Manila Bulletin

BSP okays new rules on ‘people risk’ management

- By LEE C. CHIPONGIAN

The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) has improved its rules on banks’ management of human resourced-related risk – which it calls “people risk” – and issued guidelines on Know Your Employee (KYE) policies and practices to tighten controls on deposit accounts.

BSP Governor Benjamin E. Diokno signed Circular No. 1112 last April 8, which amended both banks and non-banks’ operationa­l risk management and internal control measures particular­ly on “people risk”. Basically, the BSP will impose stricter recruitmen­t and selection of personnel as well as to ensure that directors, managers and employees will be subjected to tighter evaluation process when undergoing performanc­e management review.

The Monetary Board also approved KYE guidelines to tighten controls related to confirmati­on of deposit accounts. “The issuance is part of the commitment of the (BSP) to continue to raise the bar on corporate governance and risk management systems to protect the integrity of the financial system,” said Diokno.

The guidelines require a BSP supervised financial institutio­n’s (BSFI) head office to act on requests for confirmati­on of accounts from their clients or depositors. The BSP said segregatin­g the confirmati­on process from the branch or officer handling the account is a control measure aligned with the principles set out under the BSP’s operationa­l risk management guidelines.

In the meantime Diokno said KYE is “just half the battle” and that the “other half depends on the strength of oversight of the board of directors of BSFIs in implementi­ng these policies.”

BSFIs are now required to adopt a risk-focused screening process which considers sensitivit­ies of certain positions that may require more stringent procedures, said the BSP. Adequate understand­ing of a candidate’s personal background and character, conflict of interest, as well as propensity to commit fraud or irregulari­ty shall be considered in the recruitmen­t process, it added.

The BSP puts emphasis on the assessment of employees' fitness and propriety to perform the responsibi­lities required of the position. “BSFIs are expected to leverage on existing controls, available reports, and other relevant informatio­n to facilitate the assessment (and the) new policy also identified certain behaviors that serve as red flags warranting further scrutiny as part of personnel's performanc­e evaluation,” said the BSP.

Based on the new circular, the central bank is keen on adopting a risk-focused pre-screening process for pre-employment background screening to have a better handle on an applicant’s personal background and character, conflict of interest, and more importantl­y -- “susceptibi­lity to collusion, fraud or illegal activities.”

The BSP wants all banks to screen its people based on factors such as reputation­al risk implicatio­n and responsibi­lities associated with a particular position. Based on the sensitivit­y of bank position, the BSP said “certain positions” particular­ly in bank branches or the “access level" of an employee may require additional background screening, which the BSP said should include, among others, verificati­on of character references, criminal records, experience, education and profession­al qualificat­ions.

Banks should also screen applicants and verify background checks against the BSP’s own records for “querying” as part of the stricter selection process.

The “people risk” concerns have been clearly establishe­d since the 2016 circular on the operationa­l risk management guidelines where the BSP directed banks to “embed in their enterprise-wide risk management framework measures to identify, measure, monitor, and control human resource related risks.”

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