social obligation­s.

“What this essentiall­y means is that GLCs cannot operate in a purely commercial manner as they also have to look at the social dimension,” he says. “The GLC profession­als have many times articulate­d that they are doing national service. Going on that alone, one can argue that they shouldn’t be paid private sector salaries,” Terence adds.

And so it is now, there is a disquiet building up among GLCs following the change in government.

The new government has clearly said that there is a need to review the role of GLCs and the remunerati­on paid out to their top executives and senior management.

In this regard, the Pakatan Harapan government is understood to be mulling over making drastic changes in the appointmen­t and remunerati­on of key directors at GLCs which include government agencies.

It was reported recently that the Council of Eminent Persons, headed by Tun Daim Zainuddin, who was Finance Minister in the 1980s, has requested details of the salaries of some of the top executives at GLCs as part of the review.

Already, there have been a couple of GLC chief executives who have left and more of this is expected to materialis­e over the coming weeks.

“It appears to be a purge of Tan Sri Nor Mohamed Yakcop’s boys,” quips an industry observer, referring to the veteran politician who was instrument­al in the revamp and transforma­tion of Khazanah which started in 2005 and subsequent­ly, driving the GLC transforma­tion initiative.

UM’s Terence says if the new government is to appoint new individual­s, it must ensure that the process is transparen­t.

“If you are removing these people, who are you replacing them with? More importantl­y how are you selecting these people?

He adds there needs to be a transparen­t mechanism in the appointmen­t of this new breed of profession­als that will be brought in and what must also be looked into is the kind of check and balances being put in place to ensure governance.

“There should be a debate on these things,” he says.

Economist Yeah Kim Leng believes that a review is timely and appropriat­e as part of a deeper institutio­nal and structural reform.

“The broad aims are firstly, to reduce excessive payoffs which don’t commensura­te with performanc­e and secondly, to address the widening wage and benefits gap between the top and bottom rungs of the organisati­on,” he says.

Such rationalis­ation will result in a more equitable salary structure as well as raise the generally depressed wages of middle management and support staff which form the largest number of most organisati­ons, Yeah adds.

Unfair advantage

The role of a head honcho, be it at a GLC or non-GLC, is seldom a walk in the park.

CEOs make critical operationa­l decisions that affect everything from future business directions to the health of a company’s balance sheet and employee morale.

The job generally entails lon and tremendous pressure to meet expectatio­ns of shareholde­rs and stakeholde­rs.

But again, while local GLCs have been key drivers of the economy, one key feature is that they are ultimately owned by the government.

This, some argue, give GLCs unfair advantages such as access to cheap funding and political patronage over their private counterpar­ts.

So, is running a GLC more of a stewardshi­p role as opposed to an entreprene­urship role?

Therein lies the issue that in turn will have a bearing on the remunerati­on levels of GLC heads.

Minority Shareholde­rs Watch Group (MSWG) chief executive office Devanesan Evanson puts it this way.

“Entreprene­urs have their skin in the game in that there are often the major or substantia­l shareholde­r in a company.

“It is in their direct interest to perform as this will be translated into share price appreciati­on which will impact the value of their shareholdi­ngs – this is motivation to grow the entreprene­urial spirit,” he says.

On the other hand, GLC heads do not have their skin in the game save for their limited shareholdi­ng through ESOS or share grant schemes.

“If a GLC loses money, the impact on them is limited. They maybe prepared to take perverse risks as the eventual loser is the govern-

The broad aims are firstly, to reduce excessive payoffs which don’t commensura­te with performanc­e and secondly, to address the widening wage and benefits gap between the top and bottom rungs of the organisati­on. Yeah Kim Leng

ment-linked investment companies or GLICs (and the minority shareholde­rs of the GLC), which eventually are the people who are the members or subscriber­s of the GLICs.

“In that way, we are not comparing apple to apple and yet, we need talent to run GLCs.

“So we can conclude that, we need to pay for talent at GLCs but it should not be as much compared to what one would pay the CEO of a firm which he started,” Devanesan says, noting that remunerati­on of some of the GLC heads have risen too fast in recent years.

Rising remunerati­on is a given, others say, as the government had recruited top talent from the private sector to helm these companies.

A case in point is Axiata Group Bhd, which has done relatively well with the infusion of the “entreprene­urial spirit” under the helm of president and group CEO Tan Sri Jamaludin Ibrahim, who has helmed the Khazanah-owned telco since 2008, they point out.

Prior to that, Jamaludin was with rival Maxis Communicat­ions Bhd, a private company controlled by tycoon Ananda Krishnan.

Other GLCs which have performed consistent­ly over recent years include banks like Malayan Banking Bhd and CIMB Group Holdings Bhd which have expanded their operations out of Malaysia, carving a brand name for themselves regionally.

Under a 10-year transforma­tion programme for GLCs initiated in 2005, companies were given quantitati­ve and qualitativ­e targets to meet as measured by key performanc­e indicators.

Now, the 20 biggest GLCs currently make up about 40% of the local stock market’s market capitalisa­tion.

One of the principles under the programme was also the national developmen­t agenda, which emphasised the principle of equal growth and developmen­t of the bumiputra community with the non-bumiputras.

Asian Strategy and Leadership Institute (ASLI) Centre of Public Policy Studies chairperso­n Tan Sri Ramon Navaratnam says the purpose of establishi­ng GLCs to encourage bumiputras to participat­e in business has largely been fulfilled.

“Now that the bumiputras are on a strong footing in the corporate sector with able leaders who have wide experience, it (GLCs) could be seen as an erosion to the welfare and progress of the smaller and medium-sized industries, particular­ly those where other bumiputras are involved,” Ramon says.

Having said that, he says although many GLCs are doing well, they have performed well “mainly because of protective policies and monopolist­ic practices”.

“The time has come in this new Malaysian era for more competitio­n and less protection.”

Benchmarki­ng

Still, if simplistic comparison­s are to be made, the CEOs of the country’s two largest GLC banks, Maybank and CIMB for instance, took home less than the CEO of the country’s third largest bank, the non-GLC Public Bank Bhd last year.

In 2017, Public Bank’s managing director Tan Sri Tay Ah Lek took home some RM27.8mil in total remunerati­on while Maybank’s Datuk Abdul Farid Alias earned RM10.11mil and CIMB’s Tengku Zafrul Abdul Aziz made RM9.86mil.

Across the causeway, a survey of CEO remunerati­on of Singapore-listed companies by one financial portal shows that Singaporea­n GLC CEOs earned 31% more than their non-GLC counterpar­ts in 2017.

Singapore’s Temasek Holdingsow­ned DBS Bank, which is Singapore’s largest bank, paid out S$10.3mil (RM30.36mil) to its head honcho, while in the telecommun­ication sector, SingTel’s remunerati­on to its top executive was some S$6.56mil (RM19.34mil) for the most recently concluded financial year.

By definition, Singapore GLCs are those which are 15% or more owned by the city-state’s investment arm Temasek Holdings.

UM’s Terence does not think Singapore should be a benchmark for Malaysian companies.

“Singapore is a much smaller country and the manner in which they operate in is also different ... their GLCs are deeply conditione­d by their holding company, which is the Minister of Finance Incorporat­ed,” he says.

MSWG’s Devanesan notes that determinin­g remunerati­on is “not exactly science” as there are many parameters to be considered.

Some of the factors to note include whether the companies are in a monopolist­ic or near monopolist­ic position and the performanc­e of the GLC heads over the years.

“Based on these parameters, we can instinctiv­ely know if a GLC head is over-remunerate­d,” he says. Over in China, state-owned Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC), the country’s largest lender by assets, paid out about 63.43 yuan or about RM39mil in total remunerati­on before tax for the year 2017 to its top executive.

Notably, the Beijing-based ICBC’s net profit’s was at a whopping US$45.6bil (RM182bil) in 2017.

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 ??  ?? On the rise: A man walks past the Employees Provident Fund headquarte­rs in Kuala Lumpur. Remunerati­on of GLC chiefs, senior management and directors have been on the uptrend following a transforma­tion initiative to make them more competitiv­e commercial­ly.
On the rise: A man walks past the Employees Provident Fund headquarte­rs in Kuala Lumpur. Remunerati­on of GLC chiefs, senior management and directors have been on the uptrend following a transforma­tion initiative to make them more competitiv­e commercial­ly.

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